I was invited to talk to the Greytown Lions Club last
night about my life in the media. At the end, someone said he thought my speech
deserved a wider audience and asked if I was going to publish it. I didn’t
intend to but then thought: it’s a piece of social history, so why not? So here
it is.
I entered journalism straight
from school. That was the way things were done back then. Not now; you need a tertiary qualification,
and preferably a university degree.
Why did I become a
journalist? Probably because my mother had suggested it might be a good career
for me because I was reasonably good at English, and I didn’t want to go to university.
My burning passion was really music, but you couldn’t build a career on music.
I had to satisfy myself with playing in bands on the side, which I did for
several years.
I received my introduction to
journalism in the reading room of the Evening
Post in Willis St, Wellington. The reading room was where every word that
went into the paper – everything, including
all the classified ads and racing results – was checked before publication so
that any errors could be picked up and corrected.
Reading rooms are gone now –
history. Reporters are expected to correct their own mistakes. But don’t ask me
how they’re expected to correct their errors if they don’t realise they made
them in the first place.
My job title was copy holder
– the lowest of the low. I worked alongside a more senior person called a proof
reader. It was mind-numbingly tedious, menial work for which I was paid $21 a week – $23 if I was rostered to work a few hours extra on Saturday
afternoons for the Sports Post, which
came out late on Saturday and contained all the latest sports results.
I think the Evening Post management reasoned that if
you could survive a year in the reading room, you could survive anything. But
it was a good introduction to newspapers because it gave me an opportunity to
observe how everything worked. It was also a fascinating place in human terms
because of the weird and wonderful variety of people who worked there. The Evening Post reading room was a
magnificent collection of cranks, oddballs and eccentrics – some likeable,
others not so much.
Over in Mercer St, at the Dominion, where I worked later, the
reading room also had a culture all its own, but a very different one. At the
Dom, the readers tended to be long-haired dopeheads, dropouts, student radicals
and anarchists.
Looking back now, I realise
that the newspaper industry of that era had a wonderful tolerance of non-conformists.
In the 1960s and 70s newsrooms were populated by a wondrous assortment of
drunks, philanderers, egotists, neurotics, bohemians and assorted ne’er-do-wells. Many of them had the saving grace that they were articulate, well-read,
well-informed and easy to like.
People gravitated to
newspapers from all sorts of backgrounds and with all manner of personal
idiosyncrasies. Newsrooms were smoke-stained and noisy from the clatter of
typewriters and the barking of impatient chief reporters and subeditors. Today’s
newsrooms seem bland and homogeneous by comparison, full of earnest people –
mostly youngish middle-class university graduates – silently tapping away at
keyboards. I bet we had far more fun.
University degrees were
virtually unheard of in journalism. Most of the people I worked with came from
working-class backgrounds and like me, got into journalism straight from
school. But all that changed after the first journalism school was set up at
Wellington Polytechnic in 1967. By the 1980s it had become virtually impossible
to become a journalist without first completing an academic course.
That was a retrograde step.
Journalism went from being something you learned on the job to something you
were taught in a classroom. It also changed in the sense that it became more
heavily based on theory rather than practice. It became subject to academic
capture and we saw the intrusion of an ideological approach that encouraged
budding journalists to think their primary purpose was to challenge the
institutions of power rather than simply to provide people with important and
useful information.
Along the way, what the late
Warwick Roger liked to call the Mongrel Factor – the dogged, hard-headed, competitive
and slightly feral spirit that motivated some of the best reporters –
fell out of favour. I’d have to scratch my head very hard these days to think
of any reporters who qualify for the honourable term “mongrel”.
My first reporting job at the
Evening Post, after I had escaped the
reading room, involved covering the Wellington Magistrates Court. On a busy
morning at the No. 1 Court there would be as many as six junior Evening Post reporters sitting at the
press bench under the supervision of a more experienced hand named Fran Kitching,
better known now as Dame Fran Wilde.
We covered every case that
came up, taking it in turns to write our stories in long hand on copy paper.
Every so often a messenger would turn up and take a bundle of stories back to
the office. It sometimes took days or even weeks before some of those stories
were published because unless they were particularly important or newsworthy, they
would be set in type and kept until there was a convenient space in the paper for them.
We covered all cases apart
from very minor traffic offences. That was a much fairer arrangement than we
have now, when reporters are so thin on the ground that they have to cherry
pick which court stories to cover. Reporting of the courts appears to have become quite random, with only major cases such as murder trials being
guaranteed coverage.
From the point of view of
defendants, it’s a lottery. Some criminals may go through the courts unnoticed
by the media while others have their names splashed in the papers. You see this
in the Wairarapa Times-Age, where
weeks pass without a single court case being reported even though the local district court has
been sitting. Then suddenly, for no obvious reason, someone will be named and
shamed on the front page. I’m not asking anyone to feel sorry for the criminals,
but it’s not fair that some are publicly exposed while others escape
scrutiny.
There’s also an important public
interest element here. The reporting of criminal cases serves two purposes. One
is that it serves the public good by alerting communities to the bad people in
their midst. The other is that the fear of having their name in the paper can
serve as a deterrent to criminals, especially in smaller communities where
everyone knows everyone. But newsrooms have been so hollowed out that most of
the time the court press bench is empty. New Zealand is hardly unique in this
regard. The British journalist Nick Davies memorably wrote a few years ago that
you were more likely to see a zebra in an English court than a reporter.
The Evening Post when I started there in 1968 was cosy, comfortable and
complacent. It felt a bit like a government department but it was highly
profitable, thanks largely to the enormous volume of advertising in its pages.
I pick up Stuff papers today and see page after page without a single ad, and I
wonder how the hell the company makes a profit. More often than not the most
prominent ads are “house ads” promoting Stuff’s own publications, and therefore
not generating any revenue.
The Evening Post, which was owned by the Blundell family, was also very
conservative – so much so that it was one of the last papers in New Zealand to
put news on the front page. Prior to that, page one had consisted entirely of
classified ads. I think it was the Wahine disaster that finally persuaded the Post to put news on page one, but even
then it struck an awkward compromise by putting news on the top half and ads on
the bottom – a bizarre and possibly unique arrangement that persisted for quite
some time.
Having said that, the Post was extraordinarily thorough in its
saturation coverage of Greater Wellington affairs. You couldn’t fart or sneeze
in Wellington without it being reported in the pages of the Post.
In 1969 I was poached to
write a twice-weekly column for the Evening
Post’s morning rival, the Dominion.
When I say that, I don’t mean that all I did was write a column. No newspaper,
least of all the lean and hungry Dom, could afford to pay a wet-behind-the-ears 18-year-old
just to write a column, so I simultaneously worked as a general reporter.
The Dom had a very different
workplace culture from that of the Post. It was edgy, stimulating and slightly
anarchic. My friend the late Barrie Watts, who was then the Dom’s features
editor, described the paper as being staffed by anti-social misfits and amusing
psychopaths fuelled by prodigious quantities of alcohol. It was only a slight
exaggeration.
I was startled on arriving at
the Dom to find I had to provide my own typewriter. The company supplied only
two typewriters and they were both chained to desks, which surely tells you
something about the place.
In my first week there, a notoriously
irascible subeditor named Black Jack McKinnon bellowed for all the newsroom to
hear: “If Mr du Freznee [I suspect he mispronounced it deliberately] hasn’t
learned how to spell ‘accommodation’ by this time tomorrow, I’ll stand on him
on this desk and kick his fucking arse.” Needless to say I never misspelled
accommodation again.
That too tells you something
about newspaper culture in those days. If you got something wrong, you could
expect to be pulled up very sharply. Workplace bullying codes wouldn’t permit that
sort of bracing humiliation now.
Sexual harassment too was
taken as a given. I recently had a coffee with a former Evening Post reporter, a woman now quite prominent in public life
(not Fran Wilde), who recalled her boss saying to her not long after she
started: “There are breast men and there are leg men. I’m a leg man and I’d
appreciate it if you wore a skirt rather than pants.” You can imagine how far
you’d get with that sort of line today.
Newspapers can be high-pressure
workplaces. You’re creating a brand-new product pretty much from scratch every
day and you’re working to tight deadlines. Information has to be gathered,
stories written, edited and proofread and pages laid out within very tight time
frames. Tempers can get strained and volcanic rages were commonplace. Usually they
were relatively harmless – phones being yanked out of their sockets, typewriters
hurled on the floor, that sort of thing – but occasionally it turned a bit uglier.
I remember late one night when a Dominion reporter named Ron Malcolm, a pugnacious
Scotsman and former British Army paratrooper, was at his desk writing a report of that evening’s Wellington City Council meeting. Chris Smith, the deputy chief
subeditor, holding space open for Ron’s story with one eye anxiously on the
clock, loudly suggested Ron pull his finger out. Ron responded by inviting
Chris out to the lift foyer for a chat, then without a word decked him. Rising
groggily to his feet, Chris said “That was a dumb thing to do, Ron”, whereupon
Ron knocked him down again – then walked out, never to work at the Dominion again. He did, however, later
turn up as a tutor on the Wellington Polytechnic journalism course.
I relate this story not
because I approve of Ron’s behaviour – far from it – but as an illustration of
the rumbustious journalism culture of that era.
Drinking was central to that
culture. There was always a substantial core of Evening Post journalists who hit the pub every afternoon – or in
the Dom’s case, at night in a short lull before the final rush to get the paper
out and just before the pubs closed. Some of my workmates were high-functioning alcoholics. Every city had its own journalists’ pub –
so much so that the Journalists’ Union’s monthly paper always carried advertisements
advising what pub to visit if you were from out of town and wanted to find
local newspaper people. In Wellington it was the Britannia in Willis Street,
which was conveniently located almost next to the Evening Post and just a short walk from the Dominion. Journalists from both papers drank at the "Brit" but rarely
mingled – partly because they kept different hours, but also due to the fact
that the two papers were competitors with quite different workplace cultures
and a certain degree of mutual animosity.
That animosity persisted after
both papers came under the ownership of the same company in the late 1970s, and
even when the two titles were merged to become the Dominion Post in 2002.
I’m ashamed to admit that for
much of my time as a news reporter at the Dom, I was clueless. Even when I was
appointed as the paper’s industrial reporter, which involved covering the paralysing
union disputes that in those days were on the front page virtually every day, I
was often pathetically ignorant of what I was writing about and relied on sheer
blind instinct. It didn’t help that most of the union officials I dealt with were deeply suspicious
of the Tory press. But I was fortunate in being able to establish good
relationships with a few key people such as Jim Knox of the Federation of
Labour and Pincher Martin of the Seamen’s Union.
In 1972 I moved to Melbourne
and got a job with the Melbourne Herald.
That was, as they say these days, a whole different level. The Herald was an afternoon paper with a
circulation of half a million – more than ten times that of the Dominion. It shared a fortress-like
building on Flinders St with its morning stablemate, the Sun News-Pictorial – circulation 650,000. It was a golden era of
newspapers. The Herald printed eight editions a day, the first coming out about
11am and the final at 5 o’clock. The final edition often looked entirely
different from the first because the paper was constantly being remade through
the day as fresh stories broke.
I would have a story on the
front page of the first edition and watch with mounting dismay as it gradually
receded further and further inside the paper as the day progressed and more
important news broke. Sometimes my story might disappear entirely.
You could go for weeks
without getting anything published at all, which was unheard of on a New
Zealand paper. I remember one of my colleagues shouting the public bar at the
Duke of Wellington Hotel, where the Herald
journos drank, because he’d had a story published after a drought of three
months.
Most Herald reporters routinely got bylines – in other words, had their
names published on their stories – but strangely, it happened to me only once.
My byline was on a front-page story in the first edition but mysteriously disappeared
in later editions, although the story remained in place. The vanishing byline was no mystery to a
colleague of mine named Sam Leone, because a similar thing had happened to him.
Sam explained to me that we both had foreign-looking names and the Herald apparently preferred to showcase reporters
with familiar-sounding Anglo-Saxon names – an astonishing attitude in a city
with a big migrant population.
Despite that, I loved my time
at the Herald. It was like a giant
living organism. The newsroom had a fleet
of black Holdens and the police reporters - there were six of them with their
own room at police headquarters - were driven around by their own dedicated
chauffeur in a big black Chev Impala. The company even had its own resident
doctor.
The Herald and the Sun merged
many years ago, becoming the Herald-Sun.
It’s still the biggest-selling paper in Australia but it’s a pale shadow of its illustrious precursors. My wife and I walked past
the Herald building on a recent visit
to Melbourne and there’s very little trace remaining of its glory days. A great
institution, brought down by disruptive technology that choked off the flow of advertising
revenue and led to ruinous and self-destructive internet rivalry.
My next gig was with the National Business Review back in Wellington.
The interesting thing about NBR is that it was a weekly paper launched by former
Victoria University students whose previous journalism experience, such as it
was, was with the student newspaper Salient.
With one exception (the managing editor, Reg Birchfield) they had no background in the newspaper industry, but they saw a gap in the market and their audacious gamble paid off. Somehow, more than 50 years later, NBR has survived despite all the
turbulence in the newspaper industry, although it’s now under different
ownership and published online only.
By 1976 I was back at the Evening Post, editing the TV page and
writing daily television reviews. Somehow I ended up on the panel of a Friday night
TV show called The Media, which was
memorably spoofed as The Tedia on David McPhail's satirical show A
Week Of It. The one
story I’ll relate about The Media,
and it’s at my own expense, concerns the show that we made in the week that Fawlty Towers made its debut in New
Zealand. As the TV critic on the show, it fell to me to review John Cleese’s
brilliant new comedy and I gave it the thumbs down. Worse still, I compared it
unfavourably with an American comedy series that had also made its debut that
week. Suffice it to say that Fawlty
Towers still enjoys a worldwide cult-following while the Tony Randall Show –the one I glowingly
reviewed on national TV that night in 1976 – sank without trace. So much for my
judgment.
I then spent four years
writing for the Listener. Again, it
was then in its glory days, with a circulation approaching 400,000 – by far the
largest magazine circulation, per head of population, in the world. But I
wouldn’t delude myself that this was entirely due to the quality of the
content. In fact the Listener at that
time was state-owned and benefited from having sole rights to publish the full
week’s TV and radio programmes, which guaranteed a massive readership. The Listener did, however, have a great team
of writers, including such names as Tom Scott, Helen Paske, Phil Gifford, Denis
Welch, Karen Jackman, David Young, Gordon Campbell and Pamela Stirling.
The magazine was ridiculously
profitable and there was little pressure to produce. We had the luxury of almost
unlimited time in which to write our stories, though some of us took more
advantage of it than others. The late Stephen Stratford, a
subeditor on the magazine, once wrote that “months passed – indeed, entire
seasons – between stories by Vernon Wright [one of my fellow writers] and Karl
du Fresne”. I have to admit it was basically true, though I did produce stories
for the Listener that I’m quite proud
of.
After that, my career took a
radical lurch. I went to the Nelson Evening
Mail as news editor and never enjoyed a job more. I relished being back in
an environment where I was subjected to the discipline of tight daily
deadlines. It was a great team and a happy workplace. We worked hard, but we
were out of the office by early to mid-afternoon. By then I had three kids with
one more to come and the civilised working hours were an opportunity to
establish some sort of regular family life. But then I ruined it all by being
awarded a journalism fellowship to the UK for three months and as a result of
that, being invited to rejoin the Dominion
as its news editor – which I ill-advisedly did.
From there I progressed to
the editorship of the Dominion in
1989. All I’ll say about that is that I stand before you as the embodiment of
the Peter Principle, which holds that you rise to your level of incompetence. I
never quite understood what this meant until it happened to me. Basically the
Peter Principle means that you ascend through an organisational hierarchy
because you’re good at what you do, until you reach a point where you realise
you’ve gone one step too far. I’m not going to say I was a failure as a daily
newspaper editor; merely that I didn’t enjoy the job, didn’t feel temperamentally cut out for it and therefore wasn't convinced I was suited to the role. I had gone from an
editorial function that suited me to a managerial one that didn’t. So I quit after
two years, much to the astonishment of many of my newspaper colleagues and fellow
editors. Some regarded rising to the editorship of a metropolitan daily paper as
a career pinnacle. Why would you turn your back on it? But I didn’t see it that
way and I never wasted a millisecond wondering whether I’d done the wrong thing by
resigning. For me it was a liberating act.
My last 10 years as a
full-time newspaper journalist were spent as an assistant editor back in familiar territory at the Evening Post, mostly writing editorials,
feature articles and columns under the editorship of my friend Sue Carty, whose
own career was subsequently cut short by multiple sclerosis (which now,
thankfully, seems to be in remission). When I accepted a voluntary redundancy
deal in 2002 I was able to reflect that I’d come a long way in the 34 years
since I’d started in the Post’s reading room. By my calculation it was about 30
metres.
In the past 20-odd years I’ve
had an active freelance career. I found myself working for the Listener again under the editorship of
my old colleague Pamela Stirling, though this time I wrote as a freelance
contributor rather than an employee. I’ve been a columnist and a blogger and
I’ve written books on subjects as diverse as wine, music and freedom of the
press. I’ve had a lot of fun, and earned useful pocket money, compiling daily quizzes
that were published throughout the country. I’ve enjoyed being my own boss and
I’ve managed to make a relatively comfortable living at a time when journalism
has been in a very fragile state.
I could easily detain you for
the rest of the night talking about the wretched state of journalism in 2025
and why it’s sunk so low, but that would be too much of a downer. Some of my
earlier remarks might give you a clue as to where I think we started going
wrong, but that’s possibly a subject for another time. Thank you for listening
patiently.