Kevin Merida Disputed With Los Angeles Times Owner Regarding an Unpublished Article One Month Before Resignation

Editor Kevin Merida and Los Angeles Times owner Patrick Soon-Shiong apparently disputed over an unpublished article about a California doctor one month before his resignation, per a report from the New York Times published Friday.

Soon-Shiong reportedly raised concerns with Merida in December, allegedly attempting to dissuade the editorā€™s pursuit of a story regarding a California doctor who was an acquaintance of Soon-Shiong.

The NYT reporting, which cites three people close to the situation, comes less than a month after Merida announced his resignation from the Times, writing in a memo that he made the decision to leave ā€œin consultation with Patrick, after considerable soul-searching about my career at this stage and how best to be of value to the profession I love.ā€

Merida came to the Times from ESPN in 2021. Soon-Shiong said at the time that Merida had ā€œa clear understanding of the rigor necessary for independent journalism and how to translate that journalism to multiple platforms.ā€

In a separate email following Meridaā€™s resignation, Soon-Shiong wrote that the news organization was ā€œconducting an internal and external search for his successor.ā€ Two weeks after Meridaā€™s departure, the Times laid off about 115 journalists, amounting to 20 percent of their newsroom. ā€œTodayā€™s decision is painful for all, but it is imperative that we act urgently and take steps to build a sustainable and thriving paper for the next generation,ā€ Soon-Shiong wrote on Jan. 23.

According to Soon-Shiong, he has invested almost $1 billion in the paper since acquiring it in 2018.

The Hollywood Reporter reached out to the Times for comment.

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