Anna Quindlen’s Classy and Optimistic Goodbye to ‘Newsweek’

Filed in National by on May 4, 2009

It really doesn’t get any classier than this.  Reading submissions from outstanding young reporters vying for the Livingston Prize convinced Quindlen that new voices needed to be heard:

The last bit of evidence arrived in the form of three binders of news clippings. Because all the submissions for the Livingston Awards have to come from reporters under the age of 35, looking at the dates of birth on the entry forms for the finalists was like a stroll through my own past.

This young man was born the year I graduated from college, that young woman just about the time I became a reporter at The New York Times, this one when I was covering city hall, that one when I was writing my first column.

Needless to say, this made me feel really old.

But my second response to reading over the stories was delight. They were so thoroughly reported, so well written. Whether local, national or international news, they were just what journalism ought to be. The next time anyone insists the business won’t survive I may bash him with one of these binders, which are heavy with hope for the future.

They also made me think again about my own future. These clippings thoroughly ratified a decision I began to make a year or so ago, that has led me here, to my last LAST WORD column for NEWSWEEK.

It’s a shame that someone as acutely perceptive as Quindlen recognizes the problem that far less acute pundits dismiss (yes, David Broder, ‘bulo means you) as jealousy or something.

It’s particularly glaring when this generational stall happens in the news business, which constantly remakes itself in the image and likeness of the world. And it is egregious when it happens in the small subset of the pundit class, which is supposed to take the nation’s temperature. It’s undeniable: America’s opinionators are too white and too gray. They do not reflect our diversity of ethnicity and race, gender and generation. They do not reflect the diversity of opinion, either, mainly because most are part of an echo chamber of received wisdom that takes place at restaurant tables in New York and Washington. 

With the kind of talented reporters that Quindlen cites, journalism will survive and even flourish with or without newspapers. Or newsmagazines. The news deliverers are here. The new delivery system(s) will inevitably follow. People will read good work. Like Quindlen’s.


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  1. cassandra_m says:

    That was classy. Quindlen could be very sharp or very frustrating — but mainly because I don’t have much tolerance for preciousness. To her point, though. I wonder if the pundit class has served its purpose on the national stage. More interesting thinkers are available all over the Internet from the full range of ideologies. For example, I listen to NPR alot and I can’t help hear Cokie Roberts and Juan Williams talk about politics as really bad bloggers. Neither is doing anything more than report what the villagers are thinking and neither ever sound connected to anything real going on.

  2. The ‘nets have brought democracy to the talking heads class. It wasn’t that long that the Fred Barnes’, Morton Kondrackes, George Wills, Cokie Roberts’, and Sam Donaldsons of this world were among the few choices. The great stuff now available at Talking Points Memo, HuffPo, Daily Kos, Americablog and, of course, Delaware Liberal, have rendered those dinosaurs virtually obsolete.

    All hail unplanned obsolescence!

  3. Unstable Isotope says:

    That sounds like a very perceptive column by Quindlen. She’s right that they need diversity of voices and with the internet, they don’t all have to live in NY and DC. They can live anywhere in the country.

  4. At VibrantNation.com we don’t think making room for young talent means that women 50+ have to silence themselves or retire (which is just what the marketplace has been telling us for years). We’re so interested in what vibrant women like Anna Quindlen have to offer that we’ve offered her a job … read more at http://www.vibrantnation.com/stephen-reily-flash-forward/2009/05/14/anna-quindlen-too-old-for-newsweek-but-not-for-vibrant-nation/