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Category Archives: Chapter 6
Media Twitter: On Bed Bugs, the NYT and thin-skinned columnists
Updated 8/28/19 It all started with a story on Slate Monday noting that several locations in the New York Times building were infested with bed bugs. This led to the following tweet from NY Times visual journalism director Stuart Thompson: “Breaking – there are … Continue reading
Posted in Chapter 10, Chapter 14, Chapter 6
Tagged Bret Stephens, free speech, name calling, new york times, Streisand, twitter
1 Comment
Everything can be Explained by Hamilton: Politicians and Media, Then and Now
The thin-skinned president who made it illegal to criticize his office – John Adams, not Donald Trump — WaPo https://t.co/nH5W6HHN1E — RalphIsNow@rhanson40@threads.net (@ralphehanson) August 24, 2019 People who say we’ve never had politics before like we do today are just … Continue reading
Posted in Chapter 13, Chapter 14, Chapter 6
Tagged Aaron Burr, alien and sedition acts, Hamilton, John Adams
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Media Twitter: Candidate playlists, digital history & one more distracted boyfriend meme
Going to try to get back to blogging on a more regular basis this fall. On days I don’t have essay posts, I’m going to share some of the media issue Twitter posts that might have scrolled by your feed. … Continue reading
Posted in Chapter 10, Chapter 6
Tagged archives, campaign coverage, digital history, distracted boyfriend, memes, multimedia
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Newspapers and News in the News
Neiman Lab takes a look at what digital subscriptions are doing (or not doing) to keep newspapers healthy. Excellent article taking a deep dive at the LA Times with lots of data from Joshua Benton. ProPublica reports on how well-off parents … Continue reading
Posted in Chapter 6, Uncategorized
Tagged editorials, going digital, newspapers, reporting
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Questions Worth Asking (Maybe) – Newspaper Edition
Is GateHouse poised to own 1 in 6 of America’s newspapers? Looks like it. GateHouse is reportedly in talks to purchase Gannett, which would combine the nation’s two largest newspaper chains. Then new company would control 254 dailies and hundreds … Continue reading
Posted in Chapter 6
Tagged Because I can, going digital, media ownership, newspapers, Questions worth asking
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Why local news matters: Down in the flood edition
I’ve written on a variety of occasions how much local news matters – news from a local newspaper, television station, radio station; the importance of broadcasters having a local physical presence along with local ownership if at all possible. We … Continue reading
Posted in Chapter 3, Chapter 6
Tagged floods, Kearney Nebraska, local news
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Legacy News Vs. Google – Is the battle as clear as it seems?
There’s been a lot of chatter lately about the interaction/exploitation/mismanagement among legacy media and the social media companies. Here are a couple ofl articles/threads that do a good job of dealing with the issues: Google Made $4.7 Billion From the … Continue reading
Posted in Chapter 10, Chapter 3, Chapter 6
Tagged Google, news, social media
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Jeff Bezos and the Washington Post: Five Years Later
This week I’m at the Western Social Science Association annual conference. I’m giving a presentation looking at what has happened to Jeff Bezos and the Washington Post since the Amazon billionaire bought the paper five and a half years ago. Rather than … Continue reading
Posted in Chapter 3, Chapter 6
Tagged David Pecker, Donald Trump, Jeff Bezos, labor relations, Washington Post, WSSA 2019
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Questions Worth Asking – Journalism Edition
How does local television news change when Sinclair Broadcast Group buys a station? As shared by Prof. Jay Rosen, a paper being published Gregory J. Martin and Joshua McCrain in American Political Science Review shows that “news coverage tilts more … Continue reading
Posted in Chapter 14, Chapter 3, Chapter 6, Chapter 9
Tagged Herbert Gans, media ownership, reporting ethics, Sinclair Broadcast Group, suicide prevention
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Guest Blog Post: Jeremy Littau on what’s gone wrong with the news industry
On January 24, 2019, my friend Jeremy Littau, a journalism professor at Lehigh University, started a tweet storm of 30 or so posts that outlined an argument of why news media layoffs keep happening. Within three days, the thread had … Continue reading
Posted in Chapter 10, Chapter 3, Chapter 6, Guest Blog Post
Tagged Jeremy Littau, Littau viral Tweet storm, news industry
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