Media

The Media Mensch of the Year!

In 2007, one online outlaw became the most trusted news source on the Hollywood writers’ strike. How Nikki Finke outfoxed the big boys

This article was published in the January 7, 2008, edition of The New York Observer.

Nikki Finke’s Web site, the hub for strike news.
Nikki Finke’s Web site, the hub for strike news.

This time last year, it would have been difficult to fathom that as 2007 came to a rather inexorable end, there would be no new episodes of The Office or, hell, even Desperate Housewives to get us through what promises to be another long, cold, slushy New York winter; that Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert would be doing their shows on their own; and that in a world when one man, Rupert Murdoch, owns a scarily increasing percentage of the world’s media, a one-woman Web site would show that feisty journalistic independence isn’t dead.

No one has ever accused Nikki Finke—the contentious journalist who has worked for the Associated Press, The Los Angeles Times, this newspaper and the New York Post, which fired her after she wrote negative stories about Disney (she sued and settled for an undisclosed amount)—of being a wallflower, and in her decades-long career, which started after her years as a debutante and Plaza habitué (followed by a 1980 marriage to, and soon afterward, divorce from, the millionaire businessman Jeffrey Greenberg), more people have probably been pissed off by her than have invited her to dinner.

But in her latest journalistic incarnation, the Web site Deadline Hollywood Daily, which she started in March 2006, she has taken on the notoriously cliquish, catty and backbiting world of Hollywood—alone. And when the Writers Guild of America called a strike on Nov. 5, her keyboard was ready.

The biggest entertainment story of the year has also turned into the biggest story of Ms. Finke’s career, and, possibly, the vehicle of her redemption for those who had written her off as merely a loudly buzzing fly in Hollywood’s ointment. She’s demonstrated that one determined reporter—with none of the support or backing of a media outfit, but also none of the entangling alliances—can, in fact, beat the big guys at their own game. She’s broken the news of almost all of the significant strike developments since the beginning and has offered insight into the inner workings of the negotiations that the more slow-footed publications on the strike beat—primarily, Variety, The Los Angeles Times and The New York Times—simply can’t match. In hundreds of posts and thousands of contributors’ comments, she’s turned her site into not only a must-read, but a kind of online kaffe klatsch for information and discussion about the strike.

“I did not know I cared about Hollywood as much as I did,” Ms. Finke, who is 54, told The Observer the other day by telephone from her home in a Los Angeles suburb. “Everyone has always criticized me over the years—‘You hate Hollywood, you hate all the movies, you hate everybody.’ And I was O.K. being in that curmudgeon role!”

But with the strike, Ms. Finke said, everything changed.

“People came to me and said, ‘You have to bring you into this. You have to state your opinions.’ As a student of Hollywood, I don’t see the glamour. I don’t see any of that. That’s always been false to me. I understand the way Hollywood works. This is a town, the only place in the world, where conflicts of interest are not only allowed, but prized, at law firms. It’s a crazy system, but it works. There’s a lot that needs to be changed about it, but you don’t throw it all away. This is why the strike is so frightening.

“I didn’t know I cared.”

In some ways, Ms. Finke represents a new form of advocacy journalism. Though she says she just tries to “write the truth,” it’s not hard to pick up on a distinct effort to right what she sees as the wrongs visited upon the writers by mainstream news outlets and Hollywood’s trade papers, most egregiously, Variety. “There is not a Variety headline that doesn’t blame the writers for something. It’s just outrageous,” Ms. Finke said. “And the L.A. Times—everybody they interview, they only take the negative stuff and print that.”

“It’s definitely the kind of bible for writers,” said TV writer Tom Smuts, who sells strike-related T-shirts on his Web site, Writers Strike Swag. “I think people see her not as a partisan, but someone whose judgment is that the writers have a more legitimate argument than the producers, and she’s called bullshit on the producers.”

That’s not to say that Ms. Finke thinks that the writers can do no wrong. For one thing, she sees them, as a whole, to be somewhat deluded as to the intentions of the studios. “The writers don’t get that the studios don’t care,” she said. “They think that the shareholders would care or the bosses would care or Wall Street would care or the government or Congress or the viewers—they don’t care.”

But it all comes down, Ms. Finke argues, to the relentless march of media consolidation, a trend that only accelerated in 2007.

“Thanks to the F.C.C. and the Republican-controlled Congress never meeting a merger they didn’t like, these media companies have morphed into huge corporations which determine everything we see and hear in infotainment,” she said. “This is not really a Hollywood strike—this is a strike about megacorporations.

“We allowed this to happen over two decades,” she continued. “And now the writers think they’re going to control these guys? Big media own too much. They’re too powerful and too rich.”

“Nikki proves that [the studios’] attempts to very piggishly own everything are pointless,” said Laeta Kalogridis, a writer and executive producer of NBC’s Bionic Woman. Ms. Kalogridis contributes to a pro-writers’ blog called United Hollywood, which was founded a week before the strike. “The one news outlet they can’t exert influence on is her.”

Indeed, Ms. Finke is emphatic that at the heart of the missteps by other media outlets are ownership issues. “The worst at covering media consolidation are the papers owned by media conglomerates,” she said. “This has always been a big bête noire of mine. If you go to the Web site of the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP), it claims 350 production entities are members. But the moguls own almost all of them. It’s eight guys. This is it. This is beyond collusion. This is a country club. And it’s wrong that eight guys are controlling everything.”

Ms. Finke may see herself as a one-woman crusade, but hers is not a lonely voice echoing in the wilderness; her site, which she says got around 350,000 page views a week before the strike, now gets between 650,000 and 850,000 every couple of days. (It was briefly up to a million in the first weeks of the strike, but has since calmed down.) While her pay is not tied to page views, she says LA Weekly, which hosts Deadline Hollywood and sells advertising for it (Ms. Finke owns the Deadline Hollywood name), gave her “a little bonus money,” though it “wasn’t even enough money to let me shop at Target,” she says. (She is somewhat prickly about this because in the early days of the strike she was accused by commenters of cynically attempting to inflate her page views.) Next Page >

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Comments
Post a comment

Dave (not verified) says:

She's made Hollyweed interesting again. (No, not that kind of weed. The other kind. Think crabgrass.)

I can't wait to read what she says when SAG goes out on strike!

Anonymous (not verified) says:

Why is Big Media failing? Because they don't do enough reporting. Nikki Finke has a big brain, a sense of humor, perspective and she reports the hell out of everything. She is what media should be, and this is why she is popular. Big Media, meanwhile, stuffs their papers with filler, syndicated garbage, b.s. art directing that simply fills space. Why would someone spend money for that when someone like Finke gives 'em what they actually want? Just because you fill space on a page doth not make a newspaper...

Anonymous (not verified) says:

...and what she does best is toot her own horn.

Anonymous (not verified) says:

The power of good reporting meets the power of the internet! Viva la Nikki! You are da bomb!

Sasha Stone (not verified) says:

Everyone wants to take her down. Just watch the annoying (anonymous) comments stack up. In fact, let's play a drinking game. One gulp for "bitch," two gulps for the c-word, and bottoms-up for varying degrees of "self-serving."

They are all threatened by her and the net is, lately, very much a boys town. Finke does it better and more interestingly than most. Congratulations to her. Well deserved.

Jay (not verified) says:

so if the WGA doesn't get it (in that they are too small to make a difference against the mega-media owned by eight people), then what is the answer?

Surrender?

Where's the next Paddy Cheyefsky?

Dave (not verified) says:

Sites like these show that in fact so called "Big Media" does NOT control what people hear or think. Alternate news and information sites are everywhere, anyone who only gets their news from an evening newscast (or Entertainment Tonight) deserve to be taken advantage of.
How ironic that she complains about big media while at the very same time proving her argument to be false by her own success.

WGA member (not verified) says:

Nikki Finke was already gaining a huge following with her well-sourced columns about pilot pick-ups before the strike began. She's now an indispensable source. Forget Variety -- Nikki's info is better, faster and more honest than theirs. Which doesn't mean she doesn't offend everyone at some point. Great call as media mensch.

Anonymous (not verified) says:

Wasn't Nikki fired by the New York Observer after her West Coast job there covering Hollywood? Why didn't they report that?

Anonymous (not verified) says:

She DOES allow comments from both points of view but she picks and chooses which ones to post. I know this from personal experience. I've kept a copy of each message I've submitted. Approximately 50% have been posted. The themes of the ones not posted tell a VERY interesting story. I feel she withholds MANY comments she fears may be too persuasive or damaging to the narrative she wishes to portray.

That being said, I still find the site more informative and interactive than anything else out there on this topic.

girladvenger (not verified) says:

I'm glad a true investigative reporter is getting acknowledged.

Thanks Nikkie for all the hard work you put in, so that John Q. Public can get the best information and make up his/her own mind.

One of the few reporters that I truly respect.

Anonymous (not verified) says:

Ultimately, the content is what counts, but her raw copy is sometimes unintelligible. That, and her (to me) embarrassing self-promotion, distract from her incredibly well-sourced work.

Anonymous (not verified) says:

Not to mention, since turning on her comments section for the writers' strike, she has been censoring comments like crazy, deleting, not posting etc. Why the censorship, Nikki? What agenda are you running?

Tiny (not verified) says:

I'm laughing so hard, I can barely type ... "Journalist" ? Seriously? You all must have a very loose interpretation of that word, because she is a BLOGGER.

Bonnie (not verified) says:

Hmmm, I applaude Nikki for doing to Hollywood what USAjudges.com does for people in the courts.

David G. (not verified) says:

Obviously Mensch doesn't mean what it used to... I guess something got lost in the translation... It now means busybody or hack... I'm not sure which. D.

David G. (not verified) says:

You noticed that too. Nikki has censored unfavorable criticism and comment. But then again, it's her site and she's just a blogger... Entitled to rule her little world. D.

Dave Kanegis (not verified) says:

I'm glad to see that the strike is getting this independent coverage.

It's very important. And now it's especially so because the late night shows are back on air.

People need to understand the issues.

I think everyone agrees, the writers need to be treated fairly.

It would be interesting to see an open televised forum with the producers and writers... perhaps a debate:)

Then do a write in poll and see what Internet viewers think when they hear both sides of the issue.

Dave Kanegis
writerslifecoach.com

gumbosally (not verified) says:

three cheers for the new york observer and nikki finke for continued focus on the writers' strike. there seem to be fewer and fewer defenders of the creativity necessary to make for good television viewing and/or good newspaper reading. between obnoxious cleaving to political correctness and media conglomeration we are increasingly deprived of fresh ideas, honestly expressed. with each new manifestation of the bush-fueled oligarchy's push to eradicate independent thought, the chorus from the old buffalo springfield song, "for what it's worth" echoes over and over: "it's time we stop, hey, what's that sound; everybody look what's going down." what's going down in 2008 is an orwellian evaporation of civil liberties, union solidarity and free speech. why aren't more people outraged?

Alexander Chow-Stuart (not verified) says:

Nikki has singlehandedly given writers - who tend to be pretty isolated types, except when gathering at Starbucks - both a reliable and up-to-the-minute news source for the strike (and so much more), but also a forum for expressing our views regarding the most critical strike for the entertainment business as a whole in the past 20 years.

And this is a strike that is as much about media collusion and the lack of choice we all have in terms of entertainment, but particularly news (real news, not Britney's latest woes), as it is about residuals for new media (an issue as vital as copyright itself to those of us fortunate enough to get residuals from what we create).

As a writer who lives in LA, but far enough from Hollywood to feel as if maybe I don't, Deadline Hollywood has been a lifeline during the strike. Nikki deserves a whole bunch of awards for her absolutely tireless reporting.

Alexander Chow-Stuart (not verified) says:

Just to expand upon my comment regardng "news," I did not mean to suggest that this strike literally affects the content of television news, that is a separate debate and dispute. I should have said something like "the information we receive," because TV (particularly late night TV, but other shows as well) and movies (think especially of Michael Clayton this year, and the sometimes outstanding movies that dealt in some way with Iraq, such as Paul Haggis' deeply moving In The Valley Of Elah) are under the sway of the Big Media corporations we are striking against, and every further consolidation of their power gives them the opportunity to stifle dissident voices, in sometimes subtle ways. If they win this battle over new media and the right of writers to retain at least a tiny percentage of what they have helped create, then it only emboldens the corporations further. Nikki's blog represents the astonishing power one person can still weild using new media - and let's pray that that outlet (the internet) continues to be free and open to access and use by all.

Anonymous (not verified) says:

She gives the writers what they want to hear - she DOES NOT take the writers to task for making "this town" a place where people are fighting to survive, pay rent and their bills.

She's a shill for the WGA, she's a wannabe who rode the crest of a big story to make her self seemingly indispensable.

Her ego is the biggest story - sorry to say she's now never going away. From reporting little Hollywood crap to culling her stories from press releases and blogs, then calling them secret - sent to her on the sly.

What every happened to responsible journalism? Oh yeah, this is the L.A. Weekly.

englandbagho (not verified) says:

is still my misguided and began School the forests I still to my parents probably

mailyahoomai (not verified) says:

even know came because could reach. for the for kids were about crashing down a young I remember think I assumed they had

Sohbet sitesi (not verified) says:

Thanks a lot

Eglence (not verified) says:

ya hadi a.q ama yaaaaa

Eğlence (not verified) says:

even know came because could reach. for the for kids were about crashing down a young I remember think I assumed they had

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