Corrupt politicians and sleazy businessmen - and Lord knows, we have plenty of them - can breathe easy once the hedge fund is running the newspaper.
All tagged journalism
Corrupt politicians and sleazy businessmen - and Lord knows, we have plenty of them - can breathe easy once the hedge fund is running the newspaper.
Newspaper cartoonists are the spotted owls of journalism.
This is the state of modern journalism. Any wonder most newspapers are circling the drain?
Someday members of the American media will be judged for their lazy coverage of this pandemic, their unquestioning support of shutdowns and the hysteria they ginned up with their shallow reporting.
Newspapers around the country are in trouble. None more so than The Virginian-Pilot and the much smaller paper that swallowed it, The Daily Press in Newport News.
Unlike the quivering pantywaists running The New York Times, the WSJ editors struck back.
Bari Weiss’s savage letter to publisher A. G. Sulzberger accused The New York Times of creating a hostile work environment where conservative voices are stifled and subject to mockery.
What editor would ever allow a reporter to use the hackneyed phrase “new normal”?
Jim Bacon is back with a thought-provoking piece about the value of newspapers that charge more and give readers less.
These are not journalists, they are social provocateurs on a mission that has nothing to do with informing the public.
No matter how much spin The Tribune attempts to put on its boneheaded decision to drag the remnants of the once-sprawling Virginian-Pilot staff to Newport News, this will no longer be a Norfolk newspaper.
It’s one thing to attack the president. He’s fair game. But it’s quite another to launch attacks at the president's supporters. The very people needed if the left wants to unseat the president in November.
Clearly The Times believes the country needs a female president, even if she’s a socialist. Or a midwesterner who reportedly launches lamps at her staff.
As Monday wore on it became clear that members of the media - who were clearly hoping for trouble, telling each other to “be safe” as if they were war correspondents - would have to write upbeat pieces instead of sneering stories about hillbillies.
Just ask your freaking question, Wolf. If you have to explain that this really is a “substantive question,” perhaps it’s not.
The graduates of this journalism program will be working at a newspaper near you in the future. You’ve been warned.
How in God’s name did footage from Kentucky wind up on the news at ABC? It would be nice if someone would elaborate.
The excuses that were offered for this soggy wad of sloppy journalism raised questions about how reporters do what they do.