Denby Fawcett: MidWeek's Troubling Pay-To-Play Journalism
Mayoral candidate Keith Amemiya’s cover story this week looks like a news article but it’s a paid advertisement.
July 24, 2020 · 6 min read
About the Author
Denby Fawcett is a longtime Hawaii television and newspaper journalist, who grew up in Honolulu. Her book, is available on Amazon. Opinions are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat’s views.
Political candidates have many ways of advertising but the latest way is to buy a cover story in the weekly publication .
Mayoral candidate Keith Amemiya is the first Hawaii politician to take advantage of the opportunity, paying tens of thousands of dollars for , just when primary election ballots arrived in people’s mailboxes.
MidWeek offered the cover story opportunity to the mayoral candidates last month touting it as a 鈥減riceless鈥 opportunity available to whomever signed up first to be exclusively featured on the publication鈥檚 cover with accompanying article.
In the email sent last month, the offer was pitched as 鈥渨orth over $70,000 as a total package.” The final cost to be negotiated.
Dennis Francis is the president of Oahu Publications, the parent company of both the Honolulu Star-Advertiser and MidWeek.
Francis said MidWeek鈥檚 new venture of offering politicians a you-pay-for-it, we-write-it cover story should not be surprising.
鈥淢idweek has never been a newspaper. It has always been a 聽vehicle for ads,鈥 he said in a phone interview.
When asked if there shouldn鈥檛 be a larger disclaimer to make clear the Amemiya cover story was paid for, Francis said he is comfortable with the way it鈥檚 presented. 鈥淚t has a disclaimer at the end like any politician鈥檚 ad.鈥
There is nothing in election law prohibiting Amemiya from seizing the opportunity of a paid-for cover story.
But despite what Francis says, the perception is that Amemiya鈥檚 cover story is a normal news profile rather than an ad put together by his campaign committee.
In fact, it may appear to some readers that MidWeek is endorsing Amemiya. The headline on the cover is 鈥淏orn to Lead.鈥
As a journalist, this bothers me: the pay-to-play idea of selling a cover story to a political candidate during an election year in a publication many people think is a newspaper.
It erodes people鈥檚 confidence in objective news gathering.
鈥淲e never did it before because we never thought of it.鈥 — Oahu Publications’ Dennis Francis
Adam Wong, Amemiya鈥檚 campaign chairperson, said in an emailed statement: 鈥淥ur goal is to reach as many people as possible with Keith鈥檚 vision for change and new leadership. The voters may not be familiar with Keith so when MidWeek offered this opportunity we saw it as a good way to share his story.鈥
Amemiya鈥檚 campaign declined to disclose what it paid to buy the cover story but that information is expected to be in the next campaign spending report due to be released Wednesday.
Mayoral candidate Kym Pine said her campaign also got the cover story offer but rejected it.
鈥淚 was disappointed and offended, I always thought of MidWeek as a pure publication,” Pine said. “I thought its cover stories were about people who accomplished great things in the community, not that some cover stories were paid for.鈥
MidWeek arrives in the mail at no charge every Wednesday to 269,041 Oahu households. , MidWeek prides itself as 鈥渞eaching almost every household in Oahu.鈥
The publication is read by an older demographic — the demographic that votes.
In the past, MidWeek鈥檚 cover stories have featured business owners and community leaders, entertainers, journalists, celebrities, charities and occasionally the head of a local business such as a supermarket or hardware store that is a regular advertiser.
So why now for the first time in the publication鈥檚 36-year history has it opened up paid cover stories to politicians in the middle of an election?
鈥淲e never did it before because we never thought of it,鈥 said Francis.
A Star-Advertiser/MidWeek sales rep explains the idea in the email to political candidates:
With election year upon us, how does a candidate stand out amongst the ‘everyone does it’ sign waving, relying on hit or miss social media or viewed television spot? I have something totally new 聽that I wanted to offer you. Political analyst Neal Milner is one of the people who said he was astonished to learn MidWeek cover stories are for sale. Milner says there should be a disclaimer that it鈥檚 a paid ad written in bold print right on the cover itself. A key reason many readers consider MidWeek a newspaper is because the publication in the past featured columns by well-known local news reporters and news analysts including my husband Bob Jones, Jade Moon and Dan Boylan. That is until April 1 when they were all laid off due to declining ad revenue during the economic crisis brought on by the pandemic. When Oahu Publications does something like this it takes away trust.鈥 — Stirling Morita, Hawaii chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists MidWeek鈥檚 past cover stories聽 鈥 not all of them purchased 鈥 were written and bylined by local journalists. But what鈥檚 new here is Amemiya鈥檚 campaign bought the cover story as a political ad during an election and submitted all the photographs accompanying the interior text. Correction: An earlier version of this story said the Amemiya campaign wrote the story as well as paying for the space. The Amemiya campaign says it did not write the copy but it did provide the photographs. Stirling Morita, president of the Hawaii Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists, said he is filing a formal complaint about the story with the national office of SPJ. Morita says the story violates聽 SPJ鈥檚 ethics code by failing to prominently display that it is sponsored content. 鈥淭he so-called disclosure at the end is not adequate. It seems like an afterthought. We are all hearing about the issue of trust in journalism. When Oahu Publications does something like this it takes away trust.鈥 As mentioned before, the issue here is perception. Oahu Publications is doing what it does: make money with an advertising vehicle. But because many people think MidWeek is a news organization it appears it is endorsing Amemiya鈥檚 candidacy. Oahu Publications president Francis says other politicians have paid to have MidWeek cover stories later in the election season. But he would not disclose their names.
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ContributeAbout the Author
Denby Fawcett is a longtime Hawaii television and newspaper journalist, who grew up in Honolulu. Her book, is available on Amazon. Opinions are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat’s views.
Latest Comments (0)
Just the other day 芒聙聵born to lead, the good hanai son芒聙聶 was heavily defended over some PAC accusations of inappropriate financial dealings, etc., now he芒聙聶s attacked over inappropriate advertising?Next time maybe we should let a PAC and a candidate duke it out in public first without interfering - who knows, we might learn something?
Frank_Rizzo · 4 years ago
As a retired political advertising consultant I feel as though I've been had. As Dennis Francis reveals this hasn't been offered to political candidates before because they hadn't thought of it before. I guess I've been too naive. It's one thing to accept money from a traditional advertiser. But from a politician? Greed, in all caps. You may be surprised to know that the local TV morning shows also have rate cards for on-air' interviews.' Last I heard as much as $8k for a few minutes. So much for the empty promise of local journalism. Thanks, Denby.
philwood · 4 years ago
Interesting that Mr Francis states,聽"Midweek has never been a newspaper," while stating on the cover that Midweek is "Hawaii's Favorite Newspaper."Mahalo, Denby, for informing me that what I thought was the front page of a newspaper was actually yet another political ad containing a false statement.
Ace · 4 years ago
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