Posted on 09/13/2004 7:26:03 AM PDT by MaineRepublic
Edited on 09/13/2004 7:31:08 AM PDT by Sidebar Moderator. [history]
W ASHINGTON - These days, CBS News anchor Dan Rather and his colleagues at the network's magazine program 60 Minutes IIare enduring an unusual wave of second-guessing by some of the public and fellow journalists.
For that, they can thank "Buckhead."
(Excerpt) Read more at concordmonitor.com ...
Additional fame!
Hey, if it's LA Times via some other paper, don't the excerpting rules still apply? Though I wonder if they apply if it's being reproduced in a forum specifically named in the piece.
I resent that! I'm no amateur. As we speak I being paid to Freep!
Being called loony is fame? Not the last time I looked.
sigh...
"And what happens when this stuff gets into the mainstream, and it eventually turns out that the '60 Minutes' documents were perfectly legitimate, but because there's been so much reporting about what's being reported, it has already taken on a life of its own?"
Finally, they (the MSM) are getting close to gaining the perspective we have all had for decades. They do exactly this each and every day they engage in their self-styled "hallowed" occupation of journalism. They distort the truth into lies so badly that most people cannot discern substance from fiction.
Finally, at last, the shoe is on the other foot. Only in this case they are concerned that they cannot tell the fiction that they prefer from the facts they wish to suppress.
What fun!
Yeah, that was an attempt at marginalization by a Left-wing lunatic.
"And what happens when...it eventually turns out that the '60 Minutes' documents were perfectly legitimate..."
Jeffrey Seglin, a professor at Emerson College in Boston.
That's when the alarm clock goes off, Jeff, and you realize you're dreaming.
"But apparently the entire thing was cooked up by a couple of amateurs on Free Republic."
They can't handle the TRUTH! OBTW, mine are silk pj's!
Oh, get OVER yourself already. If someone posts something demonstrably untrue on Free Republic, they will get called on it.
On the other hand, if a Reuters publishes something factually untrue, it will get picked up by 1,000 "news" outlets around the world without a whisper of dissent by the Old Media.
Jeffrey L. Seglin writes "The Right Thing," a weekly column on general ethics syndicated by the New York Times Syndicate. In the column, he regularly offers solutions to ethical dilemmas posed by readers who Email him at rightthing@nytimes.com.
He is the author of The Right Thing: Conscience, Profit and Personal Responsibility in Todays Business (Spiro, 2003). It was named as one of the "Best Business Books of 2003" by the Library Journal. It is a collection of the first four years of The Right Thing, which until January 2004 had been a monthly business ethics column he wrote for the Sunday New York Times Money and Business pages since 1998. He is also the author of The Good, the Bad, and Your Business: Choosing Right When Ethical Dilemmas Pull You Apart (Wiley, 2000). Both books can be ordered by clicking on the links to the left.
Seglin is an associate professor at Emerson College in Boston where he is the director of the graduate program in publishing and writing. He was an ethics fellow at the Poynter Institute for Media Studies in 2001 and a resident fellow at the Center for the Study of Values in Public Life at Harvard in 1998-99.
He is the author or co-author on more than a dozen books on business and writing. He has written for publications including the New York Times, Fortune, FSB, Salon.com, Time.com, Sojourners, MIT's Sloan Management Review, Harvard Management Update, Business 2.0, ForbesASAP, CIO, CFO, MBA Jungle, among others. He regularly contributes commentaries to Public Radio's Marketplace.
Prior to 1998, he was an executive editor at Inc magazine. He began working at the magazine as a senior editor in 1989.
He holds a masters degree in theological studies from The Divinity School at Harvard University.
If you'd like to subscribe to Seglin's listserv to receive occasional Email updates about his column and other ethics issues, send an email to:
listserv@lists.emerson.edu
In the subject line and in the first line of the message body, type:
subscribe workplaceethics (your first name) (your last name)
It's important to remember not to include any space in the workplaceethics and to include both your first and last name.
The Good, the Bad, and Your Business: Choosing Right When Ethical Dilemmas Pull You Apart on amazon.com
The Poynter Institute, Essay on Media Codes of Ethics
Contact Information
Name: Jeffrey L. Seglin
Email:
Phone: jseglin@post.harvard.edu
617.824.8240
I never realized that I was a part of the bastion of right wing lunacy. I always thought the anarchists living in the wilds of the Dakotas were the right wing lunatics--not me!
Jim Jordon really points out how out of step the liberal left is with mainstream America.
And I don't even wear a straightjacket!!
"HEHEHHEHE!!! Freerepublic.com, the 'bastion of right wing lunacy'.
And I don't even wear a straightjacket!!"
The 'Rats have Al Gore and Howard Dean running around unmedicated and unrestrained, but WE are the lunatics?
I have spoken with Mr Seglin, and he is registering on FR to discuss and review this.
Please, thank him for his cooperation.
bump
"Being called loony is fame? Not the last time I looked."
Tut tut now, don't go getting your Freepa..jamas in a knot.
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