A recent exodus of talent from The Washington Post has prompted more than 400 of its staffers to send an unusual letter to the Post’s owner, Jeff Bezos, expressing alarm over the newspaper’s direction and asking him to intervene.
A mass exodus at the Washington Post has prompted 400 journalists to request Jeff Bezos's intervention, citing lost trust due to recent leadership decisions and a significant drop in subscribers, following layoffs and financial struggles.
Subscribers and star journalists have fled the Post in its first year under CEO and Publisher Will Lewis. Now staff have signed a petition asking owner Jeff Bezos to intervene.
More than 400 Washington Post journalists sent an angry letter on Wednesday to owner Jeff Bezos, pleading with him to intervene on the paper’s direction to restore the “trust that has
The Washington Post has abandoned its powerful “Democracy Dies in Darkness” slogan. But the new mission has left readers and staff reeling; read
In a letter, more than 400 employees asked Jeff Bezos, the company’s owner and founder of Amazon, to meet, saying they were “deeply alarmed” by recent decisions at the paper.
At a time when the always newsworthy Donald Trump is headed back to the White House, the venerable Washington Post should be gearing up to cover his second term but instead is being subjected to an exodus of top reporters and internal strife,
The left-leaning newspaper lost $100 million last year after four years of plunging website traffic as it struggles with a talent exodus, falling revenue and flailing readership amid an identity
After years of delays, the billionaire’s Blue Origin space company launched its New Glenn rocket early Thursday.
Washington Post opinion editor David Shipley on Friday explained to staff why he didn’t publish former Post cartoonist Ann Telnaes’ depiction of the paper’s owner, Jeff Bezos, and other billionaires offering sacks of cash to Donald Trump.