< Back to All News

Philly newspaper people cheer new owner

Employees of Knight Ridder newspapers suffered debilitating cuts year after year. Then, when the company was put up for sale last year, they worried about who would buy the papers. In what might be termed a happy ending, employees at the former KR’s papers in Philadelphia cheered their new boss Brian Tierney (pictured) on his first day on the job, according to this report in the Philadelphia Inquirer. Anna Bevan, an advertising employee, said: “This man is giving us hope.” Of course reporters are always cynical, including the Inquirer’s Barbara Boyer, who said: “Within three months, the honeymoon will be over and either we’ll start to see significant change or we’ll start feeling a frustration level … We’re all craving change.” The Philadelphia Inquirer (350,000 circulation weekdays, 705,000 Sundays) and Daily News (116,000 weekdays, no Sunday) were bought by a group of local owners led by Tierney, an advertising and PR man who is a native of the city of brotherly love. (Photo from the Philadelphia Weekly.)

Tierney’s letter to readers about local ownership and the public trust
How Tierney turned the ownership change into a city-wide celebration
Tierney’s biography — awed by his own Horatio Alger arc
Job 1 for new owners: Raise papers’ profile

< Back to All News