So easy to sneak up on them.(Take 2)
Kids enjoy time with Dad in hunting blind
(Mt. Pleasant, Michigan's Morning . . .
Stick with the big Milk.(Take 2)
Little Milk, Exercise Hurts Kids' Bones
. . .
Valerie Plame.(Quotation)
"My case aside, if they had used any shoe leather, maybe they
would have gotten a different story from what they were getting from the
White House. We were let down by the media. They were . . .
In your Facebook: why more and more journalists are signing up
for the popular social networking site.(Editorial)
Six months ago, Lori Schwab decided to join the growing number of
journalists with Facebook profiles. It wasn't a desperate attempt
to fit in with the younger generation. Instead, the . . .
Lecture in London.(New York Times Executive Editor Bill
Keller)(Quotation)
"The gravest danger to the future of newspapers is not a
hostile administration in Washington, not the acid rain of criticism,
not a business model upended by new technology, it is a loss of faith, . . .
Taking wing.(campaign debates of presidential aspirants, Barack
Obama and Hillary Clinton)(Quotation)
John Edwards "decided to become Obama's wingman in the Democratic
debate on Saturday, ganging up on Clinton. But his real hope is for
Clinton to fade away, turning the race into a one-on-one contest . . .
E.J. Dionne.(DROP CAP)
"The campaigns--and, yes the media--need to go back to the
drawing board."
--columnist E.J. Dionne, in the wake of widespread, off-target
predictions that Barack Obama would win handily in New . . .
Joining the conversation: newspapers are establishing blogs to
talk to readers about their concerns.
Shortly after Raleigh's News & Observer ran the front-page
headline "Trooper had sex in patrol car" last September,
readers started complaining. Some felt the language was unnecessary; one
mother . . .
The column that became a franchise.(how joe sixpack became a
byword in the newspaper industry.)(Editorial)
There are few in Philadelphia who will forget that April day in
1998, in that cadaver-cold dump they called the Vet, when Joe Sixpack
became a star.
Mr. Sixpack, as he later became known, had . . .
Let them play the games: The media's New Hampshire fiasco
reflects a broken model for campaign coverage.(Editorial)
It's a shame the Betty Ford Center isn't bigger. Because
the idea of shipping the entire national news media out there for some
serious therapy is very attractive.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Well, . . .
Armies of one.(LETTERS)(Letter to the editor)
Interesting article on ABC going to one-person bureaus (Drop Cap,
December/January). I thought it would have been good to mention the
model of the BBC World Service. The BBC has had reporters doing . . .
Life after television.(LETTERS)(Letter to the editor)
My TV died in September 1997, and I turned in my cable box the next
day. I may not know about the latest trendy TV shows, and I may not know
what most of the C-SPAN hosts look like, but I know . . .
Taken aback.(LETTERS)(Letter to the editor)
As former executive director of the Center for Public Integrity, I
was taken aback by the misstatements included in Anath Hartmann's
article "Center of Attention" (The Beat, December/January).
. . .
Doing less with less.(LETTERS)(Letter to the editor)
Rem Rieder's column on newsroom cutbacks was well said (Full
Court Press, December/January). There is nothing more depressing to
newsroom morale than having editorial leaders who feel obligated to . . .
The smiling subversive: And his crusade to produce
better-educated journalists.(Vartan Gregorian's journalism
quest)(Report)
New York is a city of colorful characters and iconoclasts, a place
where people on the streets could be seen talking to themselves long
before the advent of Bluetooth technology.
[ILLUSTRATION . . .
Rethinking the front page: a new approach is paying dividends at
the Waco Tribune-Herald.(THE NEWSPAPER BUSINESS)
In mid-2006 Michael Vivio, a veteran newspaper advertising
executive, had been publisher of the Waco Tribune-Herald for almost a
year, and he was perplexed.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
His Texas . . .
Old news? Today's network newscasts aren't as retro as
the conventional wisdom would suggest.(BROADCAST VIEWS)
Have you watched a network evening news program lately? Americans
who would answer "no" to that question far outnumber those
who'd say "yes." According to conventional wisdom, the
nightly national . . .
Declaring war on errors.(BOOKS)(Book review)
Regret the Error: How Media Mistakes Pollute the Press and Imperil
Free Speech
By Craig Silverman
Union Square Press
370 pages; $19.95
Letters from the Editor: Lessons on Journalism and . . .
To partner or not to partner? Distributing news in the internet
era.(THE ONLINE FRONTIER)
Local content is king. That's one of the celebrated facts of
the networked information age. Unfortunately for local news
organizations, the strategic implications of that fact are a little
murky.
. . .
Whetting the appetite for storytelling: a multimedia reporting
boot camp flourishes in Northern Ireland.(FIRST PERSON)
I couldn't figure out whether it was Queen Macha or the
Philosopher King of Bagel Bean or the Curse of the Green Lady that
really got to me when I taught multimedia storytelling in Armagh,
Northern . . .
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