Phil Rosenthal, writer of the Chicago Tribune asks: “Now that people get what they want the way they want on the Internet, where does that leave those mainstream media outlets that, in traditional fashion, pair the news people want with the news it is thought they need?” Charles Gibson, anchor of ABC World News Tonight, has [...]
The “U.S. vs. Libby” lawsuit did not only put an administration and its actions in the wake of the Iraq war on trial, but featured many stars of the political media landscape on the witness stand. I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby, former top aide to Vice-President Dick Cheney was on trial for purgery and obstruction to federal [...]
An attentive observer could come to the conclusion that the conflict in Iraq was solved a long time ago, the next elections would still be years away and all political issues resolved. At least one will get this impression when tuning in to either MSNBC or FOX News these days. While President Bush is announcing his [...]
In 2006, the Tyndall Report notices a bigger coverage of the Iraq war in the American media than in 2005. Hurricane Katrina also is still among the leaders in the battle for airtime minutes. For 20 years, the report of Andrew Tyndall measures each evening which topics get the most coverage among the three leading evening [...]
Each Sunday, Tim Russert, host of NBC’s Meet the Press, interviews the most influential politicians and most important press members in his Sunday talk show and it should come to no surprise that there is only one topic since the mid-term elections: Iraq. In a recent episode, Russert talked to two columnists of The New York [...]
Twitter Updates
Just this Monday Rachel Sklar paid a visit to my class at the Journalism School at Columbia University. Delighted that we were spared of another AP Stylebook drill it wasn’t hard for her to win over the broadcast students that were gathered in the room - not that she wouldn’t be able to do that anyway.
Together with Jay DeDapper from WNBC, the senior contributing editor of the Huffington Post discussed political reporting in a changing media world. When DeDapper mentioned twitter, she proudly took out her Blackberry and started typing away.
Today, she announced via AJR that she was leaving her position at the HuffPost to pursue other jobs in the industry:
“One of the things she will miss most, she says, is the adrenaline rush that comes with the constant demand to produce. As of November 7, Sklar, senior contributing editor for the Huffington Post and writer and editor of the Web site’s blog “Eat the Press,” will be parting ways with her all-consuming gig to pursue other projects.”
The good news is, within the next week I will have an interview with Rachel via twitter, a first time for her and me. In the meantime I will figure out the best way to organize and archive this, but it would not hurt if you start following the both of us. Suggestions and possible questions are welcome.
Photo: Andrew Rosenthal (by Katya Wachtel)
Andrew Rosenthal, the New York Times Editorial Page Editor, visited the student center at the Journalism School tonight and talked for 90 minutes about his job.
It would be an understatement to say he surprised people in the school with his pointed comments. He managed to make everyone laugh out loud at least once - and that after a long day in classes or on the reporting beat.
Talking about the controversy around Obamas published op-ed piece, followed by denying McCain the same opportunity - at least when you ask his campaign management - Rosenthal had the following words to say about a process that started with telling Senator Obama of what to write and what not.
(audio temporarily removed…)
“We can’t accept this piece but if you take out all those quotes from last week’s speech and the ones from the commercial and you focus less on attacking John McCain and you focus more on your own policies. And they sent us two more drafts and we accepted the third one.
“And when we accepted it I said to David Shipley, our editor, ‘okay here’s how this is gonna go. We are going to run this thing and the McCain people will ask for equal time. And we are going to give it to them because it’s only fair. And they are going to send us a horrible, unprintable op-ed piece. And we’re going to ask them for the same exact changes we asked Barack Obama for and we are never going to hear from them and they’re going to leak it to Drudge and attack us for dissing McCain and that is exactly what happened.
“Our public editor has criticized us. They sent in the piece. They called on a Thursday and wanted it to go on Sunday. I said ‘fine.’ Our editor said to them ‘you understand the rules, it can’t be a press release, it can’t be a rehash speech and we really don’t want you to just criticize Obama, we need to hear about your opinions.’
“They said ‘yes, yes, yes.’ They sent us a rehash speech that criticized Obama and said nothing about what McCain wanted. We wrote them back - a slightly inartfully worded email but basically said them same thing: ‘We can’t accept this.’ And they just went straight to Fox News, Drudge.”
Click more to read my tweets during his talk (Start at the bottom) and take a look at the slideshow.
Howard Kurtz is asking: “Does the campaign trail still matter much in an age of digital warfare? Or is it now a mere sideshow, meant to provide the media with pretty pictures of colorful crowds while the guts of the contest unfold elsewhere? And if so, are the boys (and girls) on the bus spinning their wheels?”

Outside the Journalism Building - Foto by Jeremy Herb
Blogs have become an important tool at the Graduate School of Journalism. For most, it is another opportunity to publish articles, for some it is a requirement for class, and for one single person it is used to showcase the clothing style of everyone else.
Here is a list of some of the blogs of my fellow students:
The Highbridge Lowdown
> a blog of unedited work by Sarah Maslin Nir. Already linked by Huffington Post and other local Bronx blogs.
Collin Crowell
> blog of new media student Collin Crowell, who also worked on the J-School coverage of the presidential forum at Columbia University.
The LES Free Press
> this blog was already linked by Gothamist.com and represents the unedited reporting by Gregory White.
Greg Wears Skinny Jeans
> Claire Moses came up with the idea of following the style of above mentioned J-Schooler, Greg White, and it has become an instant success - somehow.
More to come in the future, so bookmark this article for more…
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