Just can't see it happening. Sadly. Much as it would be better for our institutions and our democracy.
For example, the Ottawa Press Gallery recently passed some kind of motion asserting their right, as journalists in a free and democratic society, to ask questions of Harper and his bunch, wherever, whenever. Or else! Because the PMO so rigidly controls access and thus the message. Noble in intent, but it will fail in deed. And the PMO knows it's toothless. Because it's such a competitive business. The outlets need the copy to get the clicks, copies sold and the numbers to justify the ad rates. And thus their profits. So they will all - press and PMO - keep on keepin' on as they have been.
In a hyper-competitive market like T.O., that goes quadruple. If the Star, say, decides to Just Ignore Him, the Post, the Globe, the Sun and the rest will gleefully fill the void and glom their share of the finite ad revenue the circus brings. The media simply have no incentive to co-operate. Stopping coverage of Ford might be better for political decorum and civic affairs but it won't sell the ink or pixels that are, in the end, vehicles for advertising. Coupled with the fact that Ford is doubling-down on his obstreperous antics against them suggests that the madness is only going to intensify. The show's just gonna get weirder and weirder. And every outlet wants to get it on the page, on the air. It's good copy. Good TV. Good fodder for chat radio. The press needs Ford as much as he needs them to fulfill his "Media Victim" narrative.
And, finally, just think if they stop covering the Train Wreck: What the hell would happen to a forum like this without all that? Even the best bringers of salient info, like Jimmi T or MetroMan, seem to get their stuff from either people they know in the press covering it or, one guesses, TPS sources.