A few months after the Columbia Journalism Review named the Daily Oklahoman to be The Worst Newspaper in America, the paper was looking to restore its credibility. It hired a new executive editor, Stan Tiner, who had a mandate to come in and restore the paper's credibility as an accurate report of news and not the one-sided propaganda of Oklahoma's moneyed interests and the state GOP.
Tiner was fired eight months later, in December 1999, and was replaced by Sue Hale, one of Gaylord family's longest-serving cronies. One of Tiner's last acts as editor was to see the Oklahoman run the first of a planned three-part series on the Karen Silkwood saga.
Silkwood worked for a nuclear plant owned by Oklahoma-based Kerr-McGee Corp., which, she charged, had committed safety and security violations. She was killed in a car crash in 1974, reportedly on her way to meet with a journalist. The first article recounts the 1979 federal trial in which Kerr-McGee was found liable for contaminating Silkwood with plutonium.
Mere days later, Tiner was fired, and then:
Ten days after the story ran, an Oklahoman editorial praised Kerr-McGee for its contributions to the state and its citizens.
Tiner, who said the loss of his job was "devastating" but refused to comment, went back to his native Alabama. In May 2000, he took the executive editor position of the Biloxi, MS, Sun-Herald.
On Monday, the Sun-Herald shared the 2006 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service with the New Orleans Times-Picayune. Stan Tiner, whom the Gaylords fired, just won the Pulitzer Prize. The Oklahoman has not won a Pulitzer Prize since 1939, when Charles G. Werner won for Editorial Cartooning. The paper has not even had a finalist for a prize since then. Lest you think that Biloxi and New Orleans had a shoo-in because of Katrina, note that the Oklahoman did not win any Pulitzers in 1996 for its coverage of the Murrah Building bombing that happened 11 years ago tomorrow. Charles Porter won the prize for Spot News Photography in 1996 for his photographs of that day, including of the late Miss Baylee Almon at the site, and Julia Prodis of the AP was nominated for the Feature Writing prize in 1997 about that photograph. No one from the Oklahoman was even a finalist, although Ed Kelley, the editor whom Tiner replaced, did get to be on the jury for the "Breaking News" prize in 1998, awarded to the Los Angeles Times.
Is it any wonder the state keeps electing Inhofe and Coburn?
http://friends.macjournals.com/mattd/2006/04/18Another article:
Brief Tenure, Sudden Exit
After eight months as executive editor of the Daily Oklahoman, Stan Tiner is out of a job.
http://www.ajr.org/Article.asp?id=1030There's also an article in the NYT archives about his abrupt departure:
http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F10F1EFF355E0C748DDDA80894D8404482&showabstract=1And a great snarky article, from shortly after Tiner's arrival, that includes these gems:
From the looks of things, Tiner has issued two commands: "Make this paper look less like a throwback to the 1950s," and "Get this paper's perceived politics out of the 1850s."
The cosmetic changes were easy enough. Getting anything resembling progress out of Patrick B. McGuigan, the modern-day Know-Nothing who rules the Editorial page, would be substantially more difficult. As far as the "vast right-wing conspiracy" goes, McGuigan is pretty much half-vast at best, but the conspiracy couldn't have asked for a more consistent mouthpiece — his work over the years has been one constant harangue against the horrid government which does so many things to restrict people's freedom and yet somehow can't be bothered to persecute liberals or homosexuals, or to pick up the tab for private-school tuition for McGuigan's children. Suddenly McGuigan is now faced with something called the Opinion Board of Contributors, which includes such unlikely (for the Oklahoman, anyway) members as a rep from the Oklahoma City Public Schools Foundation and an actual peace activist, and which will be represented on an Op-Ed page, something Eddie Gaylord would have permitted only over his dead body.
http://www.dustbury.com/vent/vent157.htmlWhen hubby and I came out here for his second job interview (the one where you bring the spousal unit along to see the area) in 1992 there was a copy of the Daily Disappointment in our hotel room. We looked through it searching in vain for any NEWS (at least anything of a national or international nature) and figured that a section of it must be missing. Sadly, we later realized that that's all there was! And we just *loved* the Prayer of the Day on the front page...
Aww, ain't it great living in Red State Hell?