Times’ Rosenthal Is Glutton For Opinion
We’d just like to have more and more and more,” said Andrew Rosenthal, the New York Times editorial-page editor. Mr. Rosenthal was discussing the newspaper’s opinion content on the Web—whether from name-brand op-ed columnists or outside contributors, blogs or video. “We’ve got composers, astronomers—the guy from Queen,” Mr. Rosenthal said by phone April 9. He was referring to two recent blogs, The Score and Across the Universe. The latter features onetime doctoral student Brian May, whose previous writings include “We Will Rock You.” In the three months since he took over the top editorial-page job from Gail Collins, Mr. Rosenthal has been waving his TimesSelect banner all over the place. “College kids are writing for us—who are about to graduate,” Mr. Rosenthal said. “Gawker, which insists it never reads TimesSelect, did an item on one of our college bloggers.” As the opinion staff prepares to vacate its 10th-floor offices on 43rd Street for the lucky 13th floor of the Times Tower, Mr. Rosenthal is shoveling resources toward the Internet—and toward the opinion section’s much-debated online pay-to-read section. “Andy is so incredibly smart about the Web,” Ms. Collins said. “He’s way more attuned than I was.” In July, Ms. Collins is due to go back to a previous job, as a twice-weekly op-ed columnist. As editor, she helped herd the pundits—accustomed to free distribution and domination of the Most E-Mailed List—behind the TimesSelect pay wall. “Nobody likes it,” Ms. Collins said. “But I was always grateful that when we started the first time, that the columnists who hated it were so reasonable about the Times experimenting with this.” Now? “I’m in that grumpy-but-understanding state the columnists were in,” Ms. Collins said. And Mr. Rosenthal is smitten with his premium-paying—or, in the latest paywall gap, .edu-address-having—readers. “They tend to post with greater frequency than elsewhere,” Mr. Rosenthal said. “It’s extremely good. A lot of them post with their full name.” “You don’t wonder, when it says ‘Joe Blow,’ whether there’s a Joe Blow at the other end,” Mr. Rosenthal said. According to The Times’ figures, there are about 218,000 Joe Blows who’ve signed up to read TimesSelect online (another 414,000 get it thrown in with their paper subscriptions). Mr. Rosenthal has assigned deputy op-ed editor George Kalogerakis—the Robin Gibb of Spy magazine—to take a more active role with TimesSelect, bringing in top contributors. Current TimesSelect staff editor Mary Duenwald will take on a matching deputy-editor job, concentrating more on the print side. In December, Mr. Rosenthal set up another dual-role arrangement, bringing in a pair of deputy editorial-page editors: David Shipley to focus on the Web and Carla Anne Robbins to concentrate on print and to run the page when Mr. Rosenthal is away. Both Mr. Kalogerakis and Ms. Duenwald will report to Mr. Shipley. “David’s been given a big mandate to do Internet stuff,” Mr. Rosenthal said. Mr. Rosenthal said he envisions print and the Web complementing one another, with “stuff that starts online and continues in the paper, or stuff that starts in the paper and goes online.” Certain contributors are straddling the formats: Deadspin editor Will Leitch, who has written for the print op-ed page, wrote an NCAA basketball blog last month for TimesSelect. And Stanley Fish, the Florida International University law and humanities professor, has been through three permutations—print op-eds that are free online, guest print columns for the vacationing Maureen Dowd that are TimesSelect online, and Web-only TimesSelect pieces. Mr. Fish said his involvement at The Times “has been gradually increasing” over the last 12 years. In late 2006, as Mr. Rosenthal was preparing to take over the top job, Mr. Fish signed a one-year renewable contract to write a once-a-week Web column. “The primary difference between TimesSelect and the op-ed page is the restriction in length,” Mr. Fish said. “It’s quite specific when you’re writing for the op-ed page. It’s about 730 words—800 if they feel generous.” “They say the proposition of hanging clarifies the mind,” Mr. Fish said. “Saying something significant in 730 words also clarifies the mind.” On TimesSelect, Mr. Fish has written a piece stretching to some 2,200 words. And there’s nothing wrong with that, Mr. Rosenthal said. “Going into the Internet business,” he said, “there was this holy writ that no one would read past the screen. I think that’s proven to not be true.” After writing a 1,300-word column on the 2008 election, posted late on the evening of April 8, Mr. Fish said he has already received enough feedback that he’s planning to write a response on the Web. Even more recursively, TimesSelect includes an opinion blog about opinion, called The Opinionator. The blog’s author, Chris Suellentrop, has been working from Boston as a contract writer. He is scheduled to join the full-timers as a staff editor in late May, just after the three-block move. The position he’s taking is one due to be vacated on May 4 by Laura Secor. Ms. Secor, who wrote 5,000 words for the Times Magazine on Iran in January, is off to write a book on the subject of Iranian reform and democracy movements. Mr. Rosenthal said that he currently plans for Mr. Suellentrop to keep writing The Opinionator, though that may prove difficult with his new duties. “We’re moving forward,” Mr. Rosenthal said. Also westward! He will be giving up what he calls an “incredible office,” which includes two rooms and a private bath—and a building full of memories, where his father, the late A.M. Rosenthal, was executive editor. “We’ve been in this building a long time,” Mr. Rosenthal said. “The nostalgia started to wear off when it stopped smelling like ink.”
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