Newsosaur Notices Texas Tribune

July 25, 2009

It was nice of Alan Mutter to interview me and write a piece about TT. Although I probably got a little ahead of myself as to when we really will have the resources to do heavy coverage of energy and border issues, Alan still cared enough about the topic of our coming out to get it quite write. We’re grateful.

Texas Trib, one man’s journalistic mitzvah

Looking at the news business from the hard-nosed perspective of a venture capitalist, John Thornton rapidly concluded that “serious journalism is never going to be a good business again.”

But that didn’t stop Thornton, a successful partner at the Austin Ventures investment fund, from putting $1 million of his own money into starting the Texas Tribune, a non-profit online news organization that has begun scooping up some of the cream of the state’s journalism talent.

Thornton (left) is under no illusion that the Texas Trib is going to be a juicy business, he said in a telephone interview.

Rather, he decided to fund the project to make up for what he perceives to be a growing lack of coverage of significant issues by the financially strapped dailies in the Lone Star State.

Thornton said he began to focus on the erosion of public-service journalism in the course of investigating investment opportunities a few years ago for the $3.9 billion venture fund where he works.

“In 2006, we looked at the challenges being faced by newspapers and how guys like us could make a profit,” he said. “The for-profit conclusion was to buy lead-generation businesses and that has worked out for us.”

But Thornton, who also pens the insightful Insomniactive blog, didn’t see how those investments were going to help produce quality journalism.

“I was reminded of something my pastor said when I was a kid growing up,” he explained. “If you mix politics and religion, the pastor said, you get politics. The same thing seems to be true in journalism. If you mix journalism and business, you get business. That’s when I realized serious journalism is never going to be a really good business again.”

Long active in Democratic politics and philanthropy, Thornton decided to abandon those extracurricular interests to develop a new model to produce quality journalism. “Fortunately,” said Thornton, “I am in a spot where I can indulge my greed gland in my day job and pursue my interest in journalism in my civic life.”

The path led Thornton to hiring Evan Smith, the esteemed former editor of Texas Monthly, to help found the Texas Tribune. The Texas Trib, in turn, immediately acquired Texas Weekly and the services of its estimable editor, Ross Ramsey, who will be managing editor of the Trib.

Thornton said he is more than half of the way toward raising the $4 million it will take to support the new venture to the point it can sustain itself through a combination of charitable contributions, NPR-style sponsorship fees, revenues from events and perhaps a few niche print publications.

He anticipates it will take “three to four years” to bring the Trib to the point it can generate $2 million in annual revenues to support a staff of 15 journalists without requiring further donations.

What kind of coverage can this buy? “That is a work in progress,” he said, but cited three major areas of concentration for the online publication scheduled to launch in the fall:

:: “One is the wholesale change in demographics and politics in the state and what that will mean to Texas and on the national scene.”

:: “Big story No. 2 is the Texas-Mexico border – things like immigration raids, public health, safety and trade.”

:: “The third unique Texas story is the energy industry. It probably is the biggest and most important issue under our nose and happens to be inhabited by people with enormous personalities. Nobody covers the energy industry the way the New York Observer covers the media business. We can.”

Thornton says he sees “no reason” why the Texas Trib can’t emerge as the leading voice covering statewide issues, especially since “the percentage of the newshole” devoted to major issues “has gone down as local dailies have focused on where they think their franchise is: local news.”

The Texas Trib intends to complement, not compete with, the local dailies, said Thornton. “Our message to commercial dailies is that we come in peace,” said Thornton. “We have told them we want very much to work in partnership with them. We’re not pretending to replace them.”

Although Thornton believes the Texas Trib can make an impact with an endowment of $4 million or $5 million, he sees no reason why up to $20 million a year in donations could not be available to support non-profit journalism in Texas.

“Most of my family’s philanthropy in the past has been to support dance, because my wife is a former dancer,” said Thornton. “There is $20 million a year going to dance philanthropy in Texas. Why couldn’t there be the same amount for journalism? If we could be as big as dance, you could barely spend that money responsibly. A $20 million electronic newsroom could support 150 reporters. You would kind of run out of places to put those people.”

Thornton said he believes the idea could be readily exported to other states but he is focused on proving the model in Texas first. “I grew up in the franchise-restaurant business and the clowns you took least seriously were those who talked about franchising their ideas before they opened their first store,” he said. “We want to open the first store.”

While he eventually would like to help other projects if he can, “I really want to demonstrate this can be done here,” he said. “If I can do that, then I think I will have done a big mitzvah.”

His pastor would be proud.


And Now, a Word from Evan About Wiccans

July 24, 2009

Although Peggy Fikac did a fine job interviewing our partner Evan Smith for the Express News-and it is absolutely true that I have retired from partisan politics-I feel compelled to mention that the TT explicitly does not have a Wiccan fundraising quota. Or at least I don’t:

The venture has been viewed cautiously by some on the right because the $2 million-plus backing it has so far includes about $1 million from venture capitalist John Thornton, who is founding chairman of the Tribune and has been a big donor to Democrats.

That’s all ending, Smith said.

“John has pledged not to give any money to candidates any longer, and I take him at his word,” Smith said. “John in his private life was obviously entitled to support candidates or issues as he chose to. Journalists have a different standard … I want to assure you that by the time we launch, we will have money supporting this venture from Democrats, Republicans, independents, Wiccans.

The followers of Wicca aside, this much I have learned to be true: the members of the Journalism Tribe-particularly the young ones-tend to ostracize the partisans in their midsts, to make them eat lunch at Burger King rather than the place all the cool kids go. And I have to tell you: the team Evan and Ross have hired can smell a partisan from 50 paces. (A classic page out of the Wiccan book is to do a remote deadening of your olfactory nerve, so they’re more like a 10-pace deal.).

But, seriously. If we-I, I guess-would have wanted to build just another partisan echo chamber, we would have built a very different team. And attracting a Smith or a Ramsey would have been impossible. My money will go in up front, and sort of like KBH’s campaign funds having been moved to a state-race account-once the coin is there, it’s there.

These troops are not partisans. They’re journalists, and I coudn’t influence them if I wanted to. But who knows-they could very well be Wiccans.


Non-Profit Road on Texas Tribune

July 23, 2009

I think Jim Barnett is probably the best informed guy writing about non-profit journalism. The fact that he has encouraging words for us in his recent post has, of course, nothing to do with that assessment…

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Texas Tribune, the online startup being created by Austin venture capitalist John Thornton, has had a busy week in preparation for its planned fall launch.

Last Friday, it announced that it had hired Evan Smith from the highly regarded Texas Monthly. Smith will serve as CEO of the Tribune.

On Thursday, the Tribune announced that it would buy Texas Weekly, an online, subscription newsletter on Texas statehouse politics. The weekly’s editor, Ross Ramsey, will be the Tribune’s managing editor. The announcement also includes bios on the Tribune’s first five reporting hires.

A couple of things are noteworthy about these moves.

One is the quality of the journalists that the Tribune has been able to attract. In addition to Smith and Ramsey, the five reporters named to the Tribune’s staff have top-notch resumes; most are veteran reporters leaving well known publications, including some of Texas’ biggest daily newspapers. All due respect to the Tribune, but this speaks as much to journalists’ rapidly changing view of newspapers as premier career destinations. Reporters want to work for news organizations that their sources and subjects respect, if not fear, and where they will be treated well. This is a professional flight to stability, and ultimately, to quality.

The other is Thornton’s decision to buy an existing, subscription-based product. The purchase solves one of his biggest concerns - how to build an audience - as the weekly gives him entree to the state’s opinion leaders. While the Tribune is decidedly a nonprofit - Thornton speaks passionately about the need to separate God and Mammon - it also provides a model for generating revenues that can sustain the Tribune beyond its startup phase.

This is one to watch.


Texas Tribune and Facebook

July 23, 2009

In a statistic which is sure to prove absolutely meaningless but which is fun anyway, TT now has more facebook fans than any other newspaper….in the state. Not bad for 5 days. Hopefully, no one will “un-friend” us once we actually have product…


Better Late Than Never

July 18, 2009

We do now have a placeholder site up at Texastribune.org. It’s not terribly stylish, but you can sign up for updates there (which, given our rather thin level of staffing, won’t come at you in overwhelming volume). Please drop by and leave your coordinates if you’re interested.


Burka on Rasmussen on Rick and Kay

July 18, 2009

What a difference a couple of months can make in politics! Paul Burka comments on dire new poll numbers for the Senator’s camp:

Rasmussen: Perry 46, Hutchison 36posted by paulburka at 11:48 AM This represents a net six point gain for Perry over the May poll (Perry +4, Hutchison -2). The spread itself is bad enough for the Hutchison camp, but even worse is that Perry has passed her in favorability ratings. This would have been seen as inconceivable at the time Hutchison announced her exploratory committee last December.

Favorable/Unfavorable
Perry 76% favorable, 23% unfavorable
Hutchison 72% favorable, 25% unfavorable

Job Performance
Perry 74% approve, 25% disapprove
Hutchison (no results given)

Gender support
Men: Perry +17 points
Women: virtual tie

Events are trending strongly in Perry’s favor:

Tea parties: 82% of likely primary voters view favorably
Economic stimulus: 7% say that it has helped, 61% say it has hurt
Health care plan: 12% support, 83% oppose

What is the case for a Hutchison victory at this point? There’s only one argument that I can think of, and that is she can expand the primary turnout. That seems a lot less likely today than it did when she first got into the race. It’s hard to beat an incumbent with 76% favorability and 74% job approval. I have been very critical of the Hutchison non-campaign, but the fact is that the reason for these numbers isn’t what Hutchison hasn’t done. It’s what Perry has done.


Introducing Evan Smith and the Texas Tribune

July 17, 2009

The NYT has a nice writeup about Evan, what a great magazine Texas Monthly is, and what we’re up to. We’ve got a looooong way to go, but today was a an awfully nice start. More details to follow. We’re building a magnificent team.


Justice Ginsberg in NYT Mag

July 15, 2009

Sure, conservatives can be excused for their cynicism about the placement of this interview on the Sunday before the beginning of the Sotamayor hearings. But, godalmighty, what an interview! Who would have guessed that the Nixon administration was directly responsible for her becoming the first tenured female on the Columbia Law faculty.?


Steep and Flat at National Review

July 15, 2009
Ok, admit it. This is a great cover. Kevin D. Williamson’s article about Texas and our supposed anti-California economic miracle is, well, less than great. I wonder if he’s ever been here? Or heard of Howard Jarivs? These seem like reasonable questions for an editor to have asked. If Kevin D. has indeed traveled the Lone Star State, he missed the fact that Levis aren’t TX, they’re CA. Wranglers are TX. And I’m pretty sure there’s no apostrophe in either, either.

July 20, 2009


Say of the Day: Sony’s Howard Stringer

July 12, 2009

From the LA Times, covering the Allen & Co. Annual Media Mogul Petting Zoo in Sun Valley:

Sony Corp. Chief Executive Howard Stringer may have had the best quip of the day. Asked about the success of Twitter and other social networking sites, Stringer said: “A lot of people are doing very well at making very little money. It’s not a club I’m looking to join.”