Become a Member
The Jewish Chronicle

Citizen Zell finds life tough in the media

Times are hard for Jewish newspaper bosses as new media and the credit crunch

December 18, 2008 12:04

By

Alex Brummer,

Alex Brummer

2 min read

It has not been the kindest of times for American Jewish entrepreneurs. Sam Zell, the Chicago-based tycoon who a year ago rescued the Tribune group, publishers of the LA Times, the Chicago Tribune and Newsday, has found that running newspapers in the era of the internet and 24/7 news channels is a very different game to buying up distressed property and selling it on for big profits in a rising market.

In an entirely separate incident, Bernard Madoff, regarded as one of the safest pair of hands on Wall Street, confessed to the world’s largest ever known fraud, a $50(£32.5)bn investment scheme, losing billions for a number of famous Americans.

The notables included, as the Wall Street Journal noted, Mort Zuckerman, president of the Committee of American Jewish Organisations, the Elie Wiesel Foundation and a charity run by movie director Stephen Spielberg.

The Sunday Telegraph unhelpfully pointed out that Madoff and his wife Ruth are fixtures on the “so-called Jewish circuit” in New York and Florida and gave millions to “education groups and Jewish charities”.