California Post Launch Date Set for Jan. 26 as Rupert Murdoch Moves

Rupert Murdoch‘s California Post has a launch date, with executives at News Corp. telling staff that it will be “setting the agenda, entertaining and disrupting the status quo.”
The California Post will launch on Jan. 26, in both digital and print, setting up its newsroom on the Fox studio lot in Century City.
“January 26 is our moment,” NYP Media Group editor-in-chief Keith Poole and California Post editor-in-chief Nick Papps wrote to staff in a memo Monday. “The California Post officially premieres thanks to this remarkable team who believed in the vision and did the hard work to bring it to life. We’re proud, grateful and just getting started.”
The California Post is an audacious bet by News Corp., now controlled by Lachlan Murdoch (though Rupert is still involved), and led by CEO Robert Thomson, to bring to the West Coast what the New York Post has brought to New York: populist, entertaining journalism that takes aim the (mostly liberal) political elite, mixed with boots-on-the-ground reporting, significant local sports reporting, and gossip anchored by a West Coast version of Page Six, which will be led by Ian Mohr.
“We will be proudly representing the values of everyday hard-working Californians. They will be at the center of all we do, not the elites, the powerful or the corrupt,” Papps said. “Already, the reaction to our arrival and investment in journalism in this state has been so positive. People are tired of legacy media, they want change, and that change starts on January 26.”
News Corp. announced its planned California expansion last summer, targeting the Los Angeles Times and other local media.
“Los Angeles and California surely need a daily dose of The Post as an antidote to the jaundiced, jaded journalism that has sadly proliferated,” Thomson said at the time. “We are at a pivotal moment for the city and the state, and there is no doubt that The Post will play a crucial role in engaging and enlightening readers, who are starved of serious reporting and puckish wit.”




