Condé Nast

The publisher of Vogue, Vanity Fair and The New Yorker is cutting pay by 10 to 20 percent for those making more than $100,000, or just over half the work force, for five months beginning in May. Executives such as the artistic director Anna Wintour are among those affected. “It’s very likely our advertising clients, consumers and therefore our company will be operating under significant financial pressure for some time,” said Roger J. Lynch, the chief executive, in an April 13 memo. He added that he is forgoing half his salary and that layoffs were being considered.

The Denver Post

The Post laid off 13 employees, including four journalists, on April 3, according to a member of a NewsGuild bargaining committee. The paper also asked all remaining employees to take three weeks of unpaid time off from April to July. The Post, which did not reply to a request for comment, is owned by MediaNews Group, a company controlled by the hedge fund Alden Global Capital.

Euclid Media Group

The owner of weeklies in cities like Cincinnati, Detroit and San Antonio laid off roughly 50 employees and furloughed 7, about 70 to 80 percent of its staff, in mid-March. “We will do whatever we do, one day at a time and scrap our way through this,” said Michael Wagner, the chief operating officer.

Fortune

The nearly century-old business magazine is laying off 35 people, which is 10 percent of its staff, worldwide and across departments, a spokeswoman said on April 16. Alan Murray, the chief executive, will take a 50 percent pay cut, and other executives will have their salaries sliced by 30 percent. The longtime Time Inc. mainstay became part of Meredith before being sold to the Thai businessman Chatchaval Jiaravanon for $150 million in November 2018.

Gannett

Gannett, the publisher of USA Today, The Detroit Free Press and more than 250 other daily newspapers, has ordered the majority of its 24,000 employees to take five days off per month without pay in April, May and June, staff memos revealed, and executives will take a 25 percent pay cut. Paul Bascobert, the chief executive, said he would not take his salary until the crisis was over. “Our nation simply cannot afford to furlough or lay off journalists and other news industry employees in this time of crisis,” said Jon Schleuss, the NewsGuild president.

G/O Media

The owner of Gizmodo, Jezebel, The Onion and Deadspin laid off 14 people, or less than 5 percent of its employees, its chief executive, Jim Spanfeller, announced on April 3.

Group Nine Media

The publisher of The Dodo and NowThis laid off roughly 50 people, or 7 percent of its work force, on April 7, a spokeswoman said. Earlier, Group Nine had suspended 401(k) matches, put raises on hold, instituted a hiring freeze and cut executive pay 25 percent. Ben Lerer, the chief executive, will forgo his salary for six months.