Here’s the Tribune Co statement that it plans to fie for Chapter 11 bankruptcy court protection:
CHICAGO (December
— Tribune Company today announced that it is voluntarily restructuring its debt obligations under the protection of Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware. The company will continue to operate its media businesses during the restructuring, including publishing its newspapers and running its television stations and interactive properties without interruption, and has sufficient cash to do so.
The Chicago Cubs franchise, including Wrigley Field, is not included in the Chapter 11 filing. Efforts to monetize the Cubs and its related assets will continue.
“Over the last year, we have made significant progress internally on transitioning Tribune into an entrepreneurial company that pursues innovation and stronger ways of serving our customers,” said Sam Zell, chairman and CEO of Tribune. “Unfortunately, at the same time, factors beyond our control have created a perfect storm — a precipitous decline in revenue and a tough economy coupled with a credit crisis that makes it extremely difficult to support our debt.
“We believe that this restructuring will bring the level of our debt in line with current economic realities, and will take pressure off our operations, so we can continue to work toward our vision of creating a sustainable, cutting-edge media company that is valued by our readers, viewers, and advertisers, and plays a vital role in the communities we serve. This restructuring focuses on our debt, not on our operations.”
The company filed today for Court approval of various, customary First-Day Motions, including: maintaining employee payroll and health benefits; the fulfillment of certain pre-filing obligations; the continuation of the Tribune’s cash management system; the ability to honor all customer programs. The company anticipates its First-Day Motions will be approved in the next few days.
While the company has sufficient cash to continue operations, to supplement its cash availability in the event of even more significant declines in its operating results, the company has negotiated an agreement with Barclays to maintain post-filing its existing securitization facility. Barclays has also agreed to provide a letter of credit facility. The company expects to submit these agreements to the Court for approval as part of its First Day Motions.
Since going private last year, Tribune has re-paid approximately $1 billion of its senior credit facility.
During this time, the company has been rewriting the business model for its media assets with the goal of building a sustainable, innovative, competitive company that provides relevant products for its customers and communities.
For further information on Tribune Company’s Chapter 11 filing, please visit Tribune.com or http://chapter11.epiqsystems.com/tribune, or call 888-287-7568. The company will provide updates regarding ongoing operations plans as they become available.
TRIBUNE is America’s largest employee-owned media company, operating businesses in publishing, interactive and broadcasting. In publishing, Tribune’s leading daily newspapers include the Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune, The Baltimore Sun, Sun-Sentinel (South Florida), Orlando Sentinel, Hartford Courant, Morning Call and Daily Press. The Company’s broadcasting group operates 23 television stations, WGN America on national cable, Chicago’s WGN-AM and the Chicago Cubs baseball team. Popular news and information websites complement Tribune’s print and broadcast properties and extend the Company’s nationwide audience. At Tribune we take what we do seriously and with a great deal of pride. We also value the creative spirit and are nurturing a corporate culture that doesn’t take itself too seriously.
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.





People at large don’t subscribe to newspaper anymore. Why bother when you can get your news at home online for free? I don’t know a single person who subscribes to a newspaper these days. I expect every newspaper will go out of business within the next few years. Good riddance.
Georgine, Ben Franklin had your number when he said “It is better to keep silent and be thought a fool than to speak and remove all doubt.” The Tribune company is SO much more than the newspapers. This impacts TV and entertainment people…lives are being disrupted perhaps ruined. Your flip and shallow comment shows utter disrespect. You are obviously not taking advantage of that free at home online information.
I thought the Tribune company divested the LA Times a while back … you know, after destroying it.
Thad
People are tired of reading the L.A. Times’ biased stories…how many can we take? Or stories day after day after day about a poor little immigrant (translation: illegal alien)?
Where’s the good,investigative stuff like the story they researched for three years on the elderly and conservatorships, and how easy it was to take control of assets? The L.A. Times has gotten too lazy and it shows!
I have not subscribed to the LA Times for years. It has become a pretentious, thin, pointless rag with one of the worst records of opinion posing as “news” in the country. In fact, it’s so hollow now that its first article on its own bankruptcy was a reprint of a Reuters dispatch on the topic. Gross! A prayer for Christmas:
“Dear Lord, let it become a complete Liquidating 11, including liquidation of all operating subsidiaries!”
The LA Times should become a free weekly and take its place alongside the far superior LA Weekly in stacks outside of coffeehouses. Betcha the LA Weekly would wipe the deck with ‘em.
BTW, I have long thought Zell planned this. The ESOP mostly owns Trib, and they will likely be wiped out. Zell owns the junk dedt, and will probably become the next true owner. Maybe he’ll take the opportunity to fire the existing crowd and hire some real journalists.
I see that the New York Times is hocking its headquarters to pay the secretaries. Good. Maybe it will follow the LA Times to the coffeehouse steps, wiping out the current crowd of worthless, lazy Sulzbergers on the way. Hope & Change for the New Year!
Georgine, just where do you think the bulk of the news you read online originates? Newspapers. Even wire services use newspapers to find out about news to report. TV news could not exist without newspapers to steal from. Somebody from the station grabs an early edition the night before and start planning the next day. Yes, fires, storms, car chases and crimes break during the day but most news, though certainly not all of it, is initially reported by newspapers.
In the entertainment industry’s case, some news is broken on web sites or blogs — especially Nikki’s — but again, the rest of the world gets its breaking showbiz news primarily from the web sites of the trades.
I agree that the LA TIMES is a LOT worse than many years ago (and that wasn’t all that great, either). But damn it, it’s a Newspaper.
Read online? Yeah – at the local coffee shop in the morning? Take my laptop & stick it on the eating counter like a ass? In a restaurant, where one relaxes, you don’t make like a gooned-out geek placing your laptop next to your ham & eggs. A paper or book is fine (lighter and smaller, and far less obtrusive).
I will miss the LA Times. God how I wish it was brought back to life by a knowlegeable newspaper businssman (or woman). Imagine a paperless society – in the way of no magazines, no newspapers (no – not even Variety or the LA Weekly) – where you can ONLY read these things on a computer. THAT’s not the future I’m looking forward to.
I would wish that somehow, the newspapers can make even a minor comeback, or stay alive somehow. I like rifling through the pages, scanning the articles, being surprised by finding an interesting piece I wasn’t even aware of/searching for.
It will be a lesser time when there are no more newspapers.
I love newspapers. I hate staring at my laptop all day long. My eyes go buggered. There is something nice about a newspaper, reading it, folding the pages, marking a paragraph to remember something pertinent. And it requires no electricity to read it, nor plastic to house it. Yes, the ink can be a problem, but that’s also the love of it. When I’ve finished reading the paper, I have proof!
Newspapers will diminish. But without them, where would the internet news come from?
I’m with helenofpeel. I love the feel of a newspaper, the ink on my fingers, the thick supplments that come with it, the read and re-read sections of it on the floor. And you don’t need to go thru the rigamarole at airports with it.
After spending all week on a computer, I want paper in my hands. It recycles well.
A side note: the Ft Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel is also a watered down piece of Zell Hell which I refuse to buy. I’m not surprised he’s filed bandruptcy.
This doesn’t just effect the LA Times, it effects KTLA (channel 5) and the people who work there. It effects a Chicago newspaper, and I think the Chicago Cubs, and more companies. This is not something to HA, HA about…this is more people out of work, this is shareholders losing money, this adds to an economy that is in the toilet…this probably destroys peoples pensions…no joy in this at all.
I am confused here. In the bankruptcy they say that the Cubs and Wrigley Field are not included. I want someone to explain how you can separate assets from a bankruptcy filing. Is this legal?
A newspaper is not a profit-maker, it is a public service. It’s goal is to inform, investigate, illuminate. The L.A. Times should be turned into a non-profit like the St. Petersburg Times in Florida. I read the L.A. Times every single day.
The big thing here isn’t the LA angle, though that’s why it’s talked about *here*. The big thing is the Cubs, which is separated somewhat due to them being in sale talks. Here’s the Chicago Tribune story on that, and here is a story off the AP wire on ESPN.com from a couple of days before the filing regarding the state of the sale.
The words I’m watching are at the bottom of the second document.
Major League Baseball does not just accept the highest bidder for a team automatically. They retain the right to refuse a sale to an owner they don’t like. A bankruptcy judge, however, could overrule that and order the sale as put up for auction. Given that assets outside the newspaper business such as the Cubs are clearly key assets to the business, a challenge to the attempt to exclude them specifically from a Chapter 11 filing would not be out of order for the creditors. If that were to happen, the owners that comprise Major League Baseball would have a *fit*.
As for how all this affects the LA gossip scene? Big whoop. LAT had its key staff removed already.