New York – NY Sun Newspaper Tells Its Readers: We Could Cease Publication at the End of September

    13

    New York – This morning I write to you about the future of The New York Sun, which is in circumstances that may require us to cease publication at the end of September unless we succeed in our efforts to find additional financial backing. The managing editor, Ira Stoll, who is one of the founding partners in the paper, and I have shared this news with our colleagues, and we would like our readers as well to be aware of the situation.

    Join our WhatsApp group

    Subscribe to our Daily Roundup Email


    When we launched this business in October 2001 and began publishing the daily newspaper on April 16, 2002, it was with two goals. There was an editorial — an idealistic — goal of providing an alternative to the New York Times in coverage of New York City, politics, foreign policy, and culture. And there was a financial goal of making a profit. We have always been, and still are, of the view that the paper needs to achieve both goals to be a success.

    After more than six years of publication, the Sun is now at a crossroads. It has succeeded in establishing journalistic credibility and a reputation for quality and verve, and in becoming a part of the local, national, and international conversation. It is read daily by tens of thousands of New Yorkers, including the political, policy, and cultural leadership in the city. It is read in the nation’s capital — in the White House, the Congress, and in the foreign chancelleries. Newspapers and Web sites in the city and around the world follow our scoops, quote our editorials, refer to our cultural criticism, and analyze our sports coverage.

    Even many who disagree with the views of our editorial page enjoy reading the Sun. “A fabulous read for culture,” is the way it was described in the Nation. David Remnick of the New Yorker sent a note to say how much he admired what we are doing with the Sun, which he called “just plain good.” He added: “OK, I agree with about ten percent of your editorials, but so what. … I’m a lot happier, and richer, for having faced the Sun in the a.m.”

    This happens because we have been blessed not only with a high-quality group of readers but a wonderful staff that works extremely hard. Some have been snapped up by our competitors. The Wall Street Journal, the New York Post, the Daily News, the Washington Post, and the New York Times all employ alumni of The New York Sun. But in recent years, many of our staff members have turned down offers from competing papers to stay with a readership at the Sun we have all come to love.

    There has been some success as well on the business side, where a group of loyal advertisers has awakened to our readership and made The New York Sun one of the few newspapers in America to see substantial increases in print advertising revenues not only last year and the year before but also so far this year. Yet even with those gains, the expense of producing and distributing the paper exceeds our revenues. So the Sun has yet to achieve its financial goal of making a profit.

    Our losses, which are substantial, have been covered so far by a group of investors whom we would call heroic. And they are prepared to continue to back the enterprise with new capital. But as costs rise and the advertising market for newspapers generally tightens, keeping the Sun alive and moving it toward self-sufficiency will require broadening the base of investors beyond the original group.

    In recent months, we have had discussions with a number of newspaper proprietors and other potential investors about possible combinations or investment relationships. Some of those are continuing. There is no assurance that any of our discussions will be successful, but we are hopeful.

    We are not daunted by all the negative talk about newspapers. They have been essential institutions in our democracy throughout its history. The Boston Gazette helped inspire the American Revolution, Frederick Douglass’s North Star helped win abolition and emancipation, the Wall Street Journal helped defeat Soviet Communism.

    Today the power of newspapers is on display each day as they inspire a marvelous array of bloggers and aggregation Web sites, magnifying the power of print to a degree heretofore unimagined. For us it is the honor of a lifetime to be able to appear in arms, so to speak, in a newspaper war that is alive with the battle of ideas at a juncture when ideas make all the difference.

    We share all this because our community of readers reflects the dynamism and vitality and openness and positive spirit and creativity of New York and of America. We seek to capture this not only on the editorial pages but also in our cultural pages and on our front pages and in the society columns and the business and sports and health and fashion pages.

    This esprit isn’t so easy to pigeonhole ideologically, and we have found that many of those who thrill to the ideas and the articles that animate The New York Sun have political beliefs for which the best label might be “unpredictable.” If there is a common thread it would be that New York’s and America’s greatest days yet lie ahead of us.

    Certainly, launching this paper in the months immediately after September 11, 2001, was an optimistic project. Nearly seven years later, our editors and backers are even more of the view that there is indeed a place for the kind of intelligent, thoughtful broadsheet we envision in our city, which is why we are scrambling to find others who share this vision and the sense of possibility. If we fail, the newspaper and its voice will die. All the more energetic will be our efforts in the coming weeks to ensure that the conversation we’ve begun these past few years will continue.

    Yours faithfully,

    Seth Lipsky

    Editor of the Sun

    President, ONE SL LLC


    Listen to the VINnews podcast on:

    iTunes | Spotify | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Podbean | Amazon

    Follow VINnews for Breaking News Updates


    Connect with VINnews

    Join our WhatsApp group


    13 Comments
    Most Voted
    Newest Oldest
    Inline Feedbacks
    View all comments
    Lock & Load
    Lock & Load
    15 years ago

    Who Cares….

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    newspapers are the thing of the past. Online is where people read their news these days.

    Get with the program!

    moshe
    moshe
    15 years ago

    Good riddance.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    They should now start calling the newspaper ” Shkiyas Hachamah”

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    What a shame to see it closing its door It eas a great alternative and knocker to the disgusting MEAN new york SLIMES

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    Awww, one less mouthpiece for the bloviating right-wing pundits. Too bad.

    Vote McCain
    Vote McCain
    15 years ago

    A shame, a shame indeed.

    I try reading it when I am in NYC and it is very refreshing to be able to read a paper that speaks with intelligence yet it has the editorial opinion similar to the NY Post – without the disgusting smhmutz found in the Post.

    farrockgrandma
    farrockgrandma
    15 years ago

    I am very deeply disppointed and disheartened to hear this sad statement.

    I have been a subscriber to the Sun for more than 3 years, and look forward to it very day.

    It is a a rare voice – a paper that is intelligently written, pro America, pro Israel, covers local, national and international stories that the other msm choose to ignore.

    And did I mention the exceptional columnists?

    Say it isn’t so, Seth!

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    stinks, one of the more pro-israel/jewish newspapers put there

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    what a shame. I cancelled my NY times subscription as a protest a few years ago. Since then I had a subscription with the Sun. It is a great paper. Very pro-Yidden (not only pro-Israel). I hope they somehow come up with financing.

    One this is for sure. Never going back to the Times. If the sun closes, I will subscribe to the Wall Street Journal.

    Vote McCain - Palin In 08!
    Vote McCain - Palin In 08!
    15 years ago

    If they go under it will be one less paper that gives the NEWS and not their opinion of the news.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    This is sad news. I echo the comments above; this is easily the most pro-Israel paper in the city, and is miles ahead of the pornographic Post and pro-Palestinian Times. The arts and sports are great too. As a moderate, I don’t always agree with their politics, but it’s one of the best reads in the city. I really hope it sticks around.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    If you think the Times is pro-palestinian, I’d hardly call you a “moderate”.