Journalists at The New York Daily News and Forbes walked off the job Thursday amid contentious contract talks with management.
The one-day strike at the Daily News coincides with Forbes' walkout, which runs through Monday. I Photo: Wally Gobetz Flickr
Both strikes are historic: It’s the first-ever at the business-focused magazine in more than a century, and the first at the storied newspaper in more than three decades, according to the NewsGuild of New York, Philip Marcelo reported for the Associated Press (AP).
The one-day strike at the Daily News coincides with Forbes' walkout, which runs through Monday.
In midtown Manhattan, dozens of Daily News staffers and their supporters picketed Thursday outside a small co-working space — the newspaper’s office since its lower Manhattan newsroom was shuttered in 2020 during the coronavirus pandemic.
Founded in 1919, it was once the largest circulating newspaper in the country. Strikers marched around the building holding signs that read “New York Needs Its Hometown Paper” and “Alden to News: Drop Dead,” a reference to the tabloid’s famous 1975 headline.
They also put up a large inflatable rat that has become increasingly familiar at other union protests.
This week, Time magazine and Condé Nast, the publisher of Vogue, Vanity Fair, GQ, and other marquee magazines, both announced significant job cuts. Staffers at Condé Nast publications went on a one-day strike.
Then the Los Angeles Times laid off more than 100 employees, or more than 20% of its newsroom, with staffers walking out last week in protest. Meanwhile, more than 200 workers at The Washington Post, owned by billionaire Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, accepted buyouts in the waning days of 2023.
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