What’s the explanation for the “surprising resilience of print”? Consumer preference, is the main story the New York Times tells.
But three-quarters of the way through the piece, the real economics of the publishing industry appear.
Digital Apocalypse Not: NYT Celebrates Publishers Deciding They Don’t Want to Sell E-Books
Meet the Press on Clinton: Focusing on Image, Distracting From Issues
The consensus on Meet the Press is that Hillary Clinton’s problem is that she’s not her husband, she lacks his “amazing campaign skills” and is “not very defined for people.” If only she could get some credit for Bill’s “economic legacy.”
But for many of the likely voters who have backed off from Clinton, her problem isn’t that she’s not enough like her husband…but rather that she’s too much like him.
‘We Need Free Speech Protections Across All of Those Networks’
CounterSpin interview with Tim Karr about efforts to undermine net neutrality
“We’re talking about very powerful phone and cable companies here…. They’ve deployed their lobbyists to try and get Congress to pass new legislation that would somehow take away the FCC’s authority to protect the open internet.”
Down the Memory Hole: NYT Erases CIA’s Efforts to Overthrow Syria’s Government
‘Military Intervention in the Middle East Started This Crisis in the First Place’
CounterSpin interview with Raed Jarrar on the refugee crisis
NYT Plays Up Risks to Bomber Pilots, Downplays the Civilians They Kill
Jesse Hagopian on Seattle vs. Education ‘Reform,’ Rachel Meeropol on Justice for 9/11 Detainees
Seattle teachers held what looks like a successful strike, 100 percent of one high school class opted out of standardized tests, and the state Supreme Court declared charters unconstitutional. CounterSpin talks to a Seattle teacher about what it all means.
Corporate Press Fails to Trump Bigotry
The outlandish rhetoric of Republican presidential wildcard Donald Trump has left many journalists at a loss for words—words such as bigotry, xenophobia, racism, sexism and demagoguery.