The Miami Herald

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The July 27, 2005 front page of
The Miami Herald
Type Daily newspaper
Format Broadsheet

Owner The McClatchy Company
Publisher David Landsberg
Editor Anders Gyllenhaal
Founded 1903
Headquarters Herald Plaza
Miami, Florida 33132
Flag of the United States United States
Circulation 272,299 Daily
342,432 Sunday[1]
ISSN 0898-865X

Website: www.MiamiHerald.com

The Miami Herald is a daily newspaper owned by The McClatchy Company headquartered in Downtown Miami, Florida. It primarily serves Miami-Dade and Broward counties in the U.S. state of Florida, but also circulates throughout South Florida, the Caribbean, Latin America, and throughout the United States.

Contents

[edit] Overview

The newspaper employs 2,024 people in Miami and across several bureaus, including Bogotá, Managua, Tallahassee, Vero Beach, Key West, Broward County, and shared space in McClatchy's Washington bureau. Its newsroom staff of about 450 includes 144 reporters, 69 editors, 69 copy editors, 29 photographers, five graphic artists (not including page designers), 11 columnists, six critics, 48 editorial specialists, and 18 news assistants.

The newspaper has been awarded 19 Pulitzer Prizes since beginning publication in 1903.[2] Well-known columnists are Pulitzer-winning political commentator Leonard Pitts, Jr., humorist Dave Barry and novelist Carl Hiaasen. Other columnists include Ana Menendez, Fred Grimm, Edwin Pope, Robert Steinback, and Ana Veciana-Suarez. David Landsberg is the publisher, and Anders Gyllenhaal is the executive editor.

The newspaper averages 88 pages daily and 212 pages Sunday. The Herald's coverage of Latin American and Hispanic affairs is widely considered among the best of U.S. newspapers.

[edit] History

The first edition was published September 15, 1903, as The Miami Evening Record. The newspaper was renamed The Miami Herald on December 1, 1910. However, it is not Miami's oldest newspaper. The Tropical Sun, established in 1891, was the first, followed by The Miami Metropolis in 1896 (Update, Vol. 10, Num. 3, August 1983, Miami: Historical Association of Southern Florida, p. 13), The Miami Metropolis was later renamed The Miami Daily News, then simply the Miami News. The Miami News was The Miami Herald's longest competitor until 1988 when it went out of business.

During the Florida Real Estate Boom for thirteen months in 1925 and 1926 The Miami Herald was the largest newspaper in the world as measured by lines of advertising.[3]

The Herald came close to receivership but recovered in the 1930s.

On 1937-10-25, John S. Knight, son of a noted Ohio newspaperman, bought The Herald from Frank B. Shutts. Knight became editor and publisher and made his brother, James L. Knight, the business manager. The Herald had 383 employees.

Lee Hills arrived as city editor in September 1942. He later became The Herald's publisher and eventually chairman of Knight-Ridder Inc., a position he held until 1981.

The 2007-03-05 front page of The Miami Herald International Edition
The 2007-03-05 front page of The Miami Herald International Edition

The Miami Herald International Edition, printed by partner newspapers throughout the Caribbean and Latin America, began in 1946. It was later extended to Mexico in 2002.

The Herald won its first Pulitzer Prize in 1950, for its reporting on Miami's organized crime. Its circulation was 176,000 daily and 204,000 on Sundays.

On 1960-08-19, construction began on the present Herald building on Biscayne Bay. Also on that day, Alvah H. Chapman, started work as James Knight’s assistant. Chapman was later promoted to Knight-Ridder chairman and chief executive officer. The Herald moved into its new building at One Herald Plaza without missing an edition on March 23-24, 1963.

Publication of a Spanish language supplemental insert named El Herald began in 1976. It was renamed El Nuevo Herald in 1987, and in 1998 became an independent publication.

In 2003, The Miami Herald and El Universal of Mexico City created an international joint venture, and in 2004 they together launched The Herald Mexico, a short-lived English language newspaper for readers in Mexico. Its final issue was published in May 2007.

As of 2004, The Herald was the country's 24th-largest newspaper, with a Sunday circulation of 447,326, according to the Audit Bureau of Circulations.

The Herald was once Knight Ridder's flagship paper, but that distinction was shifted to the San Jose Mercury News.

[edit] Controversies

[edit] Teele-DeFede Incident

On July 27, 2005, former Miami city commissioner Arthur Teele walked into the main lobby of the Miami Herald headquarters, dropped off a package for columnist Jim DeFede, and told a security guard to tell Miami Herald columnist Jim DeFede to tell his wife Stephanie he 'loved her' before pulling out a gun and committing suicide by one shot to the head. His suicide happened the day the Miami New Times, a weekly newspaper, published salacious details of Teele's alleged affairs, including allegations Teele had sex and used cocaine with a transsexual prostitute. At the time, Teele was being investigated by federal authorities for fraud and money laundering for allegedly taking $59,000 in kickbacks to help a businessman get millions of dollars in contracts at Miami International Airport. The IRS also had an ongoing investigation of Mr. Teele. Teele was suspended from his job in 2004 by Gov. Jeb Bush after being arrested for trying to run a police officer off the road. Teele was also charged in December 2004 with 10 counts of unlawful compensation on charges he took $135,000 from TLMC Inc., and promised they would be awarded lucrative contracts to redevelop neighborhoods in Miami. Teele was also found guilty in March of 2005 for threatening an undercover detective.

Shortly before committing suicide, Teele had a telephone conversation with Jim DeFede. DeFede recorded this call without Teele's knowledge. Under Florida law, it is illegal to secretly tape a call when a speaker has an expectation of privacy. Following the shooting, DeFede admitted to Herald management that he taped the call and acknowledged that it was a mistake. Although the paper used quotes from the tape in its coverage, editor Tom Fiedler and publisher Jesus Diaz fired DeFede the next day. Fiedler argued that DeFede had violated the paper's code of ethics and was likely guilty of a felony. Many journalists and readers of the Herald disagreed with the decision to fire rather than suspend DeFede, arguing that it was made in haste and that the punishment was disproportionate to the offense. 528 journalists, including about 200 current and former Herald staffers, called on the Herald to reinstate DeFede, but the paper's management refused to back down. The state attorney's office later declined to file charges against the columnist, holding that the potential violation was "without a (living) victim or a complainant."

[edit] Government-paid journalists

On September 8, 2006, Miami Herald's president Jesús Díaz Jr. fired three journalists because they had allegedly been paid by the United States Government to work in anti-Cuba propaganda TV and radio channels. The three were Pablo Alfonso, Wilfredo Cancio Isla and Olga Connor.[4]. Less than a month later, and following the pressure of the Cuban community in Miami, Díaz resigned after reinstating the fired journalists. Nevertheless, he continues claiming that such payments, especially if coming from organisms of the state, violate the principles of journalistic independence[5]. At least seven other journalists that do not work at the Herald, namely Miguel Cossio, Carlos Alberto Montaner, Juan Manuel Cao, Ariel Remos, Omar Claro, Helen Aguirre Ferre, Paul Crespo and Ninoska Perez-Castellón, were also paid for programs on Radio Martí or TV Martí [6], both financed by the government of the United States through the Broadcasting Board of Governors, receiving a total of between 15,000 and 175,000 USD since 2001.

[edit] Community involvement

The Miami Herald sponsors several community involvement projects. The Silver Knight Awards have been held every spring since 1959. The awards are given in several categories to high school seniors who are nominated by faculty committees in their schools. Typical nominees will not only have excelled in their classroom studies but also served to better their community in some way. 18,000 students have been recognized since the program was started.

The Wish Book program lets people from the community who are suffering from hardships of varying types ask for help from the readers. Wishes have included asking for donations to buy medical equipment for a sick child, help with renovations to make a home wheelchair accessible, monetary donation to an impoverished family dealing with cancer treatments, and help to an elderly resident wanting to learn how to use a computer. Readers may make donations to specific causes or to the program at large.

The Miami Herald also co-sponsors spelling bees and athletic awards in South Florida. On those years when a co-sponsor cannot be found for the spelling bees, the Miami Herald has declined to foot the entire bill, and thus the spelling bees have been cancelled. The Tropic section and its columnist Dave Barry also run a unique annual puzzlehunt in the Miami area called the Tropic Hunt.

[edit] Pulitzer Prizes

[edit] References

  1. ^ 2007 Top 100 Daily Newspapers in the U.S. by Circulation (PDF). BurrellesLuce (2007-03-31). Retrieved on 2007-05-28.
  2. ^ The McClatchy Company Newspapers: The Miami Herald. The McClatchy Company. Retrieved on 2006-12-26.
  3. ^ Smiley, Nixon. Knights of the Fourth Estate; The Story of the Miami Herald. Miami, FL; E. A. Seeman, 1974. Page 54.
  4. ^ US 'paid anti-Cuba journalists'. BBC News (2006-09-09). Retrieved on 2006-09-09.
  5. ^ "Herald publisher resigns" Sun Sentinel.
  6. ^ "10 Miami journalists take U.S. pay" - Miami Herald.

[edit] External links

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