Ousted NY Times editor to grads: Show what you are made of

Abramson delivers speech at Wake Forest University after facing scathing criticism from NYT publisher.


Reuters May 19, 2014
"Some of you, and now I'm talking to anybody who has been dumped... You know the sting of losing and not getting something you badly want when that happens, show them what you are made of," she said. PHOTO: REUTERS

NEW YORK: The New York Times' ousted top editor Jill Abramson made her first public remarks on Monday, not shying away from the controversy surrounding her departure and told graduates to fight back.

"Some of you, and now I'm talking to anybody who has been dumped... You know the sting of losing and not getting something you badly want when that happens, show them what you are made of," she said.

Abramson delivered the commencement speech to students graduating from Wake Forest University in North Carolina after unusually scathing criticism of her management style leveled by Times' publisher Arthur Sulzberger Jr.

She brought up Anita Hill noting that the attorney who accused US Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas of sexual harassment turned her insults into a badge of honour.

"Anita wrote me last week to say she was proud of me. That meant so much," Abramson said.

Abramson co-wrote a book with New Yorker writer Jane Mayer about Thomas. Sulzberger, whose family controls the New York Times Co, announced to a stunned newsroom on Wednesday that he had replaced Abramson with her second-in-command, Dean Baquet.

Abramson was the first woman appointed to lead the newsroom.

"What's next for me, I don't know. So I'm in exactly the same boat as you," she told the audience.

Sulzberger's abrupt dismissal of the woman he hired three years ago sparked a firestorm of debate over women managers in the workplace.

The controversy was fueled by a report in The New Yorker that said Abramson was paid less than her predecessor as executive editor, Bill Keller, and other male counterparts during her 17-year career at the paper.

Sulzberger has since twice spoken out to say that Abramson's compensation was not "considerably" less than that of Keller's -that it was directly comparable - and to deny she was removed because she is a woman.

In a statement on Saturday, Sulzberger targeted Abramson’s management skills, ticking off a list of reasons including "arbitrary decision-making, a failure to consult and bring in colleagues with her, inadequate communication and public mistreatment of colleagues.”

Abramson famously got a tattoo of the Times iconic "T" on her back.

When asked if she was going to remove it, she said:

"Not a chance."

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