More info...
The Metro is indeed "sold" or structured in some way that there is a new publisher. There are to be massive changes (GOOD) and it is to be transformed into a "city" style publication. I assume this means more lifestyle coverage.
THAT won't be as easy of a sale.
San Diego Magazine, Riviera Magazine, 944, San Diego Home and Garden, and now the Metro... all chasing the same tail? It could have been an interesting challenge but it isn't going to be for me.
I finally had my audience with the new cat. Our massive staff of 4 people apparently made it difficult to get around to the meeting. It was much as I suspected, with the new broom came sweeping changes that brought in people he already had in tow.
Bob Page, the new owner, had no idea how much publishing experience I bring to the table. National magazine experience, publisher of the Downtown newspaper, design awards, community awards, blah, blah, blah I'm so wonderful awards. You get the point. He has no idea what he's losing. It strikes me as strange to not even do your homework on what it is you're buying. That's fine of course, just a little clumsy.
Clumsy is what REALLY bugged me about this last week. Since I had a big, 36 page awards program project that needed to go to press; nobody had put it in writing that I would even get paid for it so I was avoided with ninja-like precision. I assume they didn't want to chance me bolting on them. All that avoidance did was whack the hornets nest in my brain, make me feel disrespected and in a very bolting mood.
A short work-stoppage brought it to a conclusion and I am to be vamoosed from the Metro and North Park News. As it had been written from day one and completely avoided from that same moment with a lot of phony reassurances from those exiting.
Editor Tim McClain is tossed too. (See new broom reference) That guy should be snapped up as soon as he recovers from transitory burnout. He is a un-reformable workaholic and fanatical about his endeavors. You've got no idea how hard this cat worked. He was challenged and confined by the old Metro standards, so of late the world hasn't really seen what he is capable of, but from within I can tell you he was a brutally hard worker, freakishly organized, and one of the greatest multi-taskers I have ever worked with. Really, he was like a "buy one - get three free" human promotion.
I wish I had another project to lure him with. He was the only one that worked at the ridiculous pace that I did and he did it for the same reasons. He likes that intensity.
We'll see, maybe I DO have a project.