WikiLeaks’ Julian Assange believes people are out to smear him and his organization. That much seems clear. Today (March 2) the New York Times’ Ravi Somaiya writes a piece that would seem to confirm those suspicions.
Read full blog here.
WikiLeaks’ Julian Assange believes people are out to smear him and his organization. That much seems clear. Today (March 2) the New York Times’ Ravi Somaiya writes a piece that would seem to confirm those suspicions.
Read full blog here.
March 3, 2010
Wrong.
Posted by Patricia Moscoso on March 03, 2011 at 05:00 PM EST
My summer as a White House intern redefined many parts of my life, but in a very literal sense, it gave me a new meaning of the word “humble.” When I applied, I was nineteen and wondering how I could possibly contribute to the work of our government. When I was chosen for an interview, I was shocked. When I was accepted, I was floored. The White House staffers who gave me the amazing news that day would teach me so much about committing to a team and never taking this opportunity for granted.
Read entire blog here.
This column about the sale to AOL should not be ignored.
The sale … is emblematic of this new paradigm of American journalism. The Huffington Post, as Stephen Colbert pointed out when he stole the entire content of The Huffington Post and rechristened it, The Colbuffington Re-post, produces little itself. The highly successful site, like most Internet sites, is largely pirated from other sources, especially traditional news organizations, or is the product of unpaid writers who are rechristened “citizen journalists.”
Full read here.
... and the Business — Demand Radical Changes in Journalism Curriculum.
This begs the question: Is D:F/M up to the challenge?
This phishing could not be ignored:
Date: Sat Feb 19 11:22:49 EST 2011
From: emailservice@domainsbyproxy.com
RE: FWD: hello [HUNTERWORD.COM@domainsbyproxy.com]
To: gmorris@hunter.cuny.edu
The Public vs. the Media on Unions, Deficits
March 6th, 2011By Peter Hart, March 1, 2011
The New York Times reports its new poll (3/1/11):
That’s big enough news, and once again cuts against the People-Don’t-Support-These-Overpaid-Union-Workers trope.
But there’s more. When the poll asked about fixing the deficit, people had a message rarely heard in the media: Read entire FAIR blog here.
Tags: collective bargaining, Labor unions, public unions
Posted in Journalism, News/Commentary/Opinion, State of Journalism | Comments Closed