Los Angeles Times

L.A. Times to get a new editor in latest shake-up

Jim Kirk is set to succeed Lewis D’Vorkin after weeks of newsroom unrest.

- By Meg James

In another dramatic shake-up at the Los Angeles Times, Chicago journalist Jim Kirk will be named editor in chief of the newspaper, replacing Lewis D’Vorkin, who will move to a position within the parent company.

The move — which is expected to be announced Monday — follows two weeks of turmoil at The Times, including a unionizati­on vote by newsroom employees and accelerati­ng hostilitie­s between D’Vorkin and his staff.

Kirk, who previously served as publisher and editor of the Chicago SunTimes, joined The Times’ parent company, Tronc, in August. He was named interim editor of The Times on Aug. 21 after a sweeping shake-up of top editors, but Kirk stepped aside after D’Vorkin joined The Times in early November.

This time around, Kirk, 52, is being named the permanent editor to lead The Times’ newsroom, said Marisa Kollias, spokeswoma­n for Tronc.

The shake-up comes after years of staff cutbacks and management changes at the newspaper. Kirk becomes the third top editor at The Times in less than six months.

He is a native of the Chicago suburb of Dolton, Ill., and a graduate of Illinois State University. He served as Midwest managing editor

for Adweek and then as a reporter for the Sun-Times. He also worked at the Chicago Tribune, Bloomberg News, the Chicago News Cooperativ­e and Crain’s Chicago Business before rejoining the Sun-Times in 2012, after the paper was purchased by Michael Ferro, who is now the chairman of Tronc. He was named interim editor of the New York Daily News less than two weeks ago.

D’Vorkin, 65, who was the chief product officer at Forbes until October, becomes chief content officer for Tronc. He will develop content for digital and mobile consumers, according to the company.

D’Vorkin’s three-month tenure at The Times was stormy, marked by two combative newsroom-wide staff meetings. In one, D’Vorkin appeared angry that someone had leaked a recording of the first staff meeting to a New York Times reporter and he dressed down the staff, saying whomever leaked the recording was “morally bankrupt.”

In addition, the newsroom has become alarmed by the hiring in recent months of a handful of news executives.

Those high-level hires have not been announced to the newsroom, sparking suspicion about the company’s motives for the new team. The unrest attracted the attention of other major publicatio­ns, including the Washington Post, Huffington Post and the New York Times.

Reporters and editors have been worried that Tronc was building a shadow newsroom in an effort to blur the lines between news and advertisin­g in a bid to boost revenue. Editors and reporters have asked questions about the business-side operation, but D’Vorkin and other Tronc executives declined to discuss their plans.

Traditiona­lly, a virtual wall separates the newsroom from the business executives, including the ad sales team, as a way to protect the journalist­s and maintain credibilit­y with readers.

“We are continuing to invest in high-quality journalism, which will always be the company’s top priority,” Justin Dearborn, Tronc’s chief executive, said in a statement.

“Jim Kirk is a talented news veteran who is the ideal person to lead the Los Angeles Times newsroom,” Dearborn added. “We believe his establishe­d passion for news, and his management experience with big-city news teams, make him uniquely qualified.”

Kirk will report to Tronc President Tim Knight, according to Kollias.

With the latest management shake-up, it’s unclear what will become of the recently hired but unannounce­d senior editors D’Vorkin had recruited, including Louise Story, a former investigat­ive reporter at the New York Times who was listed in a company directory as a managing editor; and Bruce Upbin, who worked with D’Vorkin at Forbes as technology editor.

The situation with D’Vorkin appeared to come to a head after a withering article about D’Vorkin published Wednesday in the Columbia Journalism Review. The article was titled “LA Journalism’s ‘Prince of Darkness.’ ”

Later Wednesday, D’Vorkin suspended Kimi Yoshino, the popular business editor for the last four years. No reason was given to the staff about why she was being suspended, prompting her colleagues in the business department to write a letter to D’Vorkin protesting her treatment.

The newsroom voted overwhelmi­ngly this month to join the NewsGuild-Communicat­ions Workers of America.

“The Los Angeles Times Guild would like to congratula­te Jim Kirk on being named the next editor in chief of the Los Angeles Times. We also look forward to working together in the future as one team — and we look forward to hearing his plans for the paper,” the steering committee said in a statement.

The latest shake-up comes just 10 days after The Times’ publisher, Ross Levinsohn, was placed on unpaid leave following revelation­s that he had been a defendant in two sexual harassment lawsuits while he worked at other media companies before joining The Times. People who previously worked with Levinsohn said that he fostered a “frat boy” culture and that he made sexist and homophobic remarks.

Tronc then hired the Sidley Austin law firm to investigat­e the allegation­s against Levinsohn made in a detailed report by National Public Radio. Investigat­ors have been interviewi­ng the people who worked for Levinsohn, and the firm’s probe has not been completed, according to two knowledgea­ble people.

 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? JIM KIRK previously served as editor of the Chicago Sun-Times.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times JIM KIRK previously served as editor of the Chicago Sun-Times.
 ??  ?? LEWIS D’Vorkin will move to a role within The Times’ parent company.
LEWIS D’Vorkin will move to a role within The Times’ parent company.

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