After an impromptu beatboxing lesson from a pro, Paul MacInnes, the Guardian’s slightly disheveled entertainment editor, takes the stage and delivers a valiant if somewhat silly-looking live performance. I gotta say: it’s good to see a reporter who doesn’t take himself too seriously.
“They’ve got a special bit for me in the second half,” he […]
Entries Tagged as 'journalism'
guardian editor’s beatbox lesson, and the swingle singers scat bach
January 19th, 2010 · No Comments
Tags: curio · fun and games · journalism · music · pop culture
neat-o graph shows how americans spend their day
August 10th, 2009 · No Comments
The top-notch Web design team at the New York Times has put together a very neat interactive graph highlighting the ways different groups of Americans spend their day. Here are some interesting facts, with the usual caveat about correlation not equaling causation and all that:
People with two children are more likely to be actively […]
Tags: americas · curio · images · journalism · neato · stats · usa
flickering pictures: a weapon of mass destruction?
May 19th, 2009 · 7 Comments
From Slashdot:
“Law prof Eugene Volokh blogs about a US House of Representatives bill proposed by Rep. Linda T. Sanchez and 14 others that could make it a federal felony to use your blog, social media like MySpace and Facebook, or any other Web media ‘to cause substantial emotional distress through “severe, repeated, and hostile” speech.’ […]
Tags: americas · censorship · crazy · dumb · government · journalism · law and order · media · news · opinion · usa
journalism still not dead
February 19th, 2009 · 3 Comments
It’s only sleeping.
A few days ago, B sent me a link to an excellent article by Stephanie Nolen, a Canadian Globe and Mail reporter who — in my opinion at least — does some of the finest journalism out there, and has for years. She opened the Globe’s South Africa bureau back in 2003, […]
Tags: africa · beautiful · darn tootin' · journalism · media · writing
the sun also sets, and a novel news source rises
February 2nd, 2009 · No Comments
A neat new U.S.-based news service called the Global Post has started covering events around the world, with an emphasis on regions that traditionally fly under the mainstream radar and a novel insistence that its reporters must live full-time in the countries they cover. It’s too early to say if it’ll live up to […]
Tags: asia · finance · government · history · holy crap · japan · journalism · money · news · scary
“unbowed and unafraid”: reporter writes own obituary just before assassination
January 16th, 2009 · 2 Comments
From the inspirational self-authored obituary of Lasantha Wickramatunge, editor-in-chief of Sri Lanka’s Sunday Leader newspaper, written shortly before he was shot and killed on his way to work:
It is well known that I was on two occasions brutally assaulted, while on another my house was sprayed with machine-gun fire. Despite the government’s sanctimonious assurances, there […]
Tags: asia · censorship · do something · government · journalism · law and order · media · news · obit · sad · scary
war in gaza: press freedom would shed light on a dark situation
January 5th, 2009 · 3 Comments
Unless you haven’t turned on a television lately, you know that ten days ago the Israeli army launched a full-scale attack on Hamas forces in Gaza, with the stated aim of halting the barrage of homemade rockets that have been launched into Israeli towns since 2000. As I write this, the fight has left […]
Tags: censorship · darn tootin' · journalism · law and order · media · middle east · news · opinion · sad · war
interview with the journalism student: india’s space program
December 22nd, 2008 · No Comments
A little while ago, I got an e-mail from Meg White, a graduate student at Columbia College Chicago who’s working on an article about India’s space program. She had stumbled across my post on the Chandarayaan lunar missions, and wanted to bounce a few questions off a non-scholarly blogger type.
Because I though […]
Tags: india · journalism · media · neato · news · space
greek riots: best photojournalism i’ve seen in a long time
December 16th, 2008 · 1 Comment
Yesterday’s Boston Globe featured an unbelievable collection of photos of the ongoing anarchy in Athens. Nearly any one of these shots, if you took them, would be the best photo you’d ever take.
The riots were sparked by the police shooting of Alexis Grigoropoulos, a 15-year-old boy who was allegedly with other youths who threw […]
Tags: europe · holy crap · images · journalism · law and order · news · photography · sad
pre-election angst and “girly man churches” in america’s once-wild west
November 4th, 2008 · 1 Comment
Peter Hitchens, an excellent — if fiercely conservative — writer and columnist at Britain’s right-leaning Daily Mail, is covering America’s pre-election mood from Moscow, Idaho, which is incidentally named after a town in Pennsylvania, not Russia. Though I don’t agree with his politics, his latest editorial piece is a thing of beauty — as […]
Tags: americas · election · journalism · mccain · neato · obama · opinion · politics · usa
