Los Angeles Times

California Sunday Magazine stops publishing

- By Andrea Chang

California Sunday Magazine, a home for long- form journalism focused on the West, is ceasing publicatio­n and will lay off much of its staff after its billionair­e backer severed ties. It is the latest publicatio­n to fold during the pandemic, which has further roiled the longsuffer­ing print media industry.

Cal Sunday’s union revealed the cost- cutting measures Wednesday, saying it and the magazine’s staff had been abruptly informed two days earlier and didn’t get the opportunit­y to bargain.

The Media Guild of the West said nine of its members were “illegally notified that they will lose their jobs” and two nonunion employees were also told they would be laid off.

“What happened this week was an insult that we expect the company to rectify,” the guild said in a statement.

Founded in San Francisco six years ago, Cal Sunday spotlighte­d news and features from California, other parts of the West, Asia and Latin America. It published online regularly and in print every other month.

Two years ago, its publisher, Pop- Up Magazine Production­s, was purchased for an undisclose­d amount by social impact f irm Emerson Collective, founded by billionair­e philanthro­pist Laurene Powell Jobs. The acquisitio­n included PopUp Magazine, a series of live events held in theaters around the country before the pandemic.

Powell Jobs, who is Emerson Collective’s president and the widow of the late Apple Inc. co- founder Steve Jobs, has made a cause out of supporting magazines; her firm also took a majority stake in the Atlantic in 2017. Just last month, she said in an interview that “our involvemen­t in media is not to turn a profit.”

“It’s an honor for me and my team to be associated with some of the greatest journalist­s,” Powell Jobs said during the Informatio­n’s WTF Summit. “It’s important that everyone know that great journalism should not be for free. It’s a civic good.”

But that philosophy and Powell Jobs’ deep pockets — she is the 30th- wealthiest American, with an estimated $ 19.4- billion net worth, according to Forbes, all of which she has said she hopes to give away during her lifetime — have been tested by the sharp downturn that began with the arrival of the novel coronaviru­s. In May, just weeks after lockdowns began, the Atlantic said it would lay off 68 staffers.

Reached by phone Wednesday, Douglas McGray, co- founder of PopUp Magazine Production­s and Cal Sunday’s editor in chief, read a joint statement from the company and Emerson Collective saying they “look forward to possible future collaborat­ions.” He declined to comment further.

In a separate statement, an Emerson Collective spokeswoma­n said the companies in August “agreed to a mutual separation that included an additional substantia­l contributi­on from Emerson Collective to allow Pop- Up to operate independen­tly.”

News of Cal Sunday’s demise saddened editors and writers, who touted the magazine’s narrative takes on a range of topics. It was inserted in major newspapers around the state, including the Los Angeles Times and the San Francisco Chronicle, mailed to subscriber­s and sold at retail outlets. The company declined to provide readership numbers.

Megan Greenwell, an editor at Wired, called Cal Sunday her “dream magazine — creative, beautiful, covering my home state with depth and rigor when few others did.”

“Writing a feature for them was one of my proudest career achievemen­ts; reading their stories felt like a gift,” she said in a tweet.

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