Posted on 07/07/2008 6:54:48 PM PDT by bd476
OH ABB
Occasionally, you have to turn the compost pile. Hopefully, Mr. Broccoli can help guide the Washington Compost into something resembling a newspaper instead of a mouthpiece for the DNC.
That's a fine looking bird who undoubtedly has an important role within the animal kingdom and thus, has little or nothing in common with the subject matter. ;-)
Hopefully.
It’s hell to get old,I’m the same age as Marcus W. Brauchli;)
We do not see the elephant.
We do not acknowledge the elephant.
Therefore, the elephant does not exist.
My Houston Chronicle is getting fewer and fewer pages each week. On Monday, it’s ridiculous. It’s like the small town newspaper I grew up with in a town of 20,000 population.
Seriously, on most days, the business section is only four pages. (Really one big one folded) Sometimes six. 10 years ago it was 16.
I do hope he is able to bring some sanity to their news and editorial staff.
It’s so left-wing that it will take years before it’s worth buying, though. And through that whole process, they’ll miff off their current liberal readers.
IIRC, Katharine Weymouth is a conservative. She was going to work for some conservative magazine or newspaper some years ago, so Mom brought her over to the Post in a high position and gave some room to allow her her conservative opinions. That was maybe 20 years ago, and I don’t know if Weymouth’s positions/philosophy have changed .. but a Wall Street Journal editor may be a clue.
Yes, that looks like what they're doing.
why do they have to
“signal”
?
They might be aware of the core problems yet are too used to doing things the same way they've always done them. Thinking outside the box doesn't seem to come naturally to some folks in the print media.
She feels the urgency to change and adapt, and thank heaven.
Sounds like the reporter is trying to send Pinch a message.
The Washington Post. If you don’t get it, join the club.
Hopefully the pendulum will swing the other way. I have mixed emotions about the current malaise in print media. I'm not overjoyed reading about all the cutbacks. If local reporters are laid off, who will replace them?
There are skills involved in reporting news events, getting just the facts into a story and then composing a cogent, brief summary. I doubt there would be many people willing to hone those skills, go to news events every single day and write stories for free. Just my opinion though.
Any idea of eventually having one centralized print news source for our entire country would be disastrous. Some early attempts in that direction haven't worked all that well. (USA Today and most weekly magazines.)
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