herexfinal.gifI mentioned today's 20th anniversary of the Herald Examiner's demise in the Morning Buzz below, but now former HerEx editorial writer Joel Bellman is circulating this snippet. It's the editorial that ran in the L.A. Times to mark the rival paper's closure, acknowledging that the feistier Herald would be missed.

End of the Herald Examiner

Since the turn of the century the Herald Examiner and its predecessors have been part of the life of Los Angeles. It has been both an actor in the events of this region and a mirror of them, holding up to its reading public a reflection of the news and the issues of the day as it saw them.

When it was founded in 1903 by the most flamboyant of the American press lords, William Randolph Hearst, the Los Angeles Examiner joined his New York Journal and San Francisco Examiner as the third star in a constellation of journalistic enterprises that for decades exerted a powerful pull on America's popular culture. Like a good beer, the journalism they served up was brewed for working-class tastes, a frothy but filling blend of Progressive-era reforms and the entertaining sensationalism of yellow journalism.

Perhaps the best individual example of that Hearst style was Aggie Underwood, the late Herald city editor who, as a crime reporter, once unblushingly began a story on the murder of three children with this sentence: "What little Jeanette Marjorie Stephens loved in life--a ruffled blue organdie dress--will be her shroud in death."

Today, the public's appetite for such reportage probably is satisfied by lesser television talk shows. The paper lost and never regained the influence or the readers it had under its founder and his immediate successors. In recent years its readers and its income dwindled. Offered for sale, it found no buyers, and so its owners have closed its doors.

It is not merely the sharp whiff of mortality gusting up Broadway that brings an empathic shudder to us at The Times. The Herald Examiner's serious role as an aggressive commentator on issues of local importance will not be easily filled. Its absence will place an even greater responsibility on The Times to be fair, accurate and complete in its reporting and to be attentive to the views and concerns of all segments of this increasingly diverse community.

More: Newspapers
© 2003-2009   •  About LA Observed  •  Email the editor
LA Biz Observed
4:03 PM Fri | CBS and ABC have far bigger fish to fry - namely whether their stations can get back the auto and retail advertising that fell off a cliff in 2009.
Native Intelligence
Phil Wallace | Searching for answers after a third loss this year.
Deanne Stillman | Jihad and cash offers meet American soldiers during the Gulf War, and beyond.
Iris Schneider | After a tough year financially, the Museum of Contemporary Art put on a gala party to celebrate with 1,000 of its closest friends.
Bill Boyarsky
One of the last of Doug Ring’s many good deeds was a visit to the Los Angeles Times editorial board with members of Housing LA, an organization advocating affordable housing for the thousands of residents being forced out of the city by high rents.
Jenny Burman
Thinking more about buying less.
Here in Malibu
The close-up.
Sponsors
Jewish Journal logo
The California Wellness Foundation
Playa Vista ad
Blogads

Blogads Los Angeles network

Get RSS Feeds
of LA Observed
LA Observed publishes several Real Simple Syndication feeds for easy scanning of headlines. If you wish to subscribe to a feed, most popular RSS readers will do it for you. You can also enter the web address from the XML button below or click on a specific feed. For more help with RSS, try here or here.




Add to Google