The Prague Post - Taylor Swift, Beyonce reporting jobs trigger controversy

EUR -
AED 4.30282
AFN 77.5919
ALL 96.489516
AMD 446.751458
ANG 2.097695
AOA 1074.386737
ARS 1699.031673
AUD 1.767888
AWG 2.111868
AZN 1.987765
BAM 1.955588
BBD 2.358544
BDT 143.214439
BGN 1.956761
BHD 0.441452
BIF 3462.423785
BMD 1.171633
BND 1.513829
BOB 8.092121
BRL 6.497058
BSD 1.170973
BTN 104.923599
BWP 16.47121
BYN 3.441626
BYR 22964.000811
BZD 2.355144
CAD 1.616051
CDF 2997.624825
CHF 0.931208
CLF 0.027205
CLP 1067.228913
CNY 8.249407
CNH 8.240866
COP 4489.040371
CRC 584.836454
CUC 1.171633
CUP 31.048266
CVE 110.25302
CZK 24.336809
DJF 208.527342
DKK 7.468942
DOP 73.35203
DZD 152.301451
EGP 55.787644
ERN 17.57449
ETB 181.917833
FJD 2.675654
FKP 0.875688
GBP 0.874495
GEL 3.145768
GGP 0.875688
GHS 13.449539
GIP 0.875688
GMD 85.529546
GNF 10235.931481
GTQ 8.973025
GYD 244.99338
HKD 9.115707
HNL 30.849648
HRK 7.534068
HTG 153.531352
HUF 386.375167
IDR 19667.495062
ILS 3.747057
IMP 0.875688
INR 105.047456
IQD 1534.039863
IRR 49325.736013
ISK 147.215756
JEP 0.875688
JMD 187.369641
JOD 0.830721
JPY 184.36871
KES 151.017792
KGS 102.459486
KHR 4699.429211
KMF 492.086008
KPW 1054.469152
KRW 1733.548819
KWD 0.35996
KYD 0.975898
KZT 605.996741
LAK 25362.35245
LBP 104864.00584
LKR 362.562153
LRD 207.267479
LSL 19.644449
LTL 3.459527
LVL 0.708709
LYD 6.34731
MAD 10.733734
MDL 19.824846
MGA 5325.421358
MKD 61.543313
MMK 2460.76473
MNT 4160.603437
MOP 9.38562
MRU 46.863908
MUR 54.08284
MVR 18.101237
MWK 2030.579364
MXN 21.106848
MYR 4.779071
MZN 74.864055
NAD 19.644449
NGN 1709.165624
NIO 43.095317
NOK 11.862076
NPR 167.877759
NZD 2.030891
OMR 0.451301
PAB 1.170973
PEN 3.943472
PGK 4.98148
PHP 68.802378
PKR 328.087851
PLN 4.205019
PYG 7856.146378
QAR 4.269136
RON 5.089535
RSD 117.367748
RUB 94.251423
RWF 1705.014739
SAR 4.394757
SBD 9.544997
SCR 17.753147
SDG 704.740941
SEK 10.857585
SGD 1.514201
SHP 0.879028
SLE 28.177977
SLL 24568.55608
SOS 668.027414
SRD 45.039321
STD 24250.431258
STN 24.497443
SVC 10.24593
SYP 12956.454967
SZL 19.641866
THB 36.59048
TJS 10.790828
TMT 4.100714
TND 3.427628
TOP 2.821011
TRY 50.163924
TTD 7.94817
TWD 36.984891
TZS 2899.790709
UAH 49.51292
UGX 4188.544887
USD 1.171633
UYU 45.975005
UZS 14077.470391
VES 330.587471
VND 30837.372518
VUV 141.802401
WST 3.26631
XAF 655.885734
XAG 0.016994
XAU 0.000266
XCD 3.166396
XCG 2.11048
XDR 0.815711
XOF 655.885734
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.3186
ZAR 19.596622
ZMK 10546.097944
ZMW 26.494121
ZWL 377.26525
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    23.25

    -0.13%

  • JRI

    -0.0500

    13.38

    -0.37%

  • NGG

    -0.2800

    76.11

    -0.37%

  • BCE

    -0.0100

    22.84

    -0.04%

  • BCC

    -2.9300

    74.77

    -3.92%

  • RIO

    0.6900

    78.32

    +0.88%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    80.22

    0%

  • RELX

    0.0800

    40.73

    +0.2%

  • CMSC

    -0.1200

    23.17

    -0.52%

  • GSK

    0.3200

    48.61

    +0.66%

  • RYCEF

    0.2800

    15.68

    +1.79%

  • AZN

    0.7500

    91.36

    +0.82%

  • BTI

    -0.5900

    56.45

    -1.05%

  • BP

    0.6300

    33.94

    +1.86%

  • VOD

    0.0400

    12.84

    +0.31%

Taylor Swift, Beyonce reporting jobs trigger controversy
Taylor Swift, Beyonce reporting jobs trigger controversy / Photo: Robyn Beck, ANGELA WEISS - AFP/File

Taylor Swift, Beyonce reporting jobs trigger controversy

It's rare for a news outlet to dedicate a reporter to one personality, but the publication USA Today has decided Taylor Swift and Beyonce are phenomena requiring their own beats.

Text size:

The recent announcement by Gannett, which owns USA Today, that it was seeking two journalists to cover the biggest names in music as if they were running for president triggered both excitement and eyerolls -- and broader conversation about coverage priorities in an increasingly fragmented and financially precarious news media environment.

Gannett, which owns more than 200 daily newspapers, has slashed jobs across local markets over the past several years, laying off six percent of its news division in December.

So news of the Tay and Bey positions struck a nerve.

"I suppose now is a good time to remind Twitter that I'm the only full-time news reporter left at my newspaper that was sold by Gannett in December," said Brad Vidmar on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter.

Vidmar, 41, works for The Hawk Eye, a newspaper in Burlington, Iowa that GateHouse, an investment firm-run publishing company, purchased in late 2016.

In 2019 GateHouse acquired Gannett and took its name, becoming the largest newspaper company in the nation -- and one with a reputation for scooping newspapers before curtailing their resources.

Gannett resold The Hawk Eye to a family-owned media company in late 2022 -- its staff a skeleton of what it once was.

"They just kept cutting and cutting and cutting staff all across the board," Vidmar told AFP. "What you saw was a situation where there are less reporters, reporters forced to take on multiple beats."

Losing local content meant filling the paper with wire stories or stories from the broader USA Today network, he explained.

Vidmar said Gannett's announcement of the Swift job made "my eyes roll."

"They've been downsizing newsrooms for years now, but of course they need somebody dedicated to covering Taylor Swift," he said.

- 'Shaping a generation' -

Gannett said the new positions will be employed by USA Today and The Tennessean, the company's Nashville-based paper.

The aim of the new jobs -- which are in addition to three music reporters The Tennessean now employs -- will be to "capture the excitement around Swift's ongoing tour... while also providing thoughtful analysis of her music and career," Gannett said. Another position is aimed at similarly analyzing Beyonce's impact.

The NewsGuild's New York branch was skeptical, writing on X: "Gannett's strategy to be profitable again: 1) Lay off hundreds of reporters 2) Destroy local news coverage 3) Hire a Taylor Swift reporter."

Lark-Marie Anton, Gannett's chief communications officer, said in a statement to AFP that "these roles do not come at the expense of other jobs," noting that in Gannett's bid to "grow our audience" the company has hired 225 journalists since March and has more than 100 open roles.

"Taylor Swift and Beyonce Knowles-Carter are artists and businesswomen. Their work has tremendous economic impact and societal significance influencing multiple industries and our culture -- they are shaping a generation," Anton said.

- Under pressure -

Robert Thompson, a media scholar at Syracuse University, said his initial reaction to the new jobs was questioning whether "this is a joke."

But he said after more reflection "I think it would be silly to categorically dismiss this... There are so few things that everybody really kind of knows whether they're fans or not, and Beyonce and Taylor Swift are some of the very rare ones."

The jobs have the potential to allow for "really insightful ways to tell the story of 21st-century America through the lens of its most popular personages," he said.

On the other hand, Thompson acknowledged that negative reaction to the new jobs in light of dwindling local news coverage is reasonable.

"If you were to get a bunch of people together and say, 'We've got X number of dollars, how should they be spent?' Most of them would probably not say the Taylor Swift beat," he said.

"But that doesn't mean that separate from that context there can't be some really good things to come of it."

If performed correctly, the new jobs are not necessarily the "dream" careers some headlines have touted them as, he said.

The fan bases for both Swift and Beyonce are notoriously defensive -- music critics who make even the slightest negative comment about their idols can be doxxed or receive death threats.

And along with the "organized wrath" of Swifties and the Beyhive, the worlds these artists have curated are famously guarded.

Plus, Thompson noted, "the eyes of the profession are going to be on these poor folks when they finally get hired."

"That first piece that they file -- it better be really good."

B.Barton--TPP