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The SunPost Is Setting

Once a power on the local scene, the scrappy weekly has seen its fortunes plummet.

Phones were disconnected last week. The lone staff writer has applied for unemployment. The executive editor's name — and that of almost every employee — has vanished from the masthead.

The SunPost, one of this town's only truly independent voices, is in deep trouble. "It's sad," says Andrew Stark, the young genius who published the weekly from 1995 until he departed in 2007. "We always liked to think of the paper as the New York Times even if it wasn't quite that. We wanted it to be a voice for the community."

Jeannette Stark, Andrew's mom and the current publisher, insists it's just a temporary setback. "We're still running the paper. Talk of our disappearing is a bit premature. A couple of in-house problems have been ironed out."

Issues of last week's 24-page edition were a rare find. A new batch was never delivered to several distribution boxes along Biscayne Boulevard, and some locations near the SunPost office on Miami Beach's Meridian Avenue never received their regular complement.

The paper, like many publications, including the Miami Herald and New Times, has noticeably slimmed down over the past year. The February 21, 2008 SunPost weighed in at a healthy 80 pages, fat with full-color ads from realtors and developers touting luxury condos in South Beach high-rises, but as the foreclosure crisis crushed that industry, page counts fell. Recent issues, with the exception of a healthy 96-page Art Basel edition, have rarely cracked 40.

"The SunPost hasn't paid me since December '08 and probably won't," says one freelancer who has worked there for years and whose name was on the masthead until last week. "They even stopped giving me rubber checks."

Adds another: "I called the cops when they wouldn't pay me."

Marketing manager Antwon Thomas acknowledged the last two full-time editorial employees, Lee Molloy and Angie Hargot, were let go in the past few days. He says the newspaper plans on paying everyone who is owed money. "There may have been some oversights in paying freelancers, but those people will be paid."

The weekly's roots date back to 1979, when Felix Stark, who had owned a chain of small papers in his native South Africa, bought the Sun Reporter, a lightweight rag full of community dribble. He rechristened the paper the SunPost in 1985, two years before another South Beach tabloid, The Wave, was bought up by a couple of guys from Phoenix and rechristened Miami New Times.

For the next ten years, the SunPost built a reputation as a business-friendly paper that sometimes got a tad too close to its sources — perhaps even accepting planted stories from political operatives and advertisers. Then, in 1995, Felix Stark died, leaving the paper to his widow Jeannette. The couple's son, Andrew, 23 and fresh out of college at the time, took the reins as publisher and set out to remake the SunPost.

Under Andrew's direction, the paper embraced a brand of muckraking, in-your-face journalism. In 1997, it earned a coveted "Laurel" from the Columbia Journalism Review for its heavy and often opinionated coverage of the "Save Miami Beach" referendum, which limited the size of construction on the waterfront.

"That campaign really launched us into the spotlight," says Michael Sasser, the paper's executive editor from 1996 to 1999. "It made us kingmakers."

One of those "kings" was former Miami Beach Mayor David Dermer, a big player in the Save Miami Beach effort. "The SunPost was the driving force in moving [Save Miami Beach] forward," he says. "They were an integral part of the city."

In 2002, the paper took a big risk by trying to spread its hard-earned Miami Beach reputation to the mainland, circulating from Aventura south along Biscayne Bay. "When I started, we were 7,000 unaudited copies, and when I left, we were ABC-audited 45,000," says Andrew Stark, referring to the Audit Bureau of Circulation, which monitors newspapers. "My theory was everywhere anyone had a distribution box, we'd have one."

Rebecca Wakefield, a former Miami New Times employee, was the SunPost's freelance political columnist from July 2005 through July 2008. Her work was read by political watchers from Miami City Hall to Tallahassee. When columnist Jim DeFede left the Miami Herald the same month she started, it created an opening for the SunPost, she says. "There was a vacuum after DeFede left, a hunger to know where the bodies were buried," she says. "People who wanted to know this kind of thing found me in the SunPost."

In recent months, local papers — and those across the country — have been socked by the bad economy. The Miami Herald is up for sale. The parent company of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel is in bankruptcy. Those papers have cut back local coverage, including that of Miami Beach, so the SunPost's disappearance would be acutely felt. "I'm sure many folks who would like to see less coverage, less light shone on corruption, are probably celebrating right now," Dermer says.

One area where some newspapers, such as the Herald and New Times, have pinned their hopes is the Internet, investing substantial money in blogs and multimedia content. But the SunPost hasn't found an effective online strategy. A rough estimate from Quantcast.com shows the clunky website attracted less than 10,000 people in January. The paper's blog hasn't been updated since September.

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  • Sunday Lazy Daisy 06/19/2010 10:30:00 PM

    I miss the old Sunpost, I looked forward to picking it up in my driveway everyweek(sigh) I miss that. I did a great deal of business there and the people were amazing. I worked with Andrew Stark and Antwon Tomas, both were talented hardworking guys I considered members of my team. They helped me use my marketing dollars wisely, directing me and my team and through their efforts helped turn around a otherwise sinking business. I hope these guys are well, I've been told that these guys have left the Country. It is a shame the real Sunpost had to die. I'm hoping this new version will get better. At least we have The Lead Miami Beach. We need local coverage. Lacey D

  • Count LF Chodkiewicz Chudzikie 04/05/2009 5:32:00 PM

    It's 2:31 p.m. Sunday April 6, 2009 in the sunny Village of Trudering in the Landeshaupstaat Muenchen, Bayern, and the "Sun Post" website hasn't been updated since the article on the paper closes appeared. Yet they put out a few pages under Kim Stark so as not to return any advertising money they collected! Dare I say it? Crooked until the end and afterward!

  • formersunpoststaff 03/26/2009 10:22:00 PM

    I am never going to get the money I am owed by the sleazy Starks. They are still printing a joke of a paper with non-paying ads and throwing a few copies here and there. I tried calling Jeannett and Kim today to see if I could at least work out some type of settlement - Guess what??? Phone's are disconnected again. I hate these people...Arghhh!!!!!!!

  • Count LF Chodkiewicz Chudzikie 03/23/2009 3:47:00 PM

    March 23, 2009 6:44 a.m. Miami Time, For the record, the last posting on the Sun Post website was March 5th, so nothing was posted for the issues of March 12th or 19th, despite statements from Jeannett Stark and Kim Stark that they were still in business as posted on several little-known websites. There have been conflicting reports Kim Stark has started a new paper with the business manager of the Sun Post called "Night", but no one has seen it. A few, a very few papers with the date March 5th, were in some boxes on Miami Beach. I feel sorry for any advertisers, because there really isn't any "there", there!

  • mary michele 03/10/2009 12:58:00 AM

    A great paper! It will be missed. Hope to see staff taking assignments at other local area papers.

  • The Shadow Knows At 3AM 03/09/2009 10:39:00 PM

    Andrew Stark a genius??? He compared his newspaper to the New York Times??? I can�t believe this even got past the editor�s desk. I�m still laughing at this way off base characterization and outlandish comparison. First and foremost � the Sunpost was the mouse that roared. It was nothing more than shitty little weekly run by greedy and petty people on a real estate advertising steroid binge. Secondly, Andrew was not that smart, trust me, I worked for him for a good while. He surrounded himself with intelligent and dynamic people moistly from other major local publications (a good handful from New Times). He brought in all sorts of talent that made up for the fact that he was limited, insecure and weak in his ability to lead wisely. Almost like a little spoiled brat, Andrew expanded the newspaper without shoring up his base on the beach as I and others had warned him. With the constant extension into other markets in coverage, news boxes and advertising, his greed was ultimately the undoing of the Sunpost today - or last week - or whenever Kim finally taps out. Andrew does have one dubious distinction (aside from the NYT Laurel - still LMAO on this one) - he added a new low to the concept of advertising print whore. Without a doubt, Andrew Stark would figure out how to manipulate people�s egos in order to get them to spend a lot of money with him for a newspaper that was more steam than anything else. He was also vindictive to those who didn�t support his opinions or ideals. A petty little bully who used his paper to intimidate, Andrew was more so ingenuous and inexperienced on many levele than anythign else. Take the New York Times comment he made recently. Even though the guy now works as a glorified sale rep at a newspaper chain that is going out of business and lives in freezing cold Massachusetts and should know better, he still has no real concept of journalism and newspaper standards. Anyone from New York, or who has a half a brain and is familiar with the newspapers there, realizes that New York Post and Daily News are what people consider their hometown newspaper with the best local coverage � NOT the New York Times. The NYT is too busy covering the country and the world. New York is secondary to the Times� coverage. You see, this is exactly what I am talking about � an idiot spouting out his true ignorance � even two years later. You think the guy would learn something. Here�s another example: The genius must have seen something on a faculty roster during night school at UM when he decided to name his father Publisher Emeritus. Oh sure, the title exists in many academia circles and businesses with one, tiny little exception. You have to be ALIVE to be Emeritus. The whole idea is that an Emeritus Professor, as an example, is that they can lend advice and assist other current junior and senior faculty. Again, my point, Andrew was not that smart � he was just a really, really good faker. I have had many a laugh each week whenever I see this listing. As far as the Sunpost today � mommy Stark and Kim have only Andrew to blame for the current mess and the shattered dream out a countywide weekly. My advice to them is: 1. Pack it up � Andrew�s dream is over and there is nothing left of the paper � even the circulation is diminished to non-existence and the remaining few advertisers will figure this out soon enough. Kim�s comments to the New Times remind me of a scene out of the Wizard of Oz after Dorothy and her entourage expose the wizard's true identity and hear in a booming voice to, �ignore the man behind the machine� Just like Oz, the gig is up sweetheart and it is time to stop pretending. 2. Pay your bills and debts � you and your mom owe a lot of people a lot of money � make good on the services that were rendered by former staffers!!! It�s the very least you should do to keep some sort of face. An aside, I read the Riptide blog entry the day after this story broke and noticed that observation by the author in regards to the changes to the publication. Yes, it was greatly stripped down and there was no copy except for Hood � and he should know better � I will tell him the next time I see him. But here is what you also missed: 1. The ABC verification that Andrew worked so hard for and touted for many years is now GONE. There goes the whole credibility factor. 2. They cut down on the areas they cover � this will probably exacerbate as more people find out they are not distributing the paper in those areas and the coverage is all press releases.

  • John Hopkins 03/07/2009 8:21:00 PM

    Am sorry to see the Sun Post's decline. The younger Starks deserve to be proud of their work over the years. Here's hoping that community journalism finds new and sturdier outlets in the future. The quality of civil society depends on it! L

  • John 03/07/2009 9:29:00 AM

    Nope, absolutely not guilty of that. Just a concerned resident of South Beach that appreciated real news coverage.

  • Get A Life 03/07/2009 8:19:00 AM

    Nice comments. You must be the former editor. You were not qualified to edit a high school newspaper either. Your content sucked, no wonder they canned you! Get A Life.

  • john 03/07/2009 3:40:00 AM

    Has anyone seen the travesty that is the latest, but very illusive issue of the Sunpost? First, the content is almost all garbage. The cover story is a press release from the New World Symphony, the calendar is a joke and the rest of the crapfest within is so bad a homeless person would be embarrassed to sleep under it. Second, the masthead is a fabrication of the highest order. Executive Editor: Kim Stark. Hilarious. That woman isn't qualified to edit a high school newspaper, let alone a 'real' newspaper. Contibuting Writers: Anslie Bloom is Kim Stark's sister. Helen Hill contributed nothing to the issue. John Hood is real but should know better. Jason Jeffers contributed nothing either. Antwon Tomas also contributed nothing. Michael Sasser wrote some puff piece, although his name was misspelled on his byline - nice editing job! Robin J. Schwartz is a realtor who is probably working for the promise of free ads. Calendar Editor: Jake Orsinni is a fictional character Photographer: Eitan Moshe Klein is working for free ads Web Site: Hasn't been updated in more than a week Accounting: Jasmin Nunez already quit. Sales Director: Gail Sheptow, may have been recently employed but is probably another fictional character. Writers and advertising clients beware. This paper is now nothing more than a scam operation that didn't pay its staff - they are all gone for a reason, owes thousands of dollars to its freelancers and owes money to vendors all over town. Do not work for these criminals and, in this tough economy, don't waste your hard earned dollars on advertising with them either. You have been warned.

  • Mark Phillips 03/06/2009 2:02:00 AM

    It's very sad that cats everywhere won't have any paper to wipe their butts with and that we won't get to see these unwanted brightly colored eyesore papers scattered haphazardly across the landscape of our neighborhoods. Good riddence. Meow...

  • cb 03/05/2009 10:13:00 PM

    I've been reading the Biscayne Times a lot lately. Maybe everything will go hyperlocal.

  • esteban 03/05/2009 8:23:00 AM

    miami new times, you are definitely next, more than half the miami new times is advertising, its gonna end up like el clarin, leaving my fingers all stained with cheap ink.

  • Carlos Miller 03/05/2009 12:41:00 AM

    The Sunpost website links to a My Space Sunpost page but no Facebook Sunpost page. 'Nuff said.

  • Count LF Chodkiewicz Chudzikie 03/04/2009 10:42:00 PM

    You know exactly what I am going to say. From 1995 to 2005 I lived on Miami Beach near City Hall and tried to bring my experience as an Elected and Appointed Official in New York City to my native state. Because I critized the lack of police action to kill open drug dealing, opposed the phony SAVE MIAMI BEACH Zoning Ordinance, which David Dermer promptly violated as soon as he was elected, and filmed David Dermer's staff coming in hours after they "reported" for work and Kent Harrison Robbins was illegally lobbying in Bob Middaugh's office, that Jose Smith was violating the open meetings laws by privately getting Saul Gross and Richard Steinberg's votes to make him City Attorney, because I reported all this Weinstein and the "Murmers" column printed lie after lie after lie. And you can't sue - because as we can plainly see - and I knew years ago, the Sun Post has NO MONEY, NO ASSETS. Weinstein and the Sun Post, and its former political columnist were and are crooks, blackmailers, slanders, libelists, and have destroyed community participation in Miami Beach Government. It is a shame that since 1997 when Jose Smith, David Dermer, and Simon Cruz were elected with the Sun Post's support, Miami Beach has become everything that the liberal, Democratic, Jewish Community on Miami Beach always accused the better-education Cuban-American community in Miami and Coral Gables, a corrupt, banana republic. Whether the Sun Post does or does not continue is beside the point, the fights between Randy Hilliard-controlled Ed Tobin and David Custin-controlled Jonah Wolfson on the Miami Beach Commission dais show what kid of government Miami Beach now has and has had.

  • Rebecca 03/04/2009 10:29:00 PM

    Nice story, Kyle. It is a sad thing that this little paper is unlikely to survive. Now it's up to you guys to do a few less tits and skateboard type stories and a little more muckraking.

 

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