SUFFOLK CLOSEUP
By Karl Grossman
Once there were two daily newspapers on Long Island competing vigorously with each other—Newsday and the Long Island Press, where I was a columnist and did investigative reporting. But the Long Island Press, founded in 1821 as the Long Island Farmer, in 1977 suddenly ended publication—after those 156 years! That left one Long Island daily newspaper.
Once there were more than a dozen cable TV outlets on Long Island. Then came Cablevision gobbling up all the cable TV outlets leaving only one, with its monopoly position somewhat moderated by Verizon beginning its Fios service a decade ago.
Meanwhile, Cablevision acquired Newsday in 2008 for $650 million leaving Long Island with one company owning its only daily paper and its dominant cable TV system.
Last month, in a $17.7 billion deal, Cablevision and Newsday were acquired by Altice, a Netherlands-based company with an empire of cable TV and telecommunications operations overseas. It’s big in nations including Belgium, France, Luxembourg, Portugal, Israel and Switzerland.
The Fair Media Council, founded on Long Island in 1979 and describing itself on its website as “one of the oldest media watchdogs in the country,” a non-profit entity that “advocates for quality local news and works to create a media savvy society,” has been among the organizations opposing the Altice acquisition.
The council has said an Altice purchase caused it to have “grave concern for the public interest, public safety and the local economy.” It has warned of a prompt and dramatic cut in expenses by Altice. Indeed, Altice is known for this. “Altice’s claim to fame is cost-cutting,” as the council’s executive director Jaci Clement told Long Island Business News last year.
Moreover, Ms. Clement and the council have been—and are—deeply worried about monopoly control in Long Island media. As she declared to Long Island Business News
“For Long Island…back in 2008, I didn’t want one entity [Cablevision] owning both Newsday and News 12”—Cablevision’s TV news operation—“and I still don’t. Lots of people didn’t understand that back then, but have since come to see how media consolidation hurts both the quality and the quantity of the news.”
Following the Altice acquisition of Cablevision, Moody’s Investor Service downgraded Cablevision’s debt by two levels—to a speculative grade. “We believe that Altice will quickly reduce costs,” said Moody’s. Altice is readying $450 million in yearly savings, it said.
“However, if the cost cuts drive too fast a pace of organizational change and headcount reduction, this could result in disruption of Cablevision’s service quality and lead to market share erosion.” Moody’s cited “this business risk, combined with the elevated financial risk from the debt raised to fund the transaction.” Moody’s expects Verizon’s Fios “to gain market share if Cablevision stumbles operationally.”
Newsday has been noted for its investigative reporting since its founding in 1940? Investigative reporting is an expensive proposition. Cablevision, based in Bethpage, has been a family entity led by patriarch Charles Dolan. He’s a native of Cleveland, Ohio. Once, at a Press Club of Long Island function, I shared my experience as an Antioch College student doing an internship at the Cleveland Press, the first newspaper of publisher E.W. Scripps and known for investigative reporting going back to the Muckraking Era of the early 1900s. Mr. Dolan reflected on the great respect he had for the newspaper and the crusading editor who headed it when I was there, Louis Seltzer. Working at it inspired me to get into investigative reporting.
Mr. Dolan, like Louis Seltzer, has understood that a central mission of journalism is to be a check on, to challenge power. Under the Dolans, solid investigative reporting has continued at Newsday.
A Town of Smithtown man, the late Bob Greene, was for many years the star investigative journalist at Newsday. At the newspaper from 1955 until his retirement in 1992, Mr. Greene, of Kings Park, led investigative teams that won two Pulitzer Prizes. The first, in 1970, was for exposing land deals involving government officials in Islip Town, and the second, for years later, was for “The Heroin Trail,” a series that tracked heroin from Turkish poppy fields to the streets of Long Island. Mr. Greene also brought together reporters from across the country to uncover corruption in Arizona after Don Bolles, a journalist for the Arizona Republic in Phoenix, was killed by a car bomb in 1976 as he was investigating the Mafia and Arizona politicians. Newsday’s Greene assembled a team that followed up on Mr. Bolle’s work and put together a 23-part series which ran in newspapers around the United States. At the time, Mr. Greene commented that what was called the “The Arizona Project” would make people “think twice” about killing journalists. “We are buying life insurance on our own reporters,” he said.
Altice is led by Patrick Drahl, born in Casablanca, Morocco, moving at 15 with his family to France, studying fiber optics, and subsequently jumping into cable TV and telecommunications.
Why did Cablevision sell to Altice? Leon Lazaroff, who writes on the financial website The Street, explained last year: “That Cablevision had to sell or find a partner has been obvious. The traditional cable bundle is under attack, as streaming services from Netflix…and Time Warner’s…HBO NOW along with popular video platforms from Google’s…YouTube and Facebook…divert viewers from pay TV channels, bringing marketers and their money along with them.”
When it comes to cable TV, Charles Dolan would know when to buy and sell. He made his initial fortune founding HBO in 1971, the first premium program service in cable TV, and subsequently selling it to Time Life.
Meanwhile, this Thursday, July 7th, came the announcement that Charles Dolan’s son, Patrick, is buying a majority stake in the Newsday Media Group from Altice. He will own 75 percent of Newsday. With a background himself as a journalist, Patrick Dolan will become president of Newsday Media and continue to run News 12, which he has for many years.
Newsday, in a story on this quoted Patrick Dolan as saying: “My father and I, together with our Altice partners, are deeply committed to preserving the state-of-the-art journalism that Newsday has consistently provided and that has served Long Islanders so well.” The article also said his father will serve on a new board of directors of Newsday Media.
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Karl Grossman is a veteran investigative reporter and columnist, the winner of numerous awards for his work and a member of the L.I. Journalism Hall of Fame. He is a professor of journalism at SUNY/College at Old Westbury and the author of six books.