The nonprofit Foundation for National Progress publishes Mother Jones magazine and Mother-Jones.com, produces “Mother Jones Radio,” and directs the Mother Jones Internship Program.
Mother Jones produces revelatory journalism that, in its power and reach, seeks to inform and inspire a more just and democratic world.
M I S S I O N S TAT E M E N T
Contact Information
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CONTENTSA Letter from Mother Jones’ Publisher
What We Do
Impact: By The Numbers
Media Outlets
How Does A Magazine Make A Difference?
2004 Feature Stories
Financial Statement
Contributors And Supporters 2004
Staff
Board Of Directors 2004
Giving Opportunities
Guide To Cover Timeline
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Dear friends,
As I write this, well into 2005, the events, accomplishments and frustrations of 2004 seem far away. Today, though, I have enjoyed reflecting on last year with the benefit of a longer view.
What strikes me most forcefully is how the troubling saga of the news business has continued to unfold. Last year the profound limitations of the commercial news media were there for all to see (Remember the broadcast news’ treatment of the “Swift Boat Veterans” and “Rather-Gate”?) But if anything, the state of “the media” in 2005 has moved even more clearly into view as one of the central political chal-lenges of our time.
This year, let’s not forget, Time Inc.’s Norman Pearlstine capitulated to a court order for a reporter’s notes, while New York Times reporter Judith Miller was sent to jail for refusing to disclose sources for a story she never wrote. The nation still has no clear idea of the disaster unfolding in Darfur, or of the worsening situation in Afghanistan or Iraq, or of the tremendous threat posed by global warming. Given the chance, the Bush administration continues to manipulate the press, trying to disguise a dangerously incompetent political regime and to hide its cronyism behind a wall of secrecy and the fig leaf of national security.
Perhaps with Hurricane Katrina, the commercial media has found some backbone. This much is clear, however: there has never been a more important time for a fearless independent press. Mother Jones is extremely proud to be a part of that tradition. And we are evermore grateful to you, our friends and supporters, for being there with us.FR
OM
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MOTHER JONES MAGAZINE
The flagship project of the Foundation for National Progress, Mother Jones magazine was launched almost thirty years ago to provide a diverse national audience with investigative journalism and thoughtful, progres-sive analysis of critical issues. Mother Jones is the largest-circulation independent progressive magazine in the United States; six times a year, more than 250,000 readers pick up a copy to get the best in-depth re-porting on the issues of the day. MOTHERJONES.COM
In 1993, Mother Jones became the first general-interest magazine on the Internet. From its inception, MotherJones.com has broadened the reach and impact of the Foundation for National Progress through its blend of original content and material first presented in the pages of Mother Jones magazine. MotherJones.com serves over one million page views and an average of 300,000 unique visitors per month. Through its free weekly newsletters, MoJournal, Must Reads, and Informed Dissent, the site maintains regular contact with over 50,000 readers each week.
WH
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A MAGA ZINE AND MORE
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MOTHER JONES RADIO In mid-2005, “Mother Jones Radio” went live on the Air America Radio Network, reaching audiences across the country who otherwise might not have access to Mother Jones’ in-vestigative reporting. Every Sunday, listeners can now tune to their AM band and hear host Angie Coiro talk with the likes of columnist Paul Krugman, Iraq vet and activist Paul Reickhoff, Mother Jones’ Baghdad correspondent David Enders former Iraqi nuclear scientist Mahdi Obeidi, artist Ry Cooder, Repre-sentative Barbara Lee and many others.
MOTHER JONES INTERNSHIP PROGRAM
Since 1980, Mother Jones has provided editorial internships to aspiring journalists. Interns work side-by-side with se-nior magazine and MotherJones.com editors fact-checking, reporting and writing original stories. Since the program’s inception, Mother Jones has given nearly 600 students and graduates intensive real-world experience in the essentials of
WHERE THEY ARE NOW
A Sampling Of Mother Jones Intern Job Placements
PRINT MEDIA
Associated PressAustin American-Statesman
Baltimore SunBritish Medical Journal
Chicago ReaderChronicle Books
Dallas Business JournalDwell
Earth Island JournalEast Bay Express
Ebony Entertainment Weekly
FEM Friction Health
Hyphen Idaho Spokesman-Review
Institutional InvestorJane
Los Angeles TimesMarin Independent Journal
Modesto BeeThe New Republic
New York Law JournalNew York Times
Pacific News ServicePhiladelphia Inquirer
The ProgressiveReuters
Rural AmericaSan Francisco Business Journal
San Francisco ChronicleSan Francisco
Self SF Weekly
South Asia JournalSunset
The DakotanThe Recorder
Time U.S. News and World Report
Wall Street JournalWashington Post
Washington TimesYoga Journal
ELECTRONIC MEDIA
AlterNetCNNConsumer Health InteractiveESPNFrontlineKGO-AM KPFA KQED FM Salon.comVoice of America TV, Beijing
NGOS AND GOVERNMENT
Alameda County Board of SupervisorsAmnesty InternationalBreast Cancer ActionCenter for Investigative Reporting Center for Responsive Politics Center for the Advancement of HealthCivil Justice Foundation Fannie Mae FoundationHabeas Corpus Resource CenterJossey-BassMcGraw HillNew York City Department of InvestigationPartners for Youth with DisabilitiesPhysicians for Social ResponsibilityRainforest AllianceSan Francisco Bicycle CoalitionSan Francisco OperaSierra Club BooksSouth End PressSouthern Utah Wilderness AllianceTake to the HillsThe ExploratoriumThe Nature ConservancyU.S. Department of JusticeYIVO Institute Youth Media Council
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ESTIMATED AuDIENCE IMPRESSIONS: 2004
TYPE AuDIENCE NuMBER OF OuTLETS
Radio
TV
Web
41,704,650
28,047,200
13,602,000
978,168
132
207
17
55
TOTAL 84,332,018 411
MEDIA OuTLETS
–and many more
investigative journalism. The success of the program is evidenced in the careers of its alumni. Mother Jones interns and fellows have gone on to prominent positions in journalism at the New York Times, Newsweek, Time, The Los Angeles Times, CBS News, Reuters, National Public Radio and many other print and broadcast news media.
GROWING STRONGER IN TROuBLED TIMES
In 2004, Mother Jones magazine had a paid readership of over 250,000–the highest in our 29-year history, nearly twice the readership of just six years ago. To our knowledge, this is the high-est circulation level for an independent, progressive magazine in the United States since the 1920s, and because our research sug-gests a “pass-along” readership of another 1.2 readers per copy, we estimate that we reach 750,000 or more Americans directly with every issue. Traffic to our Web site, meanwhile, is running between 300,000 and 500,000 unique visitors per month; our research in-dicates that 7 out of 10 Web visitors do not read the print magazine.
IMPACT: BY THE NuMBERS
Air America RadioAlaska Public Radio
Allentown Morning NewsAlterNet
American Urban RadioAnchorage Daily News
Arizona RepublicArlington Heights Daily Herald
Associated PressAssociation of Trial Lawyers of America
Atlanta Journal-ConstitutionBaltimore ChronicleBaltimore Sentinel
Best American Political Writing 2004Boise WeeklyBoston Globe
Boston PhoenixBradenton Herald
Buffalo NewsBusinessWeek
Campaign for America’s FutureCBS News
CBS Radio/ENN RadioCenter for American Progress
Charleston GazetteCharlotte Observer
Chattanooga Times Free PressChicago Tribune
Chico News & ReviewCirculation Management
City ViewCKNW
Cleveland Plain DealerCNN
CNNfn.comColumbia Journalism Review
Common CauseConnect for Kids
corrente.blogspot.comCourrier International
Court TVCox News ServiceCreators Syndicate
C-SPANDaily Hampshire Gazette
Daily NewsDaily Variety
Dallas Morning NewsDayton Daily News
Denver PostDesert Dispatch
Emerging Democratic MajorityFairfield County Weekly
Fairness & Accuracy in ReportingFederation of American Scientists
Financial Times (London)Florida Times-Union
Fort Wayne News-SentinelFree Press
Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel
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GOING BEYOND THE CHOIR
Mother Jones reaches well beyond these core readers and radio listeners. In 2004, we logged more than 84 million audience impressions through some of the nation’s most prestigious and broad-based media outlets. Our stories and related mentions of Mother Jones appeared in 132 newspa-pers and periodicals, and we generated 207 radio and televi-sion interviews with our editors and writers in 2004. Dozens of nonprofit organizations linked their members to a Moth-erJones.com story through their Web sites and email news-letters. (See previous page for the hard numbers.)
A NOTE ON RECOGNITION
Mother Jones has received four National Magazine Awards in its 29-year history, including a 2001 award for general excel-lence. Recent recognition includes Utne Magazine’s 2004 Independent Press Award for political coverage; Western Publications Association’s 2004 award for best overall pub-lication; and with Nina Berman the 2004 World Press Photo second prize award for story photography.
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January 2004: Nine months had passed since the first U.S. attack on Iraq, with no end of the fighting in sight. People across the political spectrum were
gearing up for a presidential election with unprec-edented potential to change the course of history. As we began 2004, the need for a truly inde-pendent media voice had never been more crucial for American democracy. But it was also clear that this year, the traditional role of a progressive magazine like Mother Jones would not be enough. With your support, we set out to find new ways to answer this question: How does a magazine make a difference?
IT STARTS WITH GOOD JOuRNALISM
Solid, informative, accurate reporting is what Mother Jones is known for–and in each issue of the maga-
zine in 2004, readers could count on finding in-depth inves-tigations that the commercial media either failed to report or buried in the back pages.
Robert Dreyfuss and Jason Vest’s “The Lie Fac-tory,” (January/February 2004) for example, detailed how only weeks after 9/11, the Bush administration set up a secret Pentagon unit to create the case for invading Iraq–and told the inside story on the disinformation and bogus intelligence that led the nation to war. Republi-can Sen. Pat Roberts, chair of the Senate intel-ligence committee, told the Wichita Eagle that he took “The Lie Factory” into account during his investigation of intelligence failures leading up to the Iraq invasion. Fellow Sen. Ted Ken-nedy quoted extensively from the report in his scathing critique of the Bush administration.
Months ahead of the rest of the media, CNN analyst Peter
HOW DOES A MAGAZINE MAKE A DIFFERENCE?
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Bergen’s “Backdraft” (July/August 2004) made the point that “what we’ve done in Iraq is what bin Laden could not have hoped for in his wildest dreams” by engaging in “the very type of imperial adventure” radical Islamists had “long predicted was the United States’ long-term goal in the region.” It was a story to which Sen. Barbara Boxer turned –it “best expresses,” she said, “my views and I believe the views of millions of Californians and Americans”–as she quizzed Condoleezza Rice during her confirmation hearings as the new sec-retary of state.
Matthew Brzezinski’s cover story for the Septem-ber/October 2004 issue, “Red Alert,” likewise reported on an underfunded, disorganized and strategically incoherent Department of Homeland Security– and revealed how vulnerable the United States really is to potential terrorist threats. Brzezinski’s radio interviews were heard by over four million listeners. NPR “Fresh Air” host Terry Gross liked the story so much that following her half hour in-terview with Brzezinski, she asked her next guest, conservative
Norman Podhoretz, if he’d read the story–and when he said he hadn’t, proceeded to tell him exactly what it said.
ARE WE BETTER OFF?
But we wanted to do more than top-quality re-porting. That’s why we turned Ronald Reagan’s question of almost a quarter-century before on its head, with the year-long Are We Better Off? project. We wanted to get the facts heard and used by opinion shapers and decision makers, by progressive activists and by millions of Ameri-cans looking for information they could count on.
We kicked off the Are We Better Off? project with the May/June 2004 “Who’s Better Off?: A Special Report on the State of the Union” special issue of Mother Jones. With contribu-tions from longtime New York Times columnist
Anthony Lewis, former Reagan administration official Clyde Prestowitz, and veteran writers Bill McKibben, David Good-
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and in the case of writer JoAnn Wypijewski, inside a New York City jail after she was caught in an NYPD sweep of
protestors and bystanders during the GOP con-vention.
THE MOTHER JONES POLL
We wanted to go deeper still into how Ameri-cans felt about the state of the union. In June 2004 we reported on the results of the first-ever Mother Jones poll, conducted by the firm of Greenberg Quinlan Rosner. Across the political spectrum, the poll found that a majority of the American people were dissatisfied with the cur-rent state of affairs and desperate for a signifi-cant change in direction.
In nearly every area of life, Americans believed that they and the nation were worse off than three years before. People saw a country deeply divided, an economy that benefited the wealthy and big corporations while leav-ing the middle class and American workers behind and a war
man, Dave Eggers, David Rieff and Arthur Allen, the issue examined what four years of the Bush administration meant for the economy, national security, civil liberties, health care, education and the environment. It wasn’t a pretty picture.
Simultaneously, MotherJones.com published the Mother Jones 100, a database that pro-vided readers and reporters an in-depth look at the major hard and soft money contributors to both political parties. We bundled the data with special reports from Chuck Lewis, founder of the nonpartisan Center for Public Integrity, Jodie Enda of the Cleveland Plain Dealer, and Mother Jones’ Washington correspondent, Michael Scherer.
In July and August, MotherJones.com sent a team of reporters and photographers to cover the Democratic and Republican conventions in Boston and New York. They provided on-site blogging, daily photo essays, and in-depth analysis from inside the convention halls, out on the streets
Stanley Greenberg discusses the Mother Jones poll findings
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At that point, the campaign did not have time to step back and do what you did.
Unfortunately, I think the campaign made a misjudgment about the mood for change, which was reflected in their conven-tion. They devoted their whole campaign to re-assurance on security, without making the case for change or laying out Kerry’s vision for the future. In early August, I wrote a critical memo on this point–and the rest is history. The find-ings of the Mother Jones survey, which stood out from the conventional political survey, were part of the mix of thinking. They should have provided the spring board for a very effective convention.”
“CONvERSATIONS WITH CONSERvATIvES”
When we saw how well Clyde Prestowitz, a Mother Jones contributor to the “State of the Union” special issue and life-
that prevented the administration from addressing problems at home, and appeared increasingly difficult to win. The poll found that Americans were open to a candidate for the presi-dency who could articulate a message of change, security and hope. We published these findings online in June 2004 and, in collaboration with the Center for American Progress, presented them at a stand-ing-room-only briefing in Washington, D.C. When pollster Stanley Greenberg began advising the Kerry presidential campaign following the July 2004 Democratic convention, he commu-nicated the findings of our poll to the campaign staff as part of his larger case for changing the campaign’s message. About the impact the Mother Jones poll had, Greenberg wrote:
“That poll, more than any other we did or saw, un-derscored that people saw little progress for the country…. I presented the findings of the poll directly to the lead Kerry team… so I know that its impact was immediate and direct…
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long Republican, did in front of a live audience at a June 2004 Mother Jones fundraiser in Chicago, we knew it was important to find him a bigger platform. We wanted to share Prestowitz’s dynamic personality and insights on foreign policy, and saw an opportunity to position Mother Jones in a new light–a lefty magazine and a conservative believer. The idea bore fruit later in the summer when Mother Jones publisher Jay Harris met two film-makers–Stuart Sender and Julie Bergman Sender.
The Senders’ film, “Conversations with Conser-vatives”, featured interviews with four prominent conservatives–John Dean, Peter Peterson, Russell Train, and Clyde Prestowitz–speaking out against the radical right-wing agenda of the Bush admin-istration. After we made the film available online, it got picked up by organizations and Web sites across the political spectrum. This first recent foray into video production demonstrated the po-tential of a new media platform for Mother Jones.
ELECTION PROTECTION AND A COMEDY EvENT
Mother Jones joined with Working Assets and a broad national coalition of nonprofit organizations to encourage
people to volunteer as election precinct moni-tors around the country. In San Francisco, Mother Jones helped produce an “election protection” rally and concert at Yerba Buena Gardens that recruited over 600 volunteers to act as indepen-dent poll watchers during the November election. And as election season swung into full gear in September, Mother Jones presented the “State of the Union” comedy event at New York City’s Town Hall in the days following the Republican convention. The “State of the Union” event featured the brilliant political comedy of Jane-ane Garofalo, Will Durst, Lizz Winstead and a great crew of others. Funds raised from the event helped defray the costs of a gathering of inde-pendent media organizations in early 2005.
Clyde Prestowitz speaking at a Mother Jones event
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MOTHER JONES ON THE RADIO?
In 2004, there was no better example of the dismal state of American media than on the radio. So in April 2004, when the Air America Radio Network launched the first progressive AM network of its kind, Mother Jones immediately understood the importance of beginning a solid partnership. From the begin-ning, our staff and writers were regularly inter-viewed on air. Within months, we began pro-ducing the Mother Jones Minute, a weekly radio commentary that gave listeners a small slice of the investigative reporting and poignant com-mentary they could expect from Mother Jones.
In 2004, we planted the seeds for a more ex-tensive partnership with Air America Radio, which bore fruit in mid-2005 with the premiere of “Mother Jones Radio,” now heard around the country every Sunday.
THE MEDIA CONSORTIuM
If there was one story that surfaced in 2004, it was how “the media” jumped to an A-level issue for a broad spectrum of the
American public. Prompted by a wave of corpo-rate consolidation of the commercial media, the battle over changes in FCC rules that would have permitted even greater concentration and by dis-satisfaction over coverage of the war in Iraq, these forces all came to a head during the 2004 presi-dential campaign with the rise of the blogosphere, “Rather-Gate,” and the growing dominance of Fox News. But there’s more to the story than just election year politics. The way in which people get and use the news is changing. Blogs, podcasting, video blogs, MeetUps: we’re in the middle of a transformation of the media and how information gets organized and distributed.
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The questions for independent media organizations like Mother Jones are profound: How do we reaffirm the crucial role of the press as the watchdog of democracy? How do we not only adapt to these changes, but figure out how to be effective in what promises to be a time of great turbulence? How do we better understand the new opportunities as well as the next threats, especially as a new generation, with new media habits, comes of age?
In early 2004, Mother Jones began talking about this, and the idea of convening a meeting of our colleagues in the in-dependent media community following the November 2004 presidential election. We raised this idea with staff at The Nation and The American Prospect, who likewise thought we needed to evaluate the role we had all played during the election campaign season and think strategically about how to enhance our impact in the future. The election’s outcome only reinforced our belief that we needed to talk together. By the end of 2004, we were making plans for a meeting in early 2005 to do just that.
THANk YOu
For nearly thirty years, Mother Jones has remained fiercely independent and unhindered by corporate control. That’s why we’re able give you the hard-hitting, truth-telling, muckraking reporting we’re known for. We’re here because of the steadfast support of individuals like you who know that our reporting can help drive the progressive change we’d like to see in our world.
In 2004, you gave us the capacity to reach a wider audi-ence and make a difference. But if the 2004 election proved anything, it’s that we need to be more ambitious still. With your continued support we will carry out the greatest lesson learned this year: millions of American people are looking for authentically independent journalism. Mother Jones can help meet that need.
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Laurie Abraham Anatomy of a Whistleblower
Arthur Allen Whose Hospital Is It?
Peter Bergen Backdraft
Photographs by Nina Berman & Text by Verlyn Klinkenborg:
The Damage Done
Matthew Brzezinski Red Alert
David Case The Crude Doctrine
Eleanor Cooney The Way It Was
Mark Dowie Gods and Monsters
Robert Dreyfuss & Jason Vest The Lie Factory
Daniel Duane Meadow’s End
Lou Dubose Justice DeLayed
Al Franken Tearaway Burkas and Tinplate Menorahs
Todd Gitlin The Great Media Breakdown
Tim Golden The Longest Arm of the Law
David Goodman Class Dismissed
David Goodman Breaking Ranks
Joshua Hammer From Militant to Moderate
Photographs by Tim Hetherington & Text by Daniel Bergner:
Soldiers in a Forgotten War
Jack Hitt The Diddly Awards
Adam Hochschild Against All Odds
Maggie Jones The New Yankees
Maggie Jones Migrants No More
Anthony Lewis One Liberty at a Time
Bill McKibben In Search of Common Ground
Bill McKibben One Roof at a Time
Susan Orenstein Trial by Fury
Clyde Prestowitz Losing Friends & Alienating People
Photographs by Asim Rafiqui & Text by J. Malcolm Garcia:
Frontier Justice
David Rieff The End of Empire
Paul Roberts Over a Barrel
Andrea Rock Toxic Tipping Point
Michael Scherer Contracts with America
Michael Scherer Crossing the Lines
Samantha M. Shapiro The New Ward Heelers
Gail Sheehy Transforming Teresa
Dashka Slater keepers of a Lost Language
Julia Whitty Smuggling Hope
Ted Williams For a Week’s Worth of Gas
INDEX TO FEATURE STORIES PUBLISHED IN 2004 BY AUTHOR
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In a year during which the news was dominated by the November presidential election, and in which the media itself became a news story, more people continued to look to Mother Jones for high-quality, in-depth investigative reporting. As a result, paid readership in 2004 increased to 250,563, while traffic to MotherJones.com increased to an average of 300,000 unique visitors a month.
This growth in readership, along with the generous support of Mother Jones’ donor community, resulted in a 22 per-cent increase in total revenues, from $7.3 million in 2003 to $8.9 million in 2004. Subscription and newsstand revenues increased to almost $3.3 million dollars in 2004 (an increase of over $1.1 million), while contributed revenues increased by 21 percent to $3.5 million. Advertising revenue also posted an increase over the previous year, to $1.2 million.
Mother Jones spent $9.2 million in 2004. Of this total, about 76 percent, or $6.9 million, went to program-related purposes including investigative reporting in print and on-
FIN
ANC
IALS
line, membership and outreach, research and editorial ef-forts, education and support of our internship program and manufacturing and distribution. Approximately 24 percent of total expenses went to Mother Jones supporting services, including administration, fundraising and advertising.
In 2004, Mother Jones made a $300,000 investment in new subscriber acquisition, which resulted in a short-term net operating loss for the year. This investment will be paid back over the next several years in the form of increased subscriber revenues and donor contributions. The net liabili-ties shown on the 2004 balance sheet reflect future copies of Mother Jones magazine yet to be delivered to subscribers. What appears on paper to be a gap between assets and li-abilities is actually a promise on our part to continue deliver-ing Mother Jones’ award-winning investigative reporting in the years to come.
FINANCIAL REPORT FOR FISCAL YEAR 2004
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ASSETS Current assets: Cash and cash equivalents $320,629Accounts receivable $912,746Prepaid expenses $147,832Total Current Assets $1,381,207 Fixed assets (net of depreciation) $218,499Other assets $30,261
TOTAL ASSETS $1,629,967
LIABILITIES AND NET ASSETS Current liabilities: Accounts payable & accrued expenses $868,064Accrued payable $209,055Accrued vacation/severance/bonus $403,399Other Current Liabilities 0Subscription Liabilities $787,567Total Current Liabilities $2,268,085Long-term subscription liabilities $1,181,875
TOTAL LIABILITIES $3,449,960
NET ASSETS Deficit in unrestricted net assets: Operating ($2,294,984)Board designated $92,562
Total deficit in unrestricted net assets ($2,202,422)Temporarily restricted net assets $382,429Net assets ($1,819,993)
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND NET ASSETS $1,629,967
This summary of financial information has been extracted from the audited financial statements of the Foundation for National Progress on which an independent public accounting firm expresses an unqualified opinion. Copies of the complete audit may be obtained upon request.
STATEMENT OF ACTIVITIES: For the Year Ended December 31, 2004
Change in net assets $38,000Net assets at beginning of year ($1,858,463)
NET ASSETS AT END OF YEAR ($1,819,993)
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STATEMENT OF ACTIVITIES: For the Year Ended December 31, 2004
TOTAL REvENuES AND SuPPORT $8,885,000
Grants and Contributions$4,259,000
Subscription/Newsstand Sales$3,291,000
Advertising$1,191,000
Other$61,000
Merchandising$41,000
Sponsorship and Events$23,000
Royalties & Syndication$17,000
Digital Income$2,000
TOTAL EXPENSES $9,202,000
Development$996,000
Outreach$267,000
Merchandising$34,000
Events$76,000
Digital$875,000
Other$54,000
Editorial and Art$2,334,000
Manufacturingand Distribution
$1,326,000
Administration$410,000
Circulation$2,084,000
Advertising$746,000
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Publishers Circle $10,000 +
AnonymousJanis E. AdamsCharles J. AinslieAlbert A. List FoundationThe Arca FoundationJanet A. BoyleJane W. ButcherGruber Family FoundationIrving Harris FoundationAdam HochschildLannan FoundationRob McKaySara Senior O’ConnellPark FoundationRotasa FoundationNan SchafferSteve SilbersteinThe Ted Snowdon FoundationJennifer & Ted StanleyJudy Wise & Sheldon BaskinWorking Assets Grantmaking Fund of Tides Foundation National Affairs Council $5,000 - $9,999
Anonymous (3)Peter & Lucy AscoliElspeth G. BobbsLois M. De DomenicoDavid GlasscoThe Kadima FoundationMarilyn Jones & Mitchell KaplanEd & Deborah Jeanne Kleinow
Lisa W. KroeberThe Libra FoundationJohn D. & Catherine T. MacArthur FoundationGrace Allen NewtonBeverly Brazier NounKathy PillsburyChristina PlattMark A. RobillardJohn A. SimmonsThomson von SteinAnn McCall Wyman Leadership Gifts Society $1,500-$4,999
Anonymous (4)Jody AliesanAspen Business Center Foundation/McBride FamilyE. A. ChivingtonAlan CohnCompton Foundation, Inc.Cheryl Forté Louise & Jim FrankelHobart G. GuionBetty S. Hoffenberg for the Sidney Stern Memorial TrustJames C. HormelHurst FoundationJohn HenryLorna Brett HowardChris IrvinJody A. KaplanKatz Family FoundationHenry P. Kendall FoundationElliot LehmanKen & Lucy Lehman
Deborah & Scott LinkeSimon & June LiMatthew Loschen FamilyStuart MayerMaura Morey&rew S. MorrisonKenneth F. MountcastleHilary Perkins & Skip BattleThe Sandler Family Supporting FoundationGuy & Jeanine SapersteinBill & Abby SchmellingJulia M. StaschJohn & Augusta Stewart
Hellraisers $480-$1499
Anonymous (14)Drexel AgnerHarriet S. BarlowMarjorie Craig BentonAnita BieseGene BirminghamRichard T. BlackbirdSuzanne BlueMeredith Bluhm-WolfBarbara BossonJoan Catherine BraunKathleen BrodineJudd & Mary Anne BrownMs. Percy BrowningScott J. BuginasBarbara BurnimSharon CampbellDavid CoxMichelle CzosnekJanet DavisonDr. Jim Duggins
James EhlenDouglas T. EricksonAudrey EvansRichard W. FarrellJeri Smith FornaraRichard D. FreemonMary GamaCaroline GardnerKelly GheenVeva J. GibbardDavid & Betsy GiffordJudith A. GoldAdelaide Park GomerEric GreenbergLumina GreenwayRichard GurmanLillian Y. HayesThe Heller FamilyDeirdre H. HendersonTed HessCathy HillenbrandSara S. HinckleyDoug HowellLindsay HumpalJohn R. HunterMarjorie ImmonenJane Marcher FoundationShirley JohnsonDavid Cay Johnston & Jennifer LeonardChristopher Keyser & Susan SprungMichael KieschnickDorsie R. Kovacs D.V.M.Patrick LannanJane A. LapinskiEllen R. LaschiverPeter Lehman
CONTRIBUTORS AND SUPPORTERS 2004
Eduardo Jose MaglioneMs. Ira Polcyn McEvoyPatrisha McLeanJane & Dennis MeyerShayle MillerRobert A. MoeserHarle G. MontgomerySigward MoserUlla NeuburgerJoel NiggMark NorthHelene ParcesepeRoland H. Pesch & Kathleen A. RosskophFrances S. PetrocelliPiper JaffraySandra PressmanPaula RantzN. ReshotkoResponse Management TechnologiesKerry Anne RidleyRod RinellFrank RooseveltCarol SalmansonSteven R. SchildSchwab Fund for Charitable GivingLinda E. ShostakKevin SimmonsJames C. SpirrisonRonna StammNancy StephensDiana StorkFred StrickhouserJim Struve & Jeff BellDavid TaylorJack Theimer
Mike ThollHarold V. ThompsonCatherine TislarDr. Patricia Tuck & Dr. Geni BennettsC. Wagenvoord, Jr.Debbie WeeterBernice WeissbourdNancy & Christian WernerJim & Mary WhiteLeslie WilburRobin T. WinklerThe Winky Foundation Alicia P. Wittink
Muckrakers $250 - $479
Anonymous (2)Sue AddissNick AllenAdolph AlmquistAnna Louise Reynolds Fund of Triangle Community FoundationJohn B. AshbaughOlivia AtchersonDaniel AultAlec BabiarzBarbara BakerFord BallantyneMiriam BarberenaPatrick BarnettLaura BarrettKathy BeckBarbara BellRudolf A. BergmannMichele BevisRichard BirmeleDavid W. Bishop
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Jack BlockDr. Harold & Ruth BlumensteinElisabeth BondyDavid BotelloG. C. BraffordDonna Branch-GilbyDonna BriskinJerome BrookmanMarjory BrooksCheryll BrownJane BrubakerRobert Burns, MDRay H. BurtonKaren ByrnePatricia CaldwellLyndsay CampbellElaine CapenOtis CarneyJudith H. CasaleKevin CassadyLouis CinquinoRobert ClarkeP. CodyM. CohenJames A. CollinsNoel ComessSusannah ConverySarah J. CooneyH. R. CortAndrew CrowleyKate CulverJames B. DanielsJudith DavidsonLynn R. DavisStewart DavisAlice DayJudith A. DelmarHarold DemarestWilliam G. Dempsey
Giovanna DevenyMike DixonBridget K. DonohuePatricia DoughertyJohn L. DurrJack EdelmanRichard EhrenbergDeirdre EnglishMary F. EricksenDonald ErskineDavid FarrellStuart FeenK. FergusonFidelity Investments Charitable Gift Fund Joan FlaniganNicole J. FlissBeverly O. FordMimi FrankelMolly J. FranksLyn FrasierPatricia FriebertClaudia GallWayne GershAaron GibsonRobert I. GilbertTerri GladdenKenneth GoertzPhyllis GoldR. GoldsteinGreater Des Moines Community FoundationJerome A. GrossmanBarbara GuthrieEly HaimowitzMargaret HallNicholas HartToni HaunMichael Haymes
Merrily R. HelgesonSabina HirshmanMinfong HoDavid K. HoffmanAllison HoltzGeorge HowtonDavid HugginsMaxine JewettBarbara JohnsonCyrus JohnsonLois JosephStephen KaufmanJack KellerDavid J. KellyJames KennedyJeanie KilgourKatharine KingRhoda KittelsenThomas B. KnoedlerAnthony KodisPaul KraskaCharles A. KromerEster LabayEvelyn J. LandgrafRichard LangCarl A. LarrickMark LarsonRuth A. LarsonJames T. LauClinton LauberKarl LealCatharina D. LesterM. A. LesterSharona A. LevyKaren L. LewMichael A. LheureuxRichard LightmanMichael LiljaDaniel Lopez
A. LutzRandy LynchPamela LyonsJohn MacNeilleMadden AssociatesKerry MadiganScott MarcusWally MarksMartha MartinMarilyn MasonJeffrey MayersohnTed MaysKelly McClellandJohn McGradyDesmond F. McLaughlinBarbara J. MeislinJack L. MelamedPhyllis Fine MenkenMicrosoft Matching Gifts ProgramCaryle B. MillerEd MinerMarjorie MinotRobert MittenbuhlerLois V. MonganCharles MooneDaniel MoosStacy MosherGeorge MossDimity MuellerScott M. MurrayCamillo MusumeciErik NashI. N. NedsBrande NeeseAlbert P. NeilsonMike PaglieroniJames PalmerQuintin Papineau
Marte ParhamC. PawleyEd PivcevichSandy PolishukMurray PotterRichard PowellJean A. PowersProgressive ContractingLindi RamsdenJohn B. RayRealNetworks FoundationBenjamin RhodesMike RifenCarol J. RigmarkPaul RomanoJoseph H. RousePaul & Suzanne RubensteinJames RupertMark & Barbara SafranekSarah SalzbergRebecca SandrettoJohn M. ScanlanAndrew J. SchlewitzS. M. SchlieppJuliet K. SharrockBrigid SheaWilliam P. ShermanRichard SimmondsDiane M. SimonJ. SinningT. SlavikLeslie SmithPamela SmithBetsy SnyderV. B. SodiniMarsha SofferSamuel G. SolittJustin SouthwickBruce Spangler
CONTRIBUTORS AND SUPPORTERS 2004
Keith StangerBruce D. StarkWilbur StensonRobert StewartElizabeth StikisFrank A. StiversCarl SufallRoselyne C. SwigGilbert TauckWayne TerrellJudith L. TharpJudy ThompsonMelvin A. TraylorDavid TudorRobert O. TylerSolveiga UngerWilliam R. VolavkaLea WaltersJane WaltonKevin WandDavid WardenPhilip F. WarnerE. Weber WeinsteinMichael WedellJoan WelkEvan WhiteSally WilliamsBarry WinerTheodore WinsbergR. WitneyGuy WolfJanice & Peter WoodDaphne Zaras
Space limitations prevent us from listing the more than 30,000 people who contributed to Mother Jones in 2004. To all of our friends and supporters, thank you!
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STAFFFor the period from January 1, 2004 through December 31, 2004
Jay HarrisPublisher
Roger CohnEditor-in-Chief (until Oct. 2004)
Mother Jones magazine
Monika BauerleinSenior Editor
Tim DickinsonArticles Editor
David GilsonResearch Editor
Clara JefferyDeputy Editor
Susan LakeCopy Editor (until May 2004)
Alastair PaulinManaging Editor
Rina PaltaAssistant to the Editor-in-Chief
MotherJones.com
Will TacyEditor - MotherJones.com(until July 2004)
Julian BrookesAssistant Editor – MotherJones.com(until November 2004)Editor - MotherJones.com
Ed HomichProduct Manager
Tom OcampoMarketplace Manager
Laura ShapiroWeb Designer
Robert WiseWebmaster
Interns & FellowsJeff FleischerTucker FoehlNonna GorilovskayaLiv LeaderDavid MoislBradford PlumerOnnesha Roychoudhuri
Jonathan RabinovitzInvestigative Editor(until September 2004)
Michael SchererWashington Correspondent
Christine SheridanCopy Editor
Debbie YoonAssistant to the Editor-in-Chief(until November 2004)
Interns & FellowsAlex CarpKatherine CheneyMeghann FarnsworthElizabeth GettelmanAnthony HaJennifer HahnBenjamin LeslieMichal Lumsden Kari LundgrenMatteen MokallaJanelle NanosRina PaltaAmelia RagusoWasim SalfitiEva Steele-SaccioJulie Varughese
Elsa WenzelDeborah Ziff
Art Department
Jane PalecekCreative Director
Sarah kehoePhoto Editor
George McCalmanArt Director
Susan ScandrettArt Director (until April 2004)
Interns & FellowsMaggie PerkinsChloe Sherman
Manufacturing & Distribution
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STAFFFor the period from January 1, 2004 through December 31, 2004
Advertising
Eric WeissAssociate PublisherSales, Marketing & Business Development
Eileen EllisAdvertising Manager
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Molly MuellerAdvertising Sales Coordinator
Yuki TessitoreAdvertising Operations Manager
Interns & FellowsJessica BigarelKhary Brown
Marketing
Micah BerekMarketing Manager (until August 2004)
Jayne SalingerMarketing Manager
Tracy TreuCustomer Service Representative
Dilini WeerasooriyaFellow
Development & Communications
Steven katzAssociate PublisherCommunications & Fundraising
Lily Bartlett AboodDevelopment Assistant(until June 2004)Stewardship & Information Systems Manager
Laurin AsdalSenior Major Gifts Officer
Deborah JanesSenior Major Gifts Officer
Mariana MartinezStewardship & Information Systems Manager(until June 2004)
Richard ReynoldsCommunications Director
Laura WeissbeinDevelopment Assistant
Interns & FellowsGillian CrozierAdrienne Neff
Administration
Madeleine BuckinghamChief Financial & Administrative Officer
Peter MeredithResearch Assistant
Scott MorreyIT Manager
Emma PierceHuman Resources Manager
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Maysoun WazwazReceptionist
Elizabeth MauldinFellow
Accounting
Myna ChiemController
Anna DuarteAccounting Assistant
Eric FranklinBilling Manager
kevin MedfordFinancial Analyst
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Jane ButcherBoulder, ColoradoCo-chair
Rob MckaySan Francisco, CaliforniaCo-chair
Sally O’ConnellStuart, FloridaSecretary
Christina PlattBerkeley, CaliforniaTreasurer
Harriet BarlowMinneapolis, Minnesota
Julian BrookesSan Francisco, CaliforniaStaff Representative
Roger CohnSan Francisco, CaliforniaVice President
Judith GoldChicago, Illinois
Jay HarrisSan Francisco, CaliforniaPresident
Adam HochschildSan Francisco, California
Beverly NounTarpon Springs, Florida
Emma PierceSan Francisco, CaliforniaStaff Representative
Anita Roddick(on sabbatical)
Chichester, England
Stephen SilbersteinBelvedere, California
John SimmonsChicago, Illinois
Alicia WittinkWashington, D.C.
Emeritus Board
Peter BarnesMarjorie Craig BentonJoan Catherine Braun Russell BuddDr. Price CobbsRon DellumsChristina DesserJeri Smith FornaraRob GlaserDanny GoldbergVictor GotbaumCal JoyAl MeyerhoffSusan Bay NimoyDavid OlsenAndy PatrickTom PetersRabbi John RosoveChara SchreyerJulia StaschRose StyronJohn TirmanMark TukmanJudy WiseMike Woo
BOARD OF DIRECTORSFor the period from January 1, 2004 through December 31, 2004
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GUIDE TO COVER TIMELINE
January 2004Robert Dreyfuss and Jason Vest’s “The Lie Factory” exposes how, only weeks after 9/11, the Bush administration set up a secret Pentagon unit to create the case for invading Iraq.
March 2004Nina Berman’s photographs of maimed soldiers returning home from Iraq published. Berman later named a winner in 2004 World Press Photo competition.
May 2004 “Who’s Better Off?: A Special
Report on the State of the Union” published in the May/June issue
of Mother Jones.
June 2004The Mother Jones Poll shows that beneath the partisan divide, America is discontented and des-perate for change – and will vote for a candidate who articulates messages of hope and security.
August 2004Gail Sheehy is interviewed on
CNN and MSNBC following publication of “Transforming
Teresa,” her look at Teresa Heinz Kerry in the July/August issue of
Mother Jones.
M O T H E R J O N E S A N D T H E F O U N D A T I O N F O R N A T I O N A L P R O G R E S S A N N U A L R E P O R T 2 0 0 42�
September 2004 Matthew Brzezinski’s “Red Alert” in the September/October issue of Mother Jones shows how the Department of Homeland Security has been sidelined by the admin-istration’s obsession with Iraq.
September 2004 Janeane Garofalo, Will Durst and other terrific comedians perform
a post-convention evening of political comedy before a sold-out
Town Hall in New York City, pro-duced by Mother Jones.
October 2004Mother Jones hosts investigative reporter Seymour Hersh speaking to a full house at Boston’s historic Faneuil Hall on military abuse at Iraq’s Abu Ghraib prison.
November 2004Senator John Kerry loses toPresident George W. Bush.
December 2004David Goodman’s “Breaking Ranks” in the November/De-cember issue of Mother Jones reports on the growing number of U.S. soldiers who are speaking out against the war in Iraq.
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