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Washington Post to be sold to Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon

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  • Washington Post to be sold to Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon

    Washington Post to be sold to Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon

    The Washington Post

    Paul Farhi
    8/5/2013

    Excerpt:

    The Washington Post Co. agreed Monday to sell its flagship newspaper to Amazon.com founder and chief executive Jeffrey P. Bezos, ending the Graham family’s stewardship of one of America’s leading news organizations after four generations.

    Bezos, whose entrepreneurship has made him one of the world’s richest men, will pay $250 million in cash for The Post and affiliated publications to The Washington Post Co., which owns the newspaper and other businesses.

    Seattle-based Amazon will have no role in the purchase; Bezos himself will buy the news organization and become its sole owner when the sale is completed, probably within 60 days. The Post Co. will get a new, still undecided name and continue as a publicly traded company without the newspaper.

    The deal represents a sudden and stunning turn of events for The Post, Washington’s leading newspaper for decades and a powerful force in shaping the nation’s politics and policy. Few people were aware that a sale was in the works for the paper, an institution that has covered presidents and local communities and gained worldwide attention for its stories about the Watergate scandal and, in June, disclosures about National Security Agency surveillance programs.

    Post Co. chairman and chief executive Donald E. Graham and Post publisher Katharine Weymouth, his niece, broke the news of the sale to a packed meeting of employees at the company’s headquarters in downtown Washington on Monday. The mood was hushed; several veteran employees cried as Graham and Weymouth took turns reading statements and answering questions. “Everyone who was in that room knows how much Don and Katharine love the paper and how hard this must have been for them,” said David Ignatius, a veteran Post columnist who was visibly moved after the meeting.

    But for much of the past decade, The Post has been unable to escape the financial turmoil that has engulfed newspapers and other “legacy” media organizations. The rise of the Internet and the epochal change from print to digital technology have created a massive wave of competition for traditional news companies, scattering readers and advertisers across a radically altered news and information landscape and triggering mergers, bankruptcies and consolidation among the owners of print and broadcasting properties.

    ......................................

    View the complete article at:

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/nation...f4d_story.html
    B. Steadman

  • #2
    Free Republic is running a thread titled, 'Washington Post to be sold to Jeff Bezos', which was started 8/5/2013 by 'Second Amendment First'

    The thread references the 8/5/2013 Washington Post article written by Paul Farhi - http://www.washingtonpost.com/nation...f4d_story.html

    View the complete Free Republic thread at:

    http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3051419/posts



    To: House Atreides

    So why is Obama using an Amazon warehouse as a stage setting for his speech on jobs? Amy Brundage, a deputy White House press secretary, said this to the Chattanooga Times Free Press: “The Amazon facility in Chattanooga is a perfect example of the company that is investing in American workers and creating good, high-wage jobs.” And: “What the president wants to do is to highlight Amazon and the Chattanooga facility as an example of a company that is spurring job growth and keeping our country competitive.”

    73 posted on Monday, August 05, 2013 5:28:51 PM by kabar




    To: GeronL

    What difference does it make? Obama must take care of a person of influence who can be part of his MSM team. No doubt, Bezos will send money and plaudits to the regime.

    78 posted on Monday, August 05, 2013 5:38:13 PM by kabar




    To: RoosterRedux

    There's little doubt anymore that the physical newspaper, sold on the corner or delivered to your home, is fading away. That said, the Washington Post is a premier brand name in news (whatever you want to say about their editorial politics) and could easily be turned into the standard bearer for an Amazon news operation that could compete with Google News, and seamlessly integrate with Amazon marketing.

    It's a smart play.

    86 posted on Monday, August 05, 2013 6:32:27 PM by Bubba Ho-Tep ("More weight!"--Giles Corey)




    To: Second Amendment First

    Jeff Bezos; the guy who turned his corporation, its data processing software and his data servers - to connect the data-dots about individuals - into service for the Obama election campaign; an unaccounted for in-kind campaign contribution.

    If anything, we can expect the politicized left-biased editorial policies of the WashPost to only get worse.

    90 posted on Monday, August 05, 2013 7:14:01 PM by Wuli (uir)




    To: DoughtyOne

    Bezos bought the WaPo to influence legislation and the legislators that vote on it.

    He wants the Marketplace Fairness Act passed in the House (already bought it’s passage in the Senate from Dirty Harry).

    The MFA will seriously disadvantage small local businesses expanding onto the internet, leaving Bezos in control of the internet retail market and selling his services to those small entrepreneurs who sign up to be AZ affiliate sellers because the MFA makes it to difficult, confusing and expensive to do it on their own.

    This is collusion and corruption between big business, big media and big government. Crony crapitalism is going to serve the rest of us a turd sandwich.

    Obama sees the MFA as a cash cow that will save the profligate dem controlled states that are nearing bankruptcy (NY, CA, MA, etc).

    108 posted on Tuesday, August 06, 2013 12:07:01 PM by Valpal1 (If the police can t solve a problem with brute force, they ll find a way to fix it with brute force)
    Last edited by bsteadman; 08-06-2013, 06:38 PM.
    B. Steadman

    Comment


    • #3
      Controversy Swirls Around Obama Speech at Amazon Facility

      Publisher's Weekly

      By Claire Kirch with additional reporting by Judith Rosen
      7/30/2013

      Excerpt:

      Following a scheduled 25-minute tour of the packing floor of a one-million-square-foot Amazon fulfillment warehouse in Chattanooga, Tenn., President Obama made a speech on Tuesday that the White House press office described as “the first in a series of policy speeches” that the Obama administration is calling “a better bargain for the middle class.” Obama’s speech, during a scheduled 90-minute stop at Amazon’s warehouse, was to focus on, the White House said, his proposals to “jumpstart” private sector job growth and to strengthen the manufacturing sector.

      As Obama prepared to leave the White House on Tuesday morning, controversy continued to swirl among the nation’s independent booksellers about the visit to Amazon’s Chattanooga facility, which employs 1,700 workers. While starting salaries for “fulfillment associates” at Amazon’s Chattanooga warehouse could not be confirmed, a job listing posted Tuesday on Amazon.com advertised positions at $11/hour, plus benefits, for full-time workers in the company’s Murfreesboro, Tenn., fulfillment warehouse, 100 miles away.

      To date, the American Booksellers Association and two regional booksellers associations, the New England Independent Booksellers Association and the New Atlantic Independent Booksellers Association, have weighed in on the matter with letters sent to the White House.

      The ABA wrote in their letter to Obama that for the president to talk up jobs and the economy at an Amazon facility, and to praise the company as a job creator is “woefully misguided.”

      Amazon’s business practices, the ABA explained, “are actually harming small businesses and the American economy.” Referring to Amazon’s announcement Monday that it is hiring 5,000 employees in 17 fulfillment centers and another 2,000 full-time, part-time, and seasonal workers in four customer service centers, the ABA alleged that Amazon has caused the loss of many jobs, due to driving out of business numerous small businesses that can’t compete with Amazon’s heavily discounted prices. According to the Institute for Local Self-Reliance, the ABA pointed out, for every $10 million that shifts from bricks-and-mortar stores to Amazon.com, 33 retail jobs are lost.

      “That would mean, for 2012 alone, Amazon cost the U.S. 42,000 jobs just last year,” the ABA wrote, also pointing out that Amazon.com “has flouted sales tax laws” and “negatively impacted state budgets and services, as well as those of local communities.”

      Piling on with their own letters to the President, those from the two regional booksellers organizations were considerably sharper and more pointed than the ABA’s tactfully-worded communication. NEIBA demanded to know, “What is the thinking behind this decision? . . . [Amazon's] business model is based on fighting those states that have required them to collect and remit sales tax while driving Main Street brick and mortar stores out of business through predatory pricing.”

      “We cannot believe this is your vision of job creation and the future of American middle class,” wrote NAIBA. “We would hope your administration would be standing with Main Street, and investigating the monopolistic practices of Amazon, rather than explicitly or tacitly endorsing those practices.”

      ...............................................

      View the complete article at:

      http://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/b...-facility.html
      B. Steadman

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