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Media Layoff of the Day: Associated Press Cutting 10 Percent

Media company layoffs are now the rule, not the exception, but this one is still noteworthy: The Associated Press, the workhorse of U.S. journalism, is firing 10 percent of its staff, or about 400 people. Rival newswire Reuters has details, though Gawker had first crack at it, if you’re counting.

Why is this noteworthy? Because the AP, which is actually a cooperative owned by 1,500+ member newspapers, supplies the bulk of the content that fills your daily newspaper or Web site, or whatever.

Since much of the copy the AP produces is lifted from its participating members–that’s the point of the co-op structure–the cuts don’t necessarily mean that its output is going to diminish in any way. But if it does, it poses a real problem for the same companies that are currently cutting their own staffs, since they depend on the AP to fill their holes.

Time Warner’s (TWX) Time magazine, for instance, just laid off many of its foreign bureau reporters. Right now, Time can reasonably expect wire services like the AP to pick up the slack (that image above is an AP mailbox from Belgrade). But if they don’t…

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  • This is another sign of the crumbling newspaper industry. As a former journalist, I'm concerned with how our coverage will consist of fewer voices.

    Hopefully journalists out of the business will find ways to practice their craft through such things as social media.
  • Melissa Robinson
    Actually, "much of the copy the AP produces" wasn't "lifted." (I was there for a decade.) Stories in other newspapers were matched, verified and expanded upon by AP through our own reporting. Actual "pick ups" from other newspapers were reserved for true exclusives. Then, AP would follow up with its own updated version. The point being that there is a ton of original reporting done at AP that will be lost.
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