Washington Post begins sweeping layoffs - Sports coverage and the paper's podcast are among those hit the hardest as the storied newspaper struggles with declining revenue.

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The Washington Post announced sweeping layoffs Wednesday, with cuts expected to greatly reduce some coverage areas at the storied 150-year-old newspaper.

The wide-ranging job losses primarily affected the sports, books and podcast units, according to a source familiar with the situation. Foreign desks were also heavily impacted, along with cuts to business and national teams. “The Washington Post is taking a number of difficult but decisive actions today for our future, in what amounts to a significant restructuring across the company," a Post spokesperson told NBC News.

The Post, which has won dozens of Pulitzer prizes — most famously for its Watergate coverage that led to Richard Nixon’s resignation in 1974 — has been owned since 2013 by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos.
Though many American newspapers have struggled financially in recent years, Bezos is the fourth-richest person in the world, with a net worth of about $260 billion, according to Bloomberg’s Billionaire Index. That hasn't spared the paper from layoffs. The latest round of layoffs follows a 4% staff cut roughly a year ago, though those cuts did not affect the newsroom.
In response to the announcement, the Washington Post Guild, which represents hundreds of newsroom employees, said the staff has been reduced by 400 people over the last three years. "These layoffs are not inevitable. A newsroom cannot be hollowed out without consequences of its credibility, its reach and its future," the union said.

The announcement follows recent scrutiny over newsroom budget decisions, including the paper’s shifting plans around Winter Olympics coverage.

As first reported by The New York Times, the paper initially told more than a dozen journalists it would no longer send them to cover the Winter Olympics in Italy, less than three weeks before the Games were set to begin. After public criticism, including from prominent sports journalists, the paper reversed course again and now expects to send four reporters, NBC News confirmed.
In a statement, former Post editor Marty Baron said Wednesday’s announcement “ranks among the darkest days in the history of one of the world’s greatest news organizations.”
And ahead of the layoffs, members from the Post’s local desk wrote in an open letter dated Jan. 27 to Bezos that they had been warned their section would be “decimated” and left “unrecognizable,” urging leadership to preserve the paper’s local coverage.
Similarly, the guild had also warned in the days leading up to Wednesday’s announcement that the cuts could “potentially leave our newsroom even smaller than the one [Bezos] purchased — and losing twice as much money.
Several journalists confirmed in posts on X that they were among those laid off. They include: Caroline O’Donovan, who covers Amazon at the Post; Nicole Asbury, an education reporter covering Maryland; and Emmanuel Felton, a race and ethnicity reporter, who wrote, "this wasn’t a financial decision, it was an ideological one."
The media industry has entered a broader period of reckoning, with both legacy players — from broadcast giants to newspapers — and digital outlets grappling with rising costs and debt-ridden balance sheets as audiences shift how they consume news.
Declining advertising revenue and intensifying competition have pushed companies to accelerate cost-cutting moves and restructure plans across the industry.
As a result, recent years have been marked by repeated rounds of layoffs and consolidation as media companies attempt to realign their businesses with a rapidly evolving landscape.
Most recently, Netflix has moved to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery as consolidation pressures intensify, while rival Paramount Global continues to pursue its own bid after merging with Skydance Media last year. CBS, under the new leadership of Bari Weiss, is also seeking to reinvent itself and has reportedly been considering additional layoffs. Weiss, the founder of the heterodox opinion publication The Free Press, joined CBS News as editor-in-chief last year.
But signs of strain across the industry have been building for years. Disney underwent a major restructuring in 2023, cutting roughly 7,000 jobs and reorganizing the business ahead of a planned CEO transition later this year.
Legacy newspapers have also been hit hard. The Los Angeles Times has carried out multiple rounds of layoffs in recent years, most recently enacting another 6% reduction to its newsroom in mid-2025.
The shift to digital-first platforms has not insulated news organizations from cuts, either. BuzzFeed shuttered its news division in 2023, while Vice Media filed for bankruptcy the same year. Business Insider also recently cut more than 20% of its workforce as it scaled back in some areas, while simultaneously accelerating its adoption of artificial intelligence — another area of investment permanently reshaping the industry.
And last year, as its corporate parent, Comcast, prepared to spin off its cable channels as Versant, NBC News Group laid off about 150 employees, representing about 2% of its workforce.
 
Maybe they can get a job at the Federal Propaganda Institute?

Oh wait, Trump shut that down too.

Too bad so sad journoslimes, maybe you shouldn't have sold out to the elites just so you could feel smug at how much gooder a person you are.

TLDR: Get fucked jurnoslimes, I laff.
 
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Suffuh, journalists.
 
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Nixon was hilariously anti-semitic. Might not be a total coincidence the media portrayed him as the most evil corrupt leader ever.

Did anyone hear the Nixon audio tapes that were released years back? He had audiotaped his meetings sometimes, probably out of his classic paranoia (but they really were out to get him). He's be talking to some advisor, there'd be a long pause in the conversation, then Nixon would mutter out of the blue, "Fucking Jews!"

"The Jews are born spies"
"The Jews are all throughout the government"
"You can't trust the bastards"
 
I've mentioned before that in the late 80s there was a PBS series called Ethics In America (this was back when PBS actually made good programming). The series is available online at https://www.learner.org/series/ethics-in-america/ The series is ten episodes of an hour each with a different topic per episode. It's set up so there is a moderator and a round table discussion by various expert panelists.

Anyway, two of the episodes deal with military ethics. They're Under Orders, Under Fire parts 1 and 2. They also deal with journalists and how they cover things. There's a scenario where the military is sent in to a fictional country and these American reporters are embedded with enemy forces and these forces are about to ambush and kill American soldiers. They ask these two reporters, Dan Rather and Peter Jennings, if they would alert the American troops. Jennings said he would, then Rather said he wouldn't because getting the story was more important than alerting their countrymen. Jennings then reverses course.

I wonder how Ernie Pyle would have responded to them.

The best part is this one ex-soldier panelist says the thing is sooner or later those same journalists will cry for help and those same American troops they let get ambushed WILL come to their aid because they are American. The journalists had no response to that.

Nixon was hilariously anti-semitic. Might not be a total coincidence the media portrayed him as the most evil corrupt leader ever.

Did anyone hear the Nixon audio tapes that were released years back? He had audiotaped his meetings sometimes, probably out of his classic paranoia (but they really were out to get him). He's be talking to some advisor, there'd be a long pause in the conversation, then Nixon would mutter out of the blue, "Fucking Jews!"

"The Jews are born spies"
"The Jews are all throughout the government"
"You can't trust the bastards"
https://youtube.com/watch?v=MNYzh3cxruY
And he would say those things with Kissinger in the room.
 
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Nixon was hilariously anti-semitic. Might not be a total coincidence the media portrayed him as the most evil corrupt leader ever.

Did anyone hear the Nixon audio tapes that were released years back? He had audiotaped his meetings sometimes, probably out of his classic paranoia (but they really were out to get him). He's be talking to some advisor, there'd be a long pause in the conversation, then Nixon would mutter out of the blue, "Fucking Jews!"

"The Jews are born spies"
"The Jews are all throughout the government"
"You can't trust the bastards"
https://youtube.com/watch?v=MNYzh3cxruY

And he would say those things with Kissinger in the room.
Hell, Kissinger would agree with him!
 
It was very telling that multiple big subreddits could only counter him by...bringing up past stupidity, rather than the report itself. Literally attacking Shirley, the person, and not what was actually in the report. For example:
I mean that is all the left ever does. Censorship, mockery, distraction, pretending to not understand making any argument impossible. They already know they've queued up a million unwinnable arguments so they choose to not participate honestly in any of them and just be annoying retards instead.

They are tobacco execs, they have a product to sell and that is their only concern.
"The battle is won when the average American regards a corporate journalist exactly as they regard a tobacco executive."
 
Nixon was hilariously anti-semitic. Might not be a total coincidence the media portrayed him as the most evil corrupt leader ever.
That and the fact that Nixon actively resisted the counter cultural subversion of the 1960s and the hippies that got beaten at protests in the 60s under him grew up and got institutional power and rewrote history to make him a cartoon villain.
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