Life after journalism: two San Jose Mercury News staffers who took buyouts in late 2005 stayed in close touch with eight of their departing colleagues. How have they fared, what have they learned and do they miss the newsroom?
Richards, Evelyn ; Steen, Margaret
It didn't take veteran copy editor Jim Braly long to get on
with the job of reinventing himself.
Just two months after taking a voluntary buyout from the San Jose
Mercury News, Braly was hanging out in a shuttered bar on the outskirts
of Portland, Oregon, wearing an ugly '60s-era plaid jacket and
ogling an exotic dancer. There he was, amazingly, working as an extra in
a film--a gig he had culled from craigslist that he hoped would be an
entree into the world of video and sound recording.
Braly soon landed a few other entertaining jobs, including one as a
background singer in a hip-hop band's music video filmed in a
chapel. But there was a hole in his plan: His new "career"
didn't pay. For the day in the bar he earned $60. For the other
jobs, nothing.
Braly is one of about 50 newsroom employees who left the Mercury
News in late 2005 after the paper announced it was seeking voluntary
buyouts. And although his particular dream to carve out a niche in sound
recording may be unique, his experience is not. Life beyond the
newsroom, it turns out, can be full of surprises.
To glean a picture of post-newsroom existence, two of us who
accepted buyouts checked in regularly over the next year with eight
former colleagues who left at the same time. Despite great
enthusiasm--and often careful preparation--for trying something new,
their journeys to new lives were often bumpy and, in most cases,
incomplete.
By the end of that first year, everyone in the group was working,
though most were not earning as much as they had at the paper. Five had
secure jobs with benefits, three of those in the public sector. Others,
by choice, were staying clear of the regimented working world. And
although all appreciated the new flexibility in their daily lives, some
still missed the passion of newspapers.
In one way or another, their personal passages are emblematic of
the tumult shared today by so many in the newspaper business. As the
industry continues to grapple with plunging circulation, competition
from the Internet and an advertising slowdown, journalists everywhere
are fretting about their futures. Recently, cuts have been announced at
papers including the Philadelphia Inquirer, Cleveland's Plain
Dealer, the Dallas Morning News and the St. Paul Pioneer Press. Some
newsroom employees are forced to find a new direction after being laid
off; others must weigh their options for the future when deciding, like
these Mercury News employees did, whether to accept a buyout offer.
At the Mercury News, the anguish began at 4 p.m. on a Friday in
late September 2005 when Executive Editor Susan Goldberg and Publisher
George Riggs told the close-knit newsroom that 52 positions had to go,
if not through voluntary buyouts, then through layoffs. While the
announcement itself wasn't a surprise--the paper was in good
company that month, with the New York Times and the Philadelphia dailies
also announcing reductions--the size of the cut, about 15 percent,
elicited gasps from the assembled reporters and editors.
For the next seven weeks, the newsroom buzzed about who might put
in for the voluntary severance package, which offered pay and extended
medical benefits. Partway through, it became clear who at least some of
the takers would be--staffers at the Spanish- and Vietnamese-language
publications, which the Mercury News had touted but was now abandoning.
Who else would take the plunge? For some nearing retirement, the
decision was easy. But younger staff members wondered if they could find
new work with the same material and psychic benefits as reporting the
news. Some worried that if they didn't volunteer, they might get
laid off. Around the newsroom, colleagues kept informal lists of who
might go. A database of job openings elsewhere was created, and the
local Newspaper Guild sponsored a career counseling workshop.
It was during that period of gnawing uncertainty in San Jose that
Mercury News owner Knight Ridder confronted its own cataclysmic
challenge when Private Capital Management, its largest shareholder,
pressured the chain to sell out or face a boardroom shakeup. Goldberg
could only plead ignorance when staffers pressed her on what the threat
might mean for them; no one knew then, of course, that the company would
be sold and dismantled, with the Mercury News landing in Dean
Singleton's growing MediaNews empire (see "Surrounded by
Singleton," June/July), or that a year later, the newsroom again
would be shaken--by layoffs, not buyouts.
On Friday, November 11, 2005, Goldberg again stood before her
staff, this time with a handout listing 50 names. She tried some
positive spin--there would be no layoffs because enough people had
volunteered--but she couldn't dislodge the gloom. Some who were
denied the package, usually because too many in their department had
applied, were bitter. Most who got it were pleased. Even so, several
felt like zombies, worn out by anxiety over the decision and incredulous
that the place they had poured their souls into would no longer be home.
Friends hugged and cried.
Then, a standing ovation: Leigh Weimers, a local columnist for four
decades, rose from his cubicle, lifted a box of personal items from his
desk and strode to the newsroom's door. Applause continued as he
vanished down the long bleak hallway to the back exit.
The 10 people we tracked, including ourselves, are a confident,
ambitious bunch. They generally liked what they were doing; they
weren't disgruntled sorts who couldn't wait to take the money
and run. All 10 were deeply invested in journalism--financially,
professionally and emotionally.
The group is not necessarily representative of everyone who has
left a newsroom recently: Its members are in their 30s, 40s and 50s--not
as close to retirement age as some who leave. Several could afford
either not to work or to take a pay cut, at least for a time. Some had
access to health insurance through a working spouse. Under the Mercury
News' program, everyone left voluntarily, though many probably
would not have if the paper hadn't been cutting back.
Many in the group, though not all, had some notion of what they
wanted to do--ideas that ranged from selling real estate to improving
children's writing. Some had started preparing for new careers even
before the buyouts were announced. Everyone wanted to find not just a
new source of income but a new way to engage their minds and spirits.
They might not have realized it then, but they were embarking on a
difficult search for a new identity. Here is how three Mercury News
veterans struggled with that challenge.
Eugene Louie: A Work in Progress
Journalism was not the field Eugene Louie's parents,
immigrants from China, had hoped their only child would enter: They
wanted him to be a doctor, or perhaps a lawyer. But when taking a break
from college, Louie got his first journalism job as a photographer for a
small magazine in Los Angeles called Tennis West. The pay was low, the
work exhilarating. It was the beginning of a satisfying career as a
photographer that gave him not only a paycheck but also an opportunity
to meet personalities like actress Shirley MacLaine, Apple co-founder
Steve Jobs and the Dalai Lama. It also gave him a sense of identity.
When it was time to get out, after 26 years in daily journalism,
Louie discovered just how integral to his life photography had become.
Yet when the buyouts were announced, Louie, then 52, also found himself
"realizing that I was renting out my life ... to an employer."
It seemed time to do something else; his wife, Karenina Grun-Louie, was
employed as a nurse, and his son, Jonathan, was away at college. If only
he knew what to pursue. "I grabbed a community college catalog to
see if there was something that would interest me and I could complete
in two to three years," he told us a few months after leaving.
Louie quickly crafted a plan that would, ironically, take him
closer than he had ever dreamed to his parents' vision of a medical
career. If he became a radiology technician, he reasoned, he could find
a part-time job almost anywhere that would provide health insurance and
a steady income while allowing him time to pursue fine-art photography.
Perhaps he would move away from the over-photographed West Coast to Utah
or the Smokey Mountains of Tennessee. "As opposed to trying to
change the outside world, I just felt that at this time of my life it
was time to go inward a little," Louie says. "I would
photograph my vision, not some editor's idea of what a good
photograph should be."
It sounded both romantic and practical. But as Louie (and several
other former Mercury News staffers) discovered, reinventing yourself
often involves trial and error. The first reality check came in
February, three months after leaving the paper, when Louie dived into
algebra, one of the radiology program prerequisites. "All I could
think about was numbers," he says of those first few frustrating
weeks of math. It was difficult to struggle alongside community college
students, some of whom were 30 years younger. "With the buyout, my
self-worth was already on the line."
During Louie's mathematical struggles, his father died. Louie,
who had been managing his father's finances and paying for some of
his care, found himself with one less financial responsibility and the
freedom to invest the equity in his father's house. He made the
first deviation from his plan: He bought a 2,300-square-foot,
four-bedroom house just outside Charlotte, North Carolina, with plans to
rent it.
Louie depended on family support while he took the needed time to
explore his career options. He knew, for example, that he could be
covered on his wife's health insurance once his Mercury News
insurance ran out. And it was his wife and son who eventually forced him
to reconsider where he was going.
Over the Labor Day holiday almost a year after Louie had left the
paper, he attended parents' weekend at the Air Force Academy, where
his son is in his final year. "I'm the kind of guy who is
always giving advice," Louie says. But this time he found himself
on the receiving end. "I was really surprised that both my wife and
son were saying, 'Do you really think you're going to be happy
pursuing what you're pursuing, a medical career in radiology?'
Everybody seemed to think that I would not be completely happy once I
got there."
When he thought about it, he realized they were right. He enjoyed
the routine and the intellectual challenge of school, but he wasn't
sure he would like an emotionally draining job in medicine. What made
him happiest was freelance photography, both because he enjoyed taking
photos and because of the challenge of building a business. Luckily, he
had added business, marketing and sales courses to his medical load at
the community college. "I think that deep down, there was a secret
entrepreneur inside of me," Louie says.
In fact, his freelance photography business was blooming. He found,
for example, that parents appreciated--and were willing to pay for--the
photos he took of their children performing in a local children's
theater production. "It's just as valuable if it goes to a
circulation of a family of three as if it goes to a circulation of
300,000 strangers," he says.
Louie is persevering with his radiology prerequisites--dissecting a
cat testicle and a sheep's heart in an anatomy class--even though
he increasingly has doubts. "I'm not sure that that's
going to give me the psychic dollar that photography does," he
says. "But at the same time, I can see myself having the
skill."
Although Louie is less certain now than when he left the Mercury
News about his second career, he has learned an important lesson about
himself. "When I worked as a photojournalist for some sort of media
outlet, it gave me an identity that I think I really needed in my
younger years. I always knew that if I got to the point where I would
give that up, it might be a problem for me in terms of my self-image and
my self-worth," Louie says. "Surprisingly, it's not been
as difficult as I thought."
Guy Lasnier: An Emotional Adjustment
Even carefully laid plans don't guarantee a smooth transition.
Guy Lasnier, the Mercury News' deputy national/foreign editor,
found it tough to adjust to his new job as a speechwriter for a
university chancellor, in which he was expected to trade skepticism for
spin. For the first two months, Lasnier wondered whether he had made the
right decision. With that offer secure, he already had planted one foot
out the door when the buyout decisions were made. But he was denied the
package--he says Goldberg told him she didn't want him to go.
Like the others, Lasnier, who had held a variety of jobs in 11
years at the Mercury News, still loved newspapers when he quit. But the
father of two children, one still in high school, had started looking
around earlier in 2005 when contract talks between the paper and the
union on health coverage broke down, and he sensed more tension ahead.
He put out feelers closer to his home in Santa Cruz, a 35-mile trek over
a mountain range from San Jose. A surfer, Lasnier typically had spent
several mornings a week riding the waves before arriving at the Mercury
News for a later shift, avoiding rush hour.
The post he took--executive communications coordinator in the
chancellor's office at the University of California, Santa
Cruz--was practically in the neighborhood. What a contrast the setting
was: He could bike to work and gaze out his office at redwoods. But more
significant was the culture shock. Lasnier, then 51, missed the
teamwork, the sense of mission and the instant gratification of the
newspaper world. In his new position, it was harder to feel engaged.
There were no moments of victory, no scoops, no breaking-news packages
pulled together on deadline. "I was in a newsroom for 23-and-a-half
years. The camaraderie. The personalities, attitudes, people who are up
on things and have snarky things to say. It's fun," he told us
four months after leaving.
At social gatherings, especially, he was struck by how closely his
identity had been tied to his work. He also missed the cachet of his
newspaper job. "Being a journalist is cool," Lasnier says.
"Having that label--there's a 'wow' factor that we
can't deny we get a little bit of a rush from."
Emotionally, Lasnier couldn't sever his ties; he still
regularly read Romenesko and other journalism Web sites. A half-year
out, he continued to envision himself back in his old job a couple of
times a week. Luckily for him, and others, journalism offers many ways
to stay connected. Lasnier has kept his longstanding volunteer job of
producing listener commentaries for the local NPR affiliate, KUSP. When
people at the university recognize his name from the radio,
"that's my little bit of journalism buzz." (In fact, a
year after leaving the newspaper, seven of the 10 former colleagues have
kept a hand in journalism.)
When we talked to Lasnier nine months into his public affairs job,
a turning point had come from unexpected misfortune. In June, UC-Santa
Cruz Chancellor Denice Denton plunged to her death in a suicide.
Suddenly, Lasnier said, his work team drew together, bonding during a
tragedy. After a new acting chancellor stepped in, Lasnier's job
began to edge away from speechwriting toward policy matters and
background research, which he expected would be more satisfying.
Likening his journey to the "stages of grief," Lasnier said:
"I'm at acceptance now."
A year after the buyouts, he attended a lively reunion of current
and former Mercury News newsroom employees. Hundreds gathered at the
Lion and Compass in Sunnyvale, a well-known Silicon Valley eatery
started by Atari founder and arcade-videogame pioneer Nolan Bushnell.
"It was fun to collectively remember what it had been,"
Lasnier says about the Mercury News. "But now I've moved on
and am enjoying different things." That includes his university
job.
Jim Braly: A Failed Reinvention
Braly was something of an institution at the Mercury News. Readers
never saw his byline, but they probably chuckled over his clever,
insightful headlines that for 22 years graced many sections of the
paper. He was an anchor of competence and calm on the copy desk.
Braly, married with one stepdaughter in college, had dreamed
occasionally of doing something else with his life. "After a while,
the dreams became more common, and they began to come closer and closer
together. Soon they were only a few minutes apart. Then the buyouts were
announced," he recalled soon after leaving, "and my water
broke."
Still, Braly and his wife, employed by a large high-tech company
experiencing its own layoffs, worried about finances and especially
health insurance. They realized a buyout could work only if they left
the high-priced Bay Area, where they had owned a house for nine years.
"At 54, I was unlikely to be hired by any local company,"
Braly wrote us. "Say I thought about a new career in technical
writing. Any hiring manager could look at me and quickly realize I was
in no shape to sleep under my desk and work 100 hours a week."
The favorable terms of the buyout offer (for him, 44 weeks of
salary and a year of paid health care), plus the "power of the
press"--incessant headlines about an imminent bursting of the
housing bubble--convinced Braly to leave not just the paper, but the
state.
Almost immediately, the couple moved to Portland. "Of course,
it snowed the day I got here and then it rained for 30 of the next 31
days," Braly said after landing. "And the jobs don't pay
much. But if things don't work out, Oregon lets you kill
yourself."
The copy editor aspired to a new career as a sound mixer in
Portland's vibrant indie film community. Between 2001 and 2005,
Braly had helped set up a home-recording studio and cut four CDs of his
rock-and-blues band, the Stragglyrs.
His few forays into the arts community were fun. Besides the two
small on-camera roles, Braly recorded sound for three short films,
including a political satire in which terrorists are hiding in every
corner of an ordinary couple's house. But the ventures
wouldn't pay the bills, and even though his wife was telecommuting,
the couple continued to be anxious about long-term medical insurance
should she lose her job.
As the months went by, Braly often recalled a column on reinventing
yourself he had read regularly in the Mercury News. "I just
don't think that's very easy to do," he says. He and his
wife tossed around other ideas: real estate, interior design, writing a
novel. But everything would involve starting near the bottom and maybe
even paying for training. "It's daunting," Braly
concluded a half-year after leaving San Jose.
He felt a tug back to journalism and applied for an opening as an
associate producer at the local public-broadcasting affiliate. He
didn't even get an interview. "I had 30 years of journalism
experience.... I couldn't get a job as a gofer."
Then Braly applied for a temporary, four-day-a-week job at the
Oregonian "doing the same thing I've done for 30 years."
He had no illusions he would get it.
But he did. He liked it right away and badly wanted it to become a
permanent position. If it didn't, he'd again face a huge
question mark. Three months of uncertainty later, in October, the paper
did make him a permanent part-timer.
Now he feels at home again and has sent a friend at the Mercury
News a dozen e-mails about how the Oregonian is much like his old haunt.
The pizza on Election Night, the similarity of local stories--"a
newsroom is a newsroom," he says.
Braly is the only one of the 10 Mercury News alumni we tracked who
returned to permanent employment in newspapers within the first year.
Though his fantasy of remaking himself fizzled, and though he thinks
wistfully of the evening breaks spent kibitzing with longtime pals at
the Mercury News, he and his wife are thrilled with their adopted city.
With new rain boots, rain pants and fleeces, they've even accepted
the dreary weather. They go for walks, rain or shine.
Reflecting on the ups and downs of his first year away from the
Mercury News, Braly advises others to "take the plunge ... to get
out of the routine you've been in ... and try something new."
As these three discovered, there are practical hurdles to
reinventing yourself. Moving to a new industry means starting at the
bottom again--in pay as well as responsibility--or finding a way to
capitalize on your skills and experience in a field related to the
press.
But replacing the intellectual and emotional rewards of newsroom
work is also a challenge. Several admitted they missed the prestige of
being a journalist, though they sensed that, to the outside world,
journalism's glamour is fading. Even those who settled happily into
new jobs missed the newsroom, with all the drama and fulfillment that
comes from putting out a paper each day.
"Newsrooms are like no other workplace," says Pat Lopes
Harris, who at 36 left her job as a metro reporter to become a media
relations officer with San Jose State University. "You have a lot
of wiggle room to steer things between the required assignments. In most
environments, your course is set for you."
Still, Harris found gratification working for a public university
that prides itself on providing broad access to education for those who
want to learn. "I don't know if there's a better mission
to be had than helping people like that," she says.
Others echoed that sentiment. One alum who turned to real estate
derives great satisfaction from helping people find the right homes and
loans; another who trained as a drug and alcohol counselor found that
career "multiple times more rewarding" than journalism. And
the Mercury News' former Sacramento bureau chief, who joined the
California State Senate Office of Research, enjoys "putting my
skills to use for public service," including advocating on behalf
of a newly released prisoner who needed a place to go on Christmas.
"There is life after the newspaper business," Mark Gladstone
has concluded.
For this group, that life includes more time for family, hobbies
and new endeavors such as guitar lessons and foreign language study. It
involves fewer evening phone calls and working holidays. In the end, the
added flexibility and the satisfaction of taking on new challenges
compensated for the losses--the absence of the newsroom camaraderie, the
adrenaline rush and a career that, for all its demands, was something
most cherished.
A year after walking out of the paper for the last time, several of
these Mercury News alumni were still wrestling with building a solid
professional future--finding careers, not just jobs. Still, all 10
declared themselves at least as content--or in most cases, more
content--than before they left.
Says Louie: "Once you can let go of the fact that you
don't have a cool media affiliation, you can appreciate yourself
for who you are."
Evelyn Richards (
[email protected]) and Margaret Steen
(
[email protected]) are Mercury News alumni who are freelancing and
working in education.
RELATED ARTICLE: MANAGING EXPECTATIONS
Based on the experiences of 10 former San Jose Mercury News
employees in their first year after leaving the newsroom, here are some
tips for those considering a move:
--It takes time to remake yourself, and you may not love your new
venture right away. If you don't have something lined up before you
leave, expect months, at least, of self-examination and exploration.
--The easiest transitions are to fields where journalistic skills
and knowledge of a newsroom are assets, such as communications, research
or freelance writing. The public sector is especially welcoming.
--Several aspects of daily newspaper jobs are difficult to replace:
the sense of purpose, the instant gratification, the adrenaline rush and
the "wow" factor--meaning the interest among others in what
you do.
--Many jobs offer more predictable hours and fewer working
holidays. This can mean more time for family, friends and hobbies.
--If you have a reasonable plan for replacing the lost income and
health insurance--and some ideas about new careers to explore--go for
it. A year later you'll be glad you did.
--E. R. & M. S.
RELATED ARTICLE: MOVING ON
JIM BRALY
Age at buyout: 54
Years at a daily newspaper: 30, including 22 at the Mercury News
Last job at Mercury News: copy editor
Moving on: After moving to Portland and considering several
possible careers, Braly took a four-day-a-week job as a copy editor at
the Oregonian. Reinventing yourself, he discovered, is not as easy as it
sounds.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
MARK GLADSTONE
Age at buyout: 57
Years at a daily newspaper: 33, including five-and-a-half at the
Mercury News
Last job at Mercury News: Sacramento bureau chief
Moving on: Gladstone accepted the buyout and left the paper a few
weeks before the deadline so he could start a new job as a principal
consultant with the California Senate Office of Research. Although it
took time to adjust to his new role, he enjoys taking a more active part
in public policy.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
PAT LOPES HARRIS
Age at buyout: 36
Years at a daily newspaper: Five, all at the Mercury News
Last job at Mercury News: metro reporter
Moving on: When Harris left, she was contemplating a career change
to teaching, communications for a nonprofit or freelance writing. A few
months later, she took a job as a media relations officer with San Jose
State University. The more predictable hours make her family life
easier, and she likes working for a university.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
SETH HEMMELGARN
Age at buyout: 33
Years at a daily newspaper: Seven, all at the Mercury News
Last job at Mercury News: copy editor
Moving on: Hemmelgarn left to take a job as a manager at a drug and
alcohol treatment facility while he continued taking courses to become a
drug and alcohol counselor. He loved his new job but decided after a
year that it was time to look for a new challenge.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
GUY LASNIER
Age at buyout: 51
Years at a daily newspaper: 23, including 11 at the Mercury News
Last job at Mercury News: deputy national and foreign editor
Moving on: When the buyouts were announced, Lasnier had already
applied for a public affairs job in the chancellor's office at the
University of California, Santa Cruz. He accepted the position, although
his application for the buyout package was denied. He misses being part
of the newsroom, and it took several months before he felt comfortable
in his new job and began to enjoy it.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
EUGENE LOUIE
Age at buyout: 52
Years at a daily newspaper: 26, including almost 24 at the Mercury
News
Last job at Mercury News: photographer
Moving on: Louie has taken classes toward getting certified as a
radiology technician, which he thought could pay the bills while he
pursued landscape photography. But now he's not sure what he wants
to do. He may make freelance photography his focus.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
GLENDA QUEENSBURY
Age at buyout: 46
Years at a daily newspaper: 14, all at the Mercury News
Last job at Mercury News: data analyst
Moving on: Queensbury had gotten her real-estate license a few
years before she left the paper, and when she accepted the buyout she
took up real estate full time. She enjoys having more control over her
schedule.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
MICHAEL ZIELENZIGER
Age at buyout: 50
Years at a daily newspaper: 31, including 21 at the Mercury News
Last job at Mercury News: Tokyo bureau chief (before his book
leave)
Moving on: Zielenziger got a book about Japan published and spent
the fall on a book tour. He's trying to figure out his next step.
He is a visiting scholar at the Institute of International Studies at
the University of California, Berkeley, and has done freelancing and
consulting.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
EVELYN RICHARDS
Age at buyout: 53
Years at a daily newspaper: 30, including about 15 during two
stints at the Mercury News
Last job at Mercury News: assistant editor of Perspective section
Moving on: Richards wants to find a new career in education,
helping children improve their writing, but calls her transition "a
work in progress." She also has done freelance writing.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
MARGARET STEEN
Age at buyout: 35
Years at a daily newspaper: Almost six, all at the Mercury News
Last job at Mercury News: business reporter
Moving on: Steen left to see if freelance writing would offer her
more flexibility, given that her children were approaching school age,
and it has. She also teaches writing courses for adult-education
programs.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]