Tribune Company Files For Bankruptcy Protection

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VINNEE TONG and ANICK JESDANUN | December 8, 2008 08:17 PM EST | AP

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In this March 30, 2007 file photo, pedestrians walk past the Tribune Tower in Chicago. Tribune Co., owner of the Los Angeles Times and Chicago Tribune, other newspapers and the Chicago Cubs and Wrigley Field, has hired financial advisers ahead of a possible filing for bankruptcy-court protection, according to reports on Sunday, Dec. 7, 2008. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green, File)

NEW YORK — Tribune Co. _ owner of the Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune, Baltimore Sun and other dailies _ filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy Monday, the first major newspaper publisher to take such a step since the Internet plunged the industry into a desperate struggle for survival.

The media conglomerate was smothered by a drop-off in advertising and a crushing $13 billion in debt from the company's takeover a year ago by Chicago real estate mogul Sam Zell.

Chapter 11 would buy the Tribune Co. time to put its finances in order. Analysts said the company will almost certainly have to sell off some of its major holdings _ and that could prove extremely difficult because of the bad economy and the poor outlook for newspapers.

"When you look at the near term, prospects for the company and the industry are certainly not very bright," said Dave Novosel, an analyst with the Gimme Credit research firm.

Tribune Co. employees, who received an ownership stake in the company when Zell came in, could also see the value of their holdings wiped out.

Tribune Co., which has 20,000 employees, owns baseball's Chicago Cubs as well as 10 daily newspapers, including The Hartford (Conn.) Courant and the Orlando (Fla.) Sentinel, cable channels and 23 TV stations. Its papers' total circulation of more than 2 million puts the Tribune Co. among the top three most-read newspaper groups nationwide.

Other newspaper companies have also struggled with heavy debt, a downturn in advertising and the loss of readers to the Internet, but the Tribune Co. was something of a special case.

"Tribune's debt was so outsized and so disproportional to its cash flow compared to these other companies that it can be the sore thumb sticking out rather than an example of the industry," said Ken Doctor, media analyst with Outsell Inc.

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Most of the company's debt comes from the complex deal engineered by Zell. The company's lending agreements require it to keep its debt at a certain point relative to its cash flow. Those deals became harder to meet as revenue declined because of the poor economy and competition from the Internet.

Although the Tribune Co.'s next major debt payment is not due until June, the company was in danger of missing the financial targets set by its lenders. The bankruptcy filing could give the Chicago-based company some time to press its lenders to ease their targets.

To make a debt payment this year, the Tribune Co. sold the Long Island daily Newsday to Cablevision Systems Corp. for $650 million. The Tribune Co. already has made hundreds of layoffs at its papers and reduced the number of pages it puts out.

"So, how did we get here? It has been, to say the least, the perfect storm," Zell, chairman and chief executive, wrote in a memo to employees. "A precipitous decline in revenue and a tough economy have coupled with a credit crisis, making it extremely difficult to support our debt. All of our major advertising categories have been dramatically impacted."

To generate cash _ and meet the next principal payment of $593 million, due in June _ Tribune has been looking to sell the Cubs, Chicago's Wrigley Field and the company's 25 percent stake in a regional sports cable channel. But a tight credit market has made it tougher for potential buyers to obtain loans. (Zell said the Cubs are not part of the bankruptcy filing.)

Longtime Chicago Tribune reporter Maurice Possley, who resigned after winning this year's Pulitzer Prize for investigative journalism, said many talented people have left the paper in recent months, and he worries about the ones who remain.

"I really mourn what is happening," he said in an e-mail. "I hope this great paper can emerge and survive. It would be a tremendous loss to the public if it cannot be saved. I sincerely hope Sam Zell does not dance on this grave."

Brent Jones, a Sun reporter and union leader, said the bankruptcy filing unnerved the newsroom and prompted questions about whether the company might cut more jobs or sell the paper.

The company said severance payments to recently laid-off employees, deferred compensation and other payments to former workers have been discontinued. Essentially, those former employees become creditors who will have to get in line in bankruptcy court.

Philip Gregory, a lawyer for a Times auto critic and five former newsroom employees who sued Tribune in September over Zell's takeover, said the bankruptcy filing was predictable.

"We knew he was going to take this business under," Gregory said. "Of course he's blaming the market, but it's really the $13 billion in debt that he brought into the business."

In filing for bankruptcy, the company reported $13 billion in debt and $7.6 billion in assets.

John Penn, a bankruptcy lawyer at Haynes & Boone, said decisions about whether to sell papers or other assets would boil down to this: "If it makes cash, keep it. If it loses cash, get rid of it. And that's either by selling it, closing it or whatever it takes to stop the bleeding."

Stephen Lubben, a bankruptcy professional at Seton Hall Law School in Newark, N.J., said Tribune employees are particularly vulnerable because they participate in an Employee Stock Ownership Plan. Stockholders are last to be paid in bankruptcy, and often end up with nothing, with the stock getting wiped out.

Employees will not see all of their retirement savings wiped out, though. The company has continued making contributions into traditional retirement plans that are not affected, and many employees have separate 401(k) programs, said Corey Rosen, executive director for the nonprofit research group National Center for Employee Ownership.

___

Associated Press Writers Ben Nuckols in Baltimorem, Mike Robinson in Chicago and Raquel Maria Dillon in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

NEW YORK — Tribune Co. _ owner of the Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune, Baltimore Sun and other dailies _ filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy Monday, the first major newspaper publisher to take su...
NEW YORK — Tribune Co. _ owner of the Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune, Baltimore Sun and other dailies _ filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy Monday, the first major newspaper publisher to take su...
 
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We need a bailout for newspapers. Just as the auto industry is vital to the economy, newspapers are vital to the democracy. And it would cost a lot less. Just one thing, though. Newspapers would have to use the money to transport themselves into the digital age, and leave all that dead tree stuff behind. http://jgogek.wordpress.com/2008/12/10/bailout-for-newspapers-just-as-auto-industry-and-citibank-are-vital-to-economy-newspapers-are-vital-to-democracy/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:30 AM on 12/10/2008

Apparently, the final blow was their inability to strike a deal with the governor.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:00 PM on 12/09/2008

In an interview not too long ago Tribune owner Sam Zelionka revelaed his world view when he characterized the two most important human motivations in the marketplace as fear and greed. He is a pro-war neo-conservative. We don't need his likes controlling major media. The Tribue company is in part behind the prosecution of Rod Blagojevich along with Bank of America. I say good bye and good riddance.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:04 PM on 12/09/2008
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A sad turn of events. I have always liked the Chicago Tribune paper; that is, before it made changes & began a USA Today-type shortened format. I fear that many fine journalists will now find themselves out looking for a job, and in a market & economy that's incredibly difficult to wade through.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:48 AM on 12/09/2008

Zell will be alright, there's already a new buyout on the table:

Zell met with an alien contingency to sell the Tribune to Weekly World News.

http://www.weeklyworldnews.com/headlines/weekly-world-news-in-talks-to-buy-tribune/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:14 AM on 12/09/2008

Every one will suffer EXCEPT for Sam Zell and the Chandler family trust that has already taken their money out several times over. Zell's business plan for the take over sounds a lot like the logic behind the Bush invasion of Iraq - hope for the best and try and find someone to blame if the crap hits the fan - but not to worry about good old Sam, I'm sure he will find a way to grab a suitcase full of cash on his way out of town.

I can't speak for the Tribune or the Sun, but there was a time when the Los Angeles Times was actually a very good newspaper but then it was taken over by members of the Chandler family that didn't know their butt from a hole in the ground about the newspaper business and they hired "suits" whose primary function was to turn the assets into cash for the family - they were very successful at that. Now of course, the Tribune company employees will be left holding the bag - an empty bag.

Thanks a bunch, Mr. Zell and the Chandler clan and a plague on both your houses.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:44 AM on 12/09/2008

The Chandler's owned the Times for DECADES and it was a fine newspaper under the scion of that family. The deterioration began to set in under Sam Zelionka's tutelage.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:07 PM on 12/09/2008
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Well, before we get all misty-eyed about the past, it would be prudent to acknowledge that there are Chandlers and there are Chandlers. The point being: there were a whole lot more Chandlers who wanted to take the money and run than there were Chandlers who gave two hoots about the L.A. Times. The days of Buffy building a music center on a hill where she could see it from her office at Times Square were long gone by the time Tribune "saved" the paper and Zell stole it using the company's own ESOP. For my money, the LAT was doomed when Robert Scheer and Michael Kinsley got the ax (in return for which we got Joel Stein and Jonah Goldberg... whoop-do-do!)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:45 AM on 12/10/2008

For god's sake the Chandlers FOUNDED the Times! It was a great paper under their ownership, but a bit far to the right. Not as far as under Zelionka however.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:10 PM on 12/09/2008

GOOD RIDDANCE!! The Chgo Tribune was a shill for Obama, they never reported the truth and had the gall to endorse him even though they are basically a Republican oriented paper.
The reason people do not buy the Trib is because they know the Trib does not report truthfully. Now all those jerks who slanted the news can go and find a real job.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:03 AM on 12/09/2008

The Tribune endorsed Obama probably because they expect he will do what's best for the interests of the owners of the Tribune. So far it appears, what with increased Faith Based church funding, more war, backtracking on the tax increases for the rich, Obama is Bush Lite and EXACTLY what the Tribune ownership wants.
BTW, it was only the Tribune that exposed the very rich Big Fish backers of Obama back in July of 2007. If they were shilling for Obama then why did they point out his very rich backers, contradicting the meme of Obama Man of the Little People?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:39 PM on 12/09/2008

i am also going to file chap. 11 , and layoff my only two workers. why not if i can get a piece of the pie called Bailoiut fund. just like everyone else.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:18 PM on 12/08/2008

This is my opinion and observation of the the Tribune company.

I've seen them defame many, many people. They've destroyed many lives and reputations in an effort to sensationalize the news and provide "info-taintment" in order to keep the readership. You have to remember that the main customer of media companies is not the viewer or reader. It's the advertisers.

The Tribune company has repeatedly put unethical corporation's unsafe products and services ahead of the safety of the readers and viewers.

They've continually kept the public in the dark on endless amounts of important data and I've seen them push propaganda as much as anyone other media outlet.

Again, this is my opinion of this corporation. I say let them fail because they have done so much damage to this world already that God knows how much more they'll do in the future.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:06 PM on 12/08/2008

Has anyone read a newspaper recently? There is little fresh and new and relevant in the editorial pages and the features are mostly fluffy pices not well done. The NYT hired repretitive liar Bill Kristol this year. W lied to me every day. Why would I pay money to be lied to in the paper? The Trib is home town so its got the weather, sports and funnies. But it has a bunch of stupid and boring writers (son of Monica Lewinski's confidante, Tom Roeser who is incoherent , JOhn Kass whose on the same rag day in, Kathleen Parker a stepford wife conservative and Clarence Page - everyone's favorite aging black oracle on the meaning of Obama). It the Chicago Tribune had smarts and credibility people would be buying it to find out how the hell our country has fallen down so bad, to find if there is anyone in Illinois politics with an ounce of integrity, to look into the life of the city in an edgy way. Sure classifieds are over (why would you look fro a job or a home on paper when you can do precise searches for free on line) and the paper waste is obscene, but newspapers have a role - to get us up and informed in the am. But you got to be able to read them. Now the Trib is not only old and boring but practically unreadable with its new format. Ditto for the WGn properties - irelevent and

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:54 PM on 12/08/2008

Okay, I'm confused. Why the heck are newspapers doing so badly?Is it the bad economy(Which was caused by private banks not marking the prices of securities, then selling tainted collateralized debt obligations as credit default swaps to other banks, and not caused by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac: making sure banks could operate and repackaging of assets into Mortgage backed securities; Got it Hannity?)? Or is it because people are relying on the internet for their news now? If its the latter, then I think some people are just being plane foolish.

Seriously, news only reached the internet that way people could have all the unethical bias that they desperately crave (hence why Fox news is so popular and MSNBC has skyrocketed to CNN's ratings). The internet media should be used for two purposes. To be used as a secondary news source to look up popular arcticles, that can only be looked up online, and to facilitate an addiction to bias(as long as your also buying a newspaper at the same time).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:57 PM on 12/08/2008
- Paul I'm a Fan of Paul permalink

Newspapers are failing because advertising in them is no longer effective.

Got something to sell? Most folks now use ebay or Craig's List. I recently listed a used car for sale in my local paper classifieds and got a grand total of one call in 6 weeks.

Want to buy something? It is usually easier to find and cheaper to buy on-line rather than wading through all that paper and clipping coupons. Retial advertising is hurting 'cause its easier to buy on line and wait for the UPS truck than go to a mall.

But the killer is car advertising. Look at the average Sunday newspaper. Most of it is ads for new cars - and we know where that business is.

Add to that the useless news they publish and editorials that are a joke and there you have it. I cancelled my LA Times subscription after 35 years because it had become a useless rag.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:48 PM on 12/08/2008

I agree, advertising is free and easy on the Internet. Plus, newspapers create waste, destroy forests and are mostly puff pieces anyway. Real journalism is hard to find in any media.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:50 AM on 12/09/2008

I ended my Baltimore Sun subscription long before it became available online due to horrible service. The delivery people (adults not children) take no care in their work. I live in an apt, where each morning you see the papers thrown on the lawn, nowhere near any apt, not even for the people who live on the ground floor.

A few years ago, I had ordered the paper for my Dad and he paid the bill. Months after he died, they called me looking for payment. My Dad lived 15 miles away from me, so I had no idea the paper was still being delivered. I explained that he had passed away and I was not responsible for the bill. The guy then said matter of factly, "So you're not going to pay?"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:47 PM on 12/08/2008

How about we all are broke? America is broke, broken, period!!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:29 PM on 12/08/2008

Sounds like America is being sold, piece by piece by piece! Thanks Dubua, you and your administration did this to us! Things are really getting bad. They need to call it what it is... the beginning throws of a Great Depression.... all the dominoes are falling, one by one!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:27 PM on 12/08/2008
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All that will be left is angry liberals, angry conservatives and guns. Oh wait! Libs don't have guns sorry!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:31 PM on 12/08/2008
- Meah I'm a Fan of Meah permalink
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Incompetance and greed. We are experiencing the devolution of incompenance. The demise of greed. From the top down this country cannot elect such people to represent them and expect that everything is going to go on like it always has. When is somebody going to say that our country has been looted?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:10 PM on 12/08/2008
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