Here's a look at what it takes for the New York Times to cover the world -- from a piece in The Atlantic
And here are a couple of links that might (or might not) come in handy when you write your obit:
http://www.obitwriters.org/moreobits.html
http://www.blogofdeath.com/
That's it. bk
Wednesday, April 27, 2011
Friday, April 8, 2011
what else we lose ...
Via Ted Pease once again:
“Scholars and commentators have been talking for some time about how the death of newspapers could have serious consequences for the quality of newsgathering. My research demonstrates a second, largely ignored ramification. The death of newspapers seriously threatens to put an end to some of the most important legal efforts in our democracy. . . .
“For generations, newspapers and newspaper organizations have expended substantial resources to litigate major cases to the U.S. Supreme Court to ensure that trials are open to the public. They have funded the drafting of virtually every piece of open-government legislation on both a federal and a state level. They have then gone on to fund litigation efforts to ensure that these statutes, once passed, are obeyed by government officials. The death of newspapers can be expected to pose a serious constitutional crisis.”
—RonNell Andersen Jones, BYU law professor and former newspaper editor,
“New study IDs threats the ‘death of newspapers’ may have on open government,” March 2011
Friday, April 1, 2011
The other reason why we love newspapers:
Thanks to Ted Pease:
“A 19th century Irish immigrant named O’Reilly called the newspaper ‘a biography of something greater than a man. It is the biography of a DAY. It is a photograph, of twenty four hours’ length, of the mysterious river of time that is sweeping past us forever. And yet we take our year’s newspapers—which contain more tales of sorrow and suffering, and joy and success, and ambition and defeat, and villainy and virtue, than the greatest book ever written—and we use them to light the fire.’”—Adair Lara, columnist,The San Francisco Chronicle,December 30, 1999
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)