Chicago Public Media names new CEO to lead WBEZ and Sun-Times

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Chicago Public Media names new CEO to lead WBEZ and Sun-Times

After months of uncertainty and turmoil, Chicago Public Media has named a new CEO to guide its flagship radio station WBEZ and the Chicago Sun-Times.

Melissa Bell, 45, a digital journalism pioneer who co-founded online news site Vox.com, will take the helm of the Chicago NPR station and co-owned daily newspaper, which have struggled since merging under the same nonprofit banner in January 2022.

“There are challenges facing CPM, but they are not insurmountable,” Bell said in a news release Thursday. “In fact, there is so much potential that comes from the collaboration between WBEZ and the Chicago Sun-Times.”

There has been significant static in the air Chicago Public Media this year, starting with the December announcement that CEO Matt Moog would be stepping down two years after combining WBEZ and the Chicago Sun-Times, backed by $61 million in philanthropic support.

Facing declining revenue, Chicago Public Media implemented layoffs and buyouts in April, trimming the ranks by 17 employees, dramatically scaling back WBEZ’s podcasting unit and eliminating its urban alternative radio platform Vocalo

Earlier this month, the local unit of SAG-AFTRA, which represents more than 60 employees at WBEZ, filed an unfair labor practices complaint against Chicago Public Media.  Unions representing both the Sun-Times and WBEZ subsequently submitted to the board an overwhelming vote of no confidence in Moog, who has been serving as interim CEO during the search for his successor.

The national CEO search, conducted by Koya Partners, reached out to 400 leaders, drawing 83 expressions of interest. After winnowing the field to four finalists earlier this month, the board landed on Bell.

“Melissa brings an incredible depth of experience as a media executive and publisher, a product leader and as a reporter,” Robert Pasin, board chair at Chicago Public Media, said in a news release. “With her proven, visionary leadership and collaborative approach, Melissa will bring tremendous expertise and a strong track record of success to help Chicago Public Media develop a sustainable model for high-quality local journalism in the digital age.”

Bell, who earned a master’s degree from Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism, was an architect of digital strategy at the Washington Post before co-founding Vox.com in 2014, an “explainer” news site that makes “complex ideas accessible,” according to its website.

In 2016, Bell became publisher of Vox’s parent company, Vox Media, overseeing a portfolio that grew substantially during her tenure, encompassing New York Magazine, The Verge, The Cut, Eater, Vulture and other media titles.

Vox Media was among several high-profile publishers to implement layoffs last year amid declining revenue, spurring backlash from the union representing its employees.

Bell stepped down as publisher at Vox Media in October. In January, she became a visiting fellow at the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism at Oxford University, where she studied the impact of news avoidance on local journalism in the United States.

Those lessons will likely come in hand in her new role at Chicago Public Media. Bell is set to take the reins on Sept. 3.

“It is an honor to take on this role, where there is both a massive opportunity and an urgent necessity to strengthen the role of public media in our local communities,” Bell said, “There is a declining trust, and more worrisome, a declining interest in news at a critical time in Chicago and for our country.”

Moog, a Chicago tech entrepreneur, joined the Chicago Public Media board in 2010. He became interim CEO in 2020 and was elevated to permanent CEO one year later, overseeing the merger of WBEZ-FM 91.5 with the Sun-Times in January 2022.

But in the two-and-a-half years since its consummation, the merger has also led to significant and abrupt leadership changes at Chicago Public Media, including Sun-Times CEO Nykia Wright stepping down in January 2023, putting Moog directly in charge of overseeing both the radio station and the newspaper.

Moog, who stepped down from the board in 2021, will relinquish his interim CEO role upon Bell’s arrival.

rchannick@chicagotribune.com

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