Famed Chicago Alt-Weekly Barely Survives a Covid Scare

The Chicago Reader has just survived a near-death experience by the skin of its battered and chipped teeth. The 51-year-old alternative weekly was headed to oblivion because one of its co-owners reneged on an agreement to let it transition to nonprofit status. As a condition of signing off on the deal, he wanted the copublisher dismissed.

In a bizarre role-reversal, co-owner Leonard C. Goodman accused the Reader’s publisher and editors of suppressing his freedom of speech and violating the First Amendment. All because they wanted to correct a column he wrote that was full of misinformation casting doubt on the efficacy of Covid-19 vaccines.

The dispute has played out like a weird dance since Goodman published a column on November 24, 2021, saying he didn’t think the vaccine was safe for his own daughter. Under the headline “Vaxxing our kids: Why I’m not rushing to get my six-year-old the COVID-19 vaccine,” Goodman trashed the “feverish hype by government officials, mainstream media outlets, and Big Pharma, and the systematic demonization and censorship of public figures who raise questions about the campaign.” Critics of mass vaccination, he alleged, “have faced heavy suppression on social media and vicious attacks from corporate media outlets.”

After complaints poured in from readers and editorial staffers, copublisher Tracy Baim authorized editors to have the column retrospectively reviewed by an independent fact-checker. Then she took on the unenviable task of offering Goodman several options, including a rewrite, posting the fact-check, or posting an editor’s note and pulling the column. “The rewrite kept his personal opinion of his own daughter intact,” Baim said in an interview. “The non-peer-reviewed science was what we wanted to put the fact check around.”

Goodman balked. In a meeting on December 15, his allies on the paper’s governing board accused Baim of censorship and violating the Reader’s history of publishing dissenting views. One of those allies, lawyer Sladjana Vuckovic, told The Washington Post, “If they think it’s journalistic par-for-the-course to rewrite and edit an article because it’s unpopular, they should go back and review the First Amendment.”

Quite aside from the absurdity of claiming the First Amendment protects writers (much less owners) from being fact-checked and corrected, the boardroom dissension couldn’t have come at a worse time. For two years Baim, a well-known figure in Chicago media circles as cofounder of the Windy City Times, the local LGBTQ paper, had been working to set up a 501(c)3 so that the Reader could seek out support from foundations and individuals, and transition to a more financially stable nonprofit status. The Reader had been losing about $1 million a year for several years, and its interim co-owners, Goodman and real estate investor Elzie Higginbottom, had never intended to subsidize it forever. The transaction was supposed to close on December 31.


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