Otis Chandler, the former publisher of The Los Angeles Times who transformed his family’s provincial, conservative newspaper into a respected national media voice, died early on Monday. He was 78.
Chandler had been suffering from a degenerative brain disorder known as Lewy body disease, said Tom Johnson, who succeeded Chandler as publisher.
Chandler was the scion of a family that wielded financial and political power in the Los Angeles area for decades.
As publisher, he spent most of his career chafing against what he sensed was an East Coast bias against Los Angeles and fought to elevate the Times to a par with eastern rivals.
”No publisher in America improved a paper so quickly on so grand a scale, took a paper that was marginal in qualities and brought it to excellence as Otis Chandler did,” David Halberstam wrote in his 1979 book The Powers that Be.
With his blonde hair, weightlifter physique and love of surfing and hot cars, Chandler was a quintessential Californian of his generation.
He was an avid hunter as well as a collector of antique cars and motorcycles. He bagged an elephant in Mozambique, antelope in Chad, a leopard in Kenya and the four rarest species of big-horn sheep in North America. Many of his trophies were displayed at his home and at his Vintage Museum of Transportation and Wildlife in Oxnard.
Chandler resigned as the paper’s publisher in 1980 following 20 years at the helm.
He remained mostly quiet about the paper’s operation after he left as chairperson and editor in chief in 1985. But he returned as a newsroom hero in 2000 to chide publicly the paper’s management, which he blamed for an embarrassing scandal and severe cost-cutting that damaged its reputation.
Soon after, the Chandler Family Trust sold newspaper parent company Times Mirror to the Tribune.
”I was building up a hell of a head of steam,” he said in an interview in The New York Times in 2000. ”The Times is not as dear to me as my own family, but it’s close.”
Chandler was born in 1927, the son of Times publisher Norman Chandler and great-grandson of Times founder Harrison Gray Otis.
Chandler was groomed from an early age to take control of the family’s newspaper. He worked as a printer’s apprentice, reporter and in the advertising and circulation departments. He succeeded his father as publisher in 1960 at age 33.
The paper then was considered parochial and partisan, a mouthpiece for conservative political causes.
Almost immediately, Chandler initiated changes designed to make the paper one of the country’s best. He moved it toward the political centre and angered conservative allies — and family members — by publishing a series of stories on the right-wing John Birch Society.
He hired more reporters, raised salaries, opened overseas bureaus and beefed up the paper’s coverage of Washington.
Chandler also expanded the reach of Times Mirror, starting a news service with The Washington Post and acquiring newspapers, television stations and other media outlets.
Chandler’s efforts resulted in the Times winning seven Pulitzer prizes during his tenure.
”In his determination to bring The Los Angeles Times to the front rank of the nation’s newspapers, Otis Chandler came to stand for the best of what we journalists believe in,” said Louis D Boccardi, retired chief executive of The Associated Press.
”He was a beacon for quality journalism and he brought that passion to his beloved Times and the other Times Mirror newspapers. He brought those same standards to The Associated Press as a director, and those standards both challenged and enriched us.”
While serving on the board of Times Mirror until 1998, Chandler approved the hiring of Mark Willes, a cereal company executive with no newspaper experience, to run Times Mirror in 1995 when the company was mired in sagging profits.
Chandler remained silent while Willes shuttered New York Newsday, a paper Chandler had opened, and began to collapse the walls traditionally separating the business operations of the company from the editorial side.
That policy culminated in the 1999 publication of a special Sunday magazine section on the newly opened Staples Centre, the downtown sports arena.
It was later revealed that the paper split about $2-million in advertising revenue from the magazine with the arena. The deal led to widespread unrest in the newsroom and the paper later issued a front-page apology.
In 2000, disgusted with the direction the paper was headed, Chandler dictated a statement that was read aloud in the newsroom: ”I have reluctantly decided that I can no longer sit idly by and watch a very serious decline in the morale of people throughout the Times.”
Chandler railed against ”this unbelievably stupid and unprofessional handling of the Staples special section”.
He also criticised the management for staff cuts and reductions in the size of the paper, which he said threatened its credibility.
”Respect and credibility for a newspaper is irreplaceable,” Chandler wrote. ”The trust and faith in a newspaper by its employees, its readers, and the community is dearer to me than life itself.”
In addition to his wife, Bettina, survivors include sons Harry and Michael and daughters Carolyn Chandler and Cathleen Chandler. — Sapa-AP