|
An
icon in turmoil: Sports Illustrated announces mass
job cuts - 4th October 2019


Profiles
Sports
Sports
Betting Television
Wrestling
Business
Gaming
Entertainment
Pop
Culture Steaming
Advertising
Promotions

The
publication has been an institution in the US but
has struggled in recent years.
By
Jacob Bogage and Ben Strauss
The
publishing company behind Sports Illustrated laid
off 35-40 per cent of the publication's editorial
staff Thursday, according to people familiar with
the personnel moves, cuts that could decimate what
was once the standard-bearer of American sports journalism.
Staffers
speaking on condition of anonymity out of concern
for reprisal said the job losses are worse than most
inside the magazine expected. Even die-hard optimists
said morale was at an all-time low given the magazine's
recent struggles, and key managers were not given
the opportunity to fight to save some of the organisation's
most prized writers.
ports
Illustrated employees were invited to two separate
"transition meetings" on Thursday, gatherings
that were feared to split the magazine into one group
that would lose its jobs and another that would not,
at noon and 12.30 pm. But those meetings were cancelled
moments before they were set to begin, thrusting the
63-year-old publication into even more uncertainty.
Hours
later, though, the meetings were back on for 4.15pm
and 4.30 pm. Staff at the early meeting were dismissed.
Those at the later meeting were retained. Many staffers
attended the 4.15pm meeting in solidarity.
Thirty
former employees on the print side of the publication
will receive severance protection guaranteed through
SI's collective bargaining agreement with the NewsGuild
of New York. Guild members are negotiating to extend
those benefits to other laid-off staffers, including
full-time contractors.
Sports
Illustrated has been in a state of uncertainty for
years after two corporate sales. Publishing conglomerate
Meredith bought it from Time I, for $US1.8 billion
($2.7 billion) in 2017, then immediately put the title
back on the market. Authentic Brands Group purchased
Sports Illustrated in May for $US110 million, a price
considered a bargain.
ABG
is a marketing and brand development company that
predominantly licenses brand and trademarks of celebrities
such as Marilyn Monroe. Because of ABG's lack of experience
running a media company, the deal included a provision
that Meredith would continue to run the editorial
side of the magazine for two years.
But
less than a month later, ABG cut off that part of
the deal and leased Sports Illustrated's media operations
to Seattle-based startup Maven, a move staffers saw
as an immediate threat to the magazine's future.
Maven
almost immediately began staffing changes at Sports
Illustrated. Christian Stone, the magazine's editor
in chief of seven years, is leaving, according to
a memo released this week. Stone was viewed as an
obstacle between widespread cuts due to his long tenure
at SI, and his departure earlier this week was greeted
by fear and apprehension.
Before
Thursday afternoon's meetings, a group of Sports Illustrated
staffers launched a last-ditch effort calling for
Meredith to step back in to halt or ease the layoffs
and decrying Maven's content plans after the staffing
changes.
"The
Maven wants to replace top journalists in the industry
with a network of Maven freelancers and bloggers,
while reducing or eliminating department that have
ensured that the stories we publish and produce meet
the highest standards," the group wrote in a
statement. " . . . These plans significantly
undermine our journalistic integrity, damage the reputation
of this long-standing brand and negatively affect
the economic stability of this publication."
Reached
by phone on Thursday and asked about the turmoil at
SI, ABG chief executive Jamie Salter described the
situation at the magazine as "awesome."
"I
can only tell you that we buy troubled companies that
we think there's enormous amount of value in the intellectual
property in," he said. "We're also living
in a digital world, and I don't want to blame anyone
because it takes a lot of people to run a business.
But it takes a leader to build a business. And at
the end of the day whoever has been leading this company
for the last seven years, in my opinion, they fell
behind.
"ABG
has been successful because we're laser-focused on
social media, on influencers, on product and design.
And we're laser-focused on localizing product for
each market, and we've invested the money and resources
in those people for those markets."
Asked
about layoffs, he said, "We have to be smart
about it. We have to change some of the soldiers.
You need different skill-sets."
Maven
executives have begun recruiting an army of freelancers
to replace salaried Sports Illustrated writers, according
to multiple people who were contacted and interviewed
for the positions.
The
work would be largely devoid of the original reporting
that made Sports Illustrated an icon in the American
media landscape, those people said, and would use
the magazine's loyal audience to boost Maven's content.
"We
made a deal," Salter said. "They paid their
money. Last time I checked, we asked for three years
up front, they paid $US45 million. I don't know too
many people who will throw $US45 million in the garbage."
Some
current Sports Illustrated staffers were unaware of
Maven's content plans and stunned to hear of the specifics
second hand from colleagues. Maven recently posted
generic job listings, including "managing editor,"
"pre-editor," "editorial lead,"
"insider (reporter)," "sport editor"
and "expert writer," to the surprise of
some Sports Illustrated staffers.
(The
Washington Post)
|