The excuses that were offered for this soggy wad of sloppy journalism raised questions about how reporters do what they do.
All in Media
The excuses that were offered for this soggy wad of sloppy journalism raised questions about how reporters do what they do.
On one hand, we have a woman trying to fuel a race war. On the other we have a jerk who harasses pregnant women. And then there’s the gullible press corps.
It’s a delicate balance. Weighing the need to know against the danger of romanticizing a killer.
It gives me no pleasure to write this, but I don’t trust the media. I worked in journalism for 42 years. I once was proud of my profession. No more.
If you want to know what’s wrong with newspapers, why they sometimes run with rumors and print half-baked truths, it’s because the adults have left the building.
I read “Vows" the way I read about the royal family, or primitive tribes in Papau New Guinea.
Shaming people who work at service jobs is precisely the sort of elitism Fox commentators constantly criticize other networks about. Frankly, it’s snotty.
Doesn’t matter if you’re pro- or anti-Trump, fact is, this choreographed stunt will fuel the president’s narrative that the press corps is a leviathan trying to bring down his presidency.
People should subscribe to their local newspaper and raise holy hell when they see evidence of bias.
Maybe it's time to rethink journalism schools. Surely, would-be reporters should be counseled before blowing four years worth of tuition to enter a field with stagnant wages and no future.
Every single journalist I know has a story about a freak who badgered, stalked, harassed or threatened him or her. Most never bothered to tell a superior, let alone law enforcement.
For much of 2018, however, he’s been back at the Beach, working for an undisclosed benefactor or benefactors. Holland’s been doggedly doing what he does best: using the Freedom of Information Act to sift through thousands of documents and emails.
As a writer who spent her entire adult life as a journalist, this study confirms a terrible truth: The industry I loved and labored in is failing.
It’s something of a relief for the sale to be finalized after a decade of uncertainty.
For the past 10 years, all Pilot employees knew they could wake up one morning and suddenly find themselves working for a new boss.
Since when did four-letter words and abortion jokes become acceptable at a formal dinner?