L.A. Times lets go of staffers
Chuck Philips among those leaving
|
More Articles:
Most Viewed:
'New Moon' breaks box office records(5337 views)Spielberg, King team on 'Dome'(2407 views)'Avatar' toys with augmented reality(2264 views)Ever capable entrepreneur(1669 views)Planet 51(1479 views)'Oprah' to end run in 2011(1421 views) |
The names of L.A. Times staffers taking buyouts or getting pinkslips began to circulate in journo circles on Monday night, fueled by postings on numerous media-centric websites. Among the scribes involved in the paper's showbiz coverage who are exiting the building is longtime investigative reporter Chuck Philips.
Philips won a Pulitzer for the L.A. Times in 1999 for his coverage of corruption in the entertainment biz, but he took a hit in March when the paper had to run a lengthy retraction on his story involving music mogul Sean Combs and the late rap star Tupac Shakur.
Longtime music writer Richard Cromelin is leaving as well, as is former TV critic and film reporter Paul Brownfield. Other Calendar page regulars exiting include classical music writer Chris Pasles, arts writer Lynne Heffley, music editor-writer Kevin Bronson and Gotham-based reporter Paul Lieberman.
Steve Harvey, who penned the Times' long-running "Only in L.A." compendium of local oddities for the California section, is leaving, as is veteran sports writer Larry Stewart.







