Post Tagged with: "newspaper"

Simon Thompson / December 10, 2011 1:12 pm

Diana Henriques

Senior financial writer at The New York Times on the Madoff family and female journalists

Jacob Drucker and Daniel Ki / November 8, 2011 12:01 pm

An Unconstitutional Debate

America’s obsession with the Constitution affects modern American politics

Alex Sherbany / May 29, 2010 10:02 pm

A Lebanese Angle on the Rima Fakih Story

Apart from being an excellent excuse to boost web traffic with pictures of bikini-clad women (cf. The Huffington Post), you may not have seen Lebanese journalist Hanin Ghaddar’s very interesting article last week  in Foreign Policy comparing American and Lebanese reactions to the Rima Fakih story. In America: Not many people — let along beauty pageant winners — have been accused [...]

Jonathan Yip / April 26, 2010 3:05 pm

Print is Dead. Right?

For the first time in a long time, there’s serious newspaper competition in New York—actually, newspaper competition anywhere would be newsworthy… But, New York is the big leagues. NYT vs. WSJ, fight! David Carr says: The fight bears watching for a few reasons. This is New York, a crucible of city journalism, a place that has seen newspaper wars for almost [...]

Alex Sherbany / April 24, 2010 6:12 pm

The “Everybody Draw Muhammad” Contest

In response to the South Park / Muhammad controversy, several bloggers with a libertarian bent have been pushing the idea of a “Draw Muhammad!” contest to retaliate against the New York-based Islamic extremist group Revolution Muslim. The idea originated with noted sex columnist Dan Savage, who has advertised it as a way to retaliate against Revolution Muslim’s “veiled threats” and “water down [...]

Henry Shull / April 20, 2010 11:39 am

Paper and Ink (Online)

As the business manager of a print publication, I can’t help but jump into a discussion about the issues raised in Jeffrey Kalmus’s article in the most recent issue of the HPR about the decision by the New York Times to charge for online content.  Two experiences last week stirred my thinking about the economics of print journalism.  The first [...]

Will Rafey / March 24, 2010 9:01 pm

“Africa: Why Do We Care?”

I would like to think that the Committee on African Studies’ decision to hold a panel event entitled “Africa in the Media” together with the Department of African and African American Studies just two weeks after I finished writing an article about the same subject (you can read it here) is more than mere coincidence. Of course I’m biased, but [...]

Jeffrey Kalmus / March 8, 2010 3:03 pm

The Times Charges Ahead

New online business model will help the press serve the public good

Allan Bradley / March 7, 2010 6:37 pm

Misguided Environmentalism

Last summer I worked for five weeks as a member of an Appalachian Trail crew, living in tents in Northern Maine while performing maintenance on the trail. Apparently I gave them my mailing address, because yesterday I received “The MAINEtainer,” an eight-page newspaper from the Maine Appalachian Trail Club (MATC). One headline stood out: “MATC opposes Highland Plantation wind energy [...]

Sam Barr / March 3, 2010 7:28 am

Tweet Summary of Halperin/Heilemann Forum

Can you blog Tweets? I don’t know, but let’s give this a try. For those of you who couldn’t spend an hour and a half at the Halperin/Heilemann forum last night, here’s a minute-and-a-half tweet rundown…. Waiting for Halperin/Heilemann forum to start. Definitely not packed. Maybe people are over the 2008 gossip? What about midterm gossip? Bill Purcell just said [...]

Jonathan Yip / February 7, 2010 12:09 pm

Yale and the Times

Perhaps I’m harping too much on this news-reading thing, but Yale is currently in a fervor over cost-cutting plans to scrap dining hall subscriptions of the New York Times. One Yalie said that he “had a slight heart attack”—and I thought having a heart attack was pretty binary—when he saw plans to terminate the $50,000-a-year subscriptions. One student wrote an [...]

William Leiter / December 20, 2009 11:20 pm

Letter from the Editor

On Jan. 17, 1925 President Calvin Coolidge remarked that the “business of the American people is business.” Pundits and politicians invoke this often-cited dictum to confirm that we live in a land of capitalism and free markets, and to remind us that while America is an ideal place to do many things, it is first and foremost a place of [...]

Giulio Galliani / December 20, 2009 11:05 pm

Understanding Italy’s Prime Minister

What Silvio Berlusconi represents in Italian politics

Jeremy Patashnik and Catie Williams / November 24, 2009 4:34 am

The Taboo Solution

The silenced economics of legalization In 1998, the satirical newspaper The Onion boldly declared “Drugs Win Drug War.” Satire aside, the headline embodied the increasingly prevalent view that America’s War on Drugs is unwinnable, and that it has been ineffective at best, and counterproductive at worst. Still, the dominant view in American politics is that prohibited drugs are dangerous and ought [...]

Max Novendstern / November 7, 2009 7:41 pm

E Pluribus Pluribus

Public discourse in the age of the Internet Republic.com 2.0 by Cass Sunstein Princeton University Press, September 2009, $24.95, 272 pp. Create Your Own Economy by Tyler Cowen Dutton Adult, July 2009, $25.95, 272 pp. Cass Sunstein begins Republic.com 2.0 by asking his readers to imagine a world where their control over the media they consume is total.”It is some [...]

custom writing