After NPR's Major Layoff, Employees Accuse CEO Of Racism


After NPR's Major Layoff, Employees Accuse CEO Of Racism​

BY TYLER DURDEN
TUESDAY, APR 04, 2023 - 05:45 AM
In 2023, there are few pleasures like watching leftist media platforms suffer from declining revenue, then painful layoffs and, finally, a delightful crescendo of knee-jerk accusations of racism.
That's exactly what's been playing out at NPR. Last week, looking down the barrel of a $30 million budget shortfall, NPR slashed 10% of its staff across all its departments.
Thanks to none of you listening to NPR's "Louder Than A Riot," we may never hear the promised episode about rapper Saucy Santana
Another axe is poised to fall on NPR's digital team, which has a separate union arrangement. NPR voluntarily recognized that unionization, only to see the union resist accepting NPR's proposed contract terms. "This means they cannot be laid off until a contract or separate lay-off agreement is met," reports Bloomberg. We won't hold our breath waiting for that.
So far, the layoffs hit 84 people, including senior European correspondent and 41-year vet Sylvia Poggioli. NPR said skin-color and membership in marginalized groups factored into their choices of whom to fire.
NPR also killed four podcasts, including "Louder Than A Riot." Its second and final season was examining how hip-hop's "Black women and queer folk have dealt with the same oppression [hip-hop] was built to escape." Right on cue, NPR's "Louder Than A Riot" team rushed to its Twitter account and accused NPR of hitting people of color and queers hardest -- a claim it later corrected.

The real fun started at an "all-hands" meeting called to quell dissent that broke out in earlier department-level sessions about the layoffs. We know this thanks to a Bloomberg exclusive that adds its own layer of unintentional amusement with its straight-faced embrace of woke grievance-blather.
President and CEO John Lansing used slides with metrics to tell employees a bad news/good news story: Sure, NPR's Q1 sponsorship revenue had crashed 30%, but the post-layoff employee diversity readings are roughly the same as before the cuts.
However, one can imagine the grim tone Lansing struck as he disclosed that trans representation in the programming department slipped from 2.5% to 1.2%.
Thanks to some odd NPR decision-making, the meeting was primed for trouble before it started.
As Bloomberg reported, "all laid off employees were given 30 days, or as much time as needed, to remain on staff and transition their work." Even though they aren't trusted to enter NPR buildings anymore, fired employees were curiously invited to join the all-hands meeting, which everyone joined via Zoom.
Lansing had shared demographic stats about the survivors, but, when he opened things up for questions, employees demanded similar race and gender identity stats about the casualties.

NPR's quintessential old-white-man CEO John Lansing previously headed Voice of America (NPR)
Temperatures started rising with an exchange between a fired black employee and the lily-white, 65-year-old Lansing. The employee -- whom Bloomberg didn't dare assign a gender -- said some podcasts didn't get marketing support, and quoted specific executives purported past assurances. The employee also asked, in Bloomberg's words, "how NPR would make diversity work essential."
Lansing addressed the question and comment, but then asked attendees to "turn down the rhetoric." Apparently bristling over the fired employee having named names, he reportedly said, "I would never, ever, on your worst day, call you out by name in a meeting with 827 people.”
In Bloomberg's language, "some employees interpreted this as tone-policing and felt uncomfortable." Soon after, another employee asked how they could be specific with questions without naming individuals. Lansing reiterated his previous admonition, and said the earlier conversation lacked civility.
Oh no you dint, John Lansing!!
Triggered employees leapt into Zoom's chat feature and declared Lansing's reaction "racist." One wrote, “Civility is a weapon wielded by the powerful.”
In a wonderful reap-what-you-sow moment, another employee posted a link to an NPR segment titled "When Civility Is Used As A Cudgel Against People Of Color.”
Sounds like Lansing better voluntarily commit himself to an inpatient DEI program -- and quick.
In 2022, NPR's David Folkenflik wrote an article about NPR's "struggles to retain high-profile journalists of color. Hosts have complained to the network's leadership of pay disparities along racial and gender lines."
At the time, Fox News' Tucker Carlson said, "That sounds systemic, and weird, considering 99 percent of NPR's programming is about promoting equity." His segment included a brief yet tasty sampling of the madness in NPR's programming.





so much nonsense in this article
 

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The rapidity with which NPR collapsed into radical leftism is kind of nuts. It feels like once Trump came down that escalator they just yoinked the stick at hard as they could and it went from some boring stuff and soft left reporting to constant narrative push.
When I was growing up, NPR was a rich, old nerd wearing a bowtie and politely asking you to vote Democrat because it's the thinking man's party. Today, NPR is an obese bluehair screaming directly into your ear that you're a fascist and we're all going to die.
 
It seems the angle they're going for is "they didn't promote us, of course we failed" while the head guy is trying to tell them you need to make something that actually sells, but in the nicest way possible.
Honestly doing that on a mass call where rather than being sane they just called out the upper echelons as failing to protect them that's borderline cuddly. In the average company after doing that shit you, your manager and their manager would be on a call afterwards where it would be abundantly clear either you were now next on the firing list or they were followed by you.
 
When I was growing up, NPR was a rich, old nerd wearing a bowtie and politely asking you to vote Democrat because it's the thinking man's party. Today, NPR is an obese bluehair screaming directly into your ear that you're a fascist and we're all going to die.
No, it's that you specifically are going to die because you're not just a fascist, but you're also a racist transphobe! Also here's a self-proclaimed Marxist claiming capitalism primarily hurts niggos and trannies. Everyone knows having more blacks and trannybosses in power will save capitalism.
 
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So weird to meet a person whose family listened to NPR on car rides. I was in the Chudmobile as Mom & Dad would have Howard Stern, Opie & Anthony, Rush Limbaugh, and Coast to Coast AM.

I think that's why I'm attracted to Kiwifarms because angry, vulgar, and insane people are just nostalgic for me.
 
I couldn't get over the anachronistic aristocrat negress ghost, whose personality is bubbly fat woman.
It gets shown just how she came to be in her situation, but also how much of that bubbliness is active delusion, as the show goes on. She's portrayed as a dumb person in general, though, a rarity when it comes to black people on TV nowadays.

As for this, happy for NPR to go broke, and it's just another reminder that there's a whole class of progressives who regard professionalism in their work environment as silencing their marginalised voices. With the amount of DEI bullshit and whiny wokists suffering the consequences, at least this global depression is going to have some perks.
 
When I was growing up, NPR was a rich, old nerd wearing a bowtie and politely asking you to vote Democrat because it's the thinking man's party. Today, NPR is an obese bluehair screaming directly into your ear that you're a fascist and we're all going to die.
There was a Family Guy gag years ago where a guy leaves his dog at home with NPR on the radio, and the dog becomes increasingly agitated and wears its own paws down to nubs scrabbling at the door. That's exactly what listening to those pseudo-intellectual shitheads feels like.
Either way, it's shitty programming where charisma is actively discriminated against.

 
The rapidity with which NPR collapsed into radical leftism is kind of nuts. It feels like once Trump came down that escalator they just yoinked the stick at hard as they could and it went from some boring stuff and soft left reporting to constant narrative push.
It's because the enemy was always within, only contained with good leftist platitudes from the gov. and media. Trump came along and the gates opened wide.
 
I have no sympathy for higher ups in these companies, even ones who likely were "just along for the woke ride". This is what they deserve. You enabled this insanity, either actively or passively via not putting your fucking foot down! You know what they say about good men doing nothing. In short... GET FUCKED!

Hopefully government funds come next and that 10% reaches at least 41%!
Yeah but the higher ups aren't "good men" - they're vultures.

They siphoned up a whole lot of cash for themselves, let NPR burn to the ground, and now they're going to scatter and do the same thing again and again forever.

EDIT - The top 33 people at NPR were collecting $12,000,000 a year - meaning the average top salary was $360,000 a year for working at NPR. Nearly 50% of employees there were making $100,000/year.
 
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