Journalism


Red Book Hoax

A couple weeks ago in regard to the story about a college student being visited by the FBI because he had checked out a copy of Mao’s Little Red Book Kip noted:

FULL DISCLOSURE: There are some who are insisting that this story is a hoax. But if it is then that means that an MSM reporter, or two university professors, are risking their jobs on a lark. Sounds unlikely to me. The reporter, Aaron Nicodemus, has publicly insisted that the story is genuine.

Well it turns out they were right:

The reporter writes about how the student’s story eventually started to unravel under intense questioning (only after the initial story was written), and how the tale “came at a perfect storm in the news cycle” due to the recent New York Times story about government surveillance. It doesn’t mention the paper’s failure to speak with the student prior to publishing the piece, nor does it offer up any kind of admission or apology.

Here is the retraction article which was published on 12/24. It is 4 days later and until I ran across the article in Regret the Error linked above I still thought the original story was true. I wonder how many will continue to cite this as an example of bushian governmental badness (which it would be if true). For instance this entry was posted on Thursday, December 29th, 2005 at 3:29 am UTC.


Magazine Begins Morph to Blog

Or was it one already?
Even though I don’t get all that many comments here I consider comments to be a valuable feature of the blogging community. Now, Business Week has added user comments to its online articles. For instance, at the moment, you can be the first to leave a comment on this article.
So is BW now a multi-author blog with deep pockets? What about other MSM online sites?
Via Dan Gilmour.


Open Source Pajamas

The Pajamas Media (aka Open Source Media) development has been mildly interesting to watch and now I wonder whether anyone will read, analyze, quote and link to anything on that site beyond navel gazing by the participants. My reading of their copyright notice suggests that The Talent Show is has already violated it. Heck I will too:

You may not reproduce, distribute, copy, publish, enter into any database, display, modify, create derivative works, transmit, or in any way exploit any part of this site. The only exceptions to this are that you may download material from Our Site for your own personal use, provided such download is limited to making one machine readable copy and/or one print copy that limited to occasional articles of personal interest only. No other use of the content of Our Site is permitted.

The language seems pretty clear that they don’t want us to quote and comment on any of their material so let’s oblige them.
Via Making Light.


Which Porpoise Did You Get?

In early September there was a version of Dilbert that showed a porpoise taking out a shark lawyer. It turns out that there were two versions and Scott Adams notes:

Several people sent comments to my blog yesterday saying they noticed that my comic on 9-6-05 that featured a porpoise killing a lawyer was published in two different versions. The tame version ran in newspapers and the edgier one ran on my website. What’s up with that, they wonder.

Well, the second one is certainly a bit edgier. Read the full story.