News

1 March 2001

Are watchdogs an endangered species?

In 1964 the Pulitzer Prize went to The Philadelphia Bulletin in a new reporting category. The award honored the Bulletin for reporting that police officers in that city were running a numbers racket right out of their station house, and it presaged a new wave of scrutiny of police corruption in American cities. The award had one other significance as well. It marked formal recognition by the print...

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1 March 2001

Profit Pressures

After almost a decade of smooth sailing, media company profits plummeted this spring as a rapidly declining stock market spurred a broad downturn. Starting in Silicon Valley and then spreading across the country, executives began to talk about hard choices to maintain profitability, including potential layoffs and other cutbacks affecting editorial content. At one newspaper, the San Jose Mercury...

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2 February 2001

AFP journalist beaten, issued death threat by police officer

In a letter to the chief of police of the Indian province Jammu-e-Kashmir, Ashok Suri, RSF protested the attack on Surinder Oberoi, a journalist with Agence France-Presse (AFP) and RSF correspondent, by a police officer in Kashmir. The organisation expressed concern that no serious investigation was conducted and that no sanctions were taken against the officer responsible for this attack. RSF...

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1 February 2001

No degrees of separation

Jessica Siegal's fingers were gliding around a goblet of white wine that she held in her left hand. She was dressed in a black, hugging ball gown, fringed at the wrists and hemline in smooth fur. Without my soliciting, she whispered into my ear the right questions to be asked to the guests at the black-tie Committee to Protect Journalists dinner at the Waldorf-Astoria. "I teach interviewing at NYU...

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1 February 2001

Market-driven

One night in mid-November, several dozen journalists gathered in the Tribeca loft of the writer Jacob Weisberg to celebrate the publication of The Slate Diaries, a collection of journal entries by assorted contributors to the online magazine. Among those in attendance were Michael Kinsley, the editor of Slate and a columnist for The Washington Post; Hendrik Hertzberg, a staff writer for The New...

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1 February 2001

Why New York could rule new media

The receptionist at Inside.com's front desk is color-coordinated to the online magazine's spacious northern Chelsea loft. Her teeny, bright sea-green halter top conveniently shows off a prominent tattoo on her right shoulder, and it is a near-perfect match to a turquoise floor-to-ceiling tube-shaped room that is about twice as wide as her desk. What is it? "Oh, that's the conference room," she...

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17 January 2001

Hindustan Times emphasises "people"

While selling a newspaper to both consumers and media planners, it's generally numbers that make the most convincing argument. But after having stolen a march over its nearest rival, The Times of India (TOI), Delhi's largest-selling newspaper, The Hindustan Times (HT), is focusing on the quality of its readership, rather than the number of people reading the paper. Take the advertising for the...

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1 January 2001

Where Women Rule

THE LEGEND OF AMAZONIA in journalism started on a sour note. The saga began in June 1999, as the Sarasota Herald-Tribune's new executive editor, Janet Weaver, agonized over whether to ask a former colleague to apply to become the paper's managing editor. The colleague was smart, well-respected--and a self-proclaimed enemy. Weaver had collided with her over a job promotion more than five years ago...

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1 January 2001

Lifting the veil

It feels like an age of plenty, but more children live in poverty now than twenty years ago; 17 percent of them live below the line, up from about 16 percent in 1979. Welfare reform has ushered more people into the work force, but low wages make it hard for many of them to cope with the cost of living. And 42 million people, most of them working but still poor, do not have health insurance. For...

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1 January 2001

The Cybercops Are Coming -- But Whom Will They Serve?

The deal was sealed with a hug. Instead of being at war, Bertelsmann, the world's third-largest media conglomerate, and Napster, the popular upstart, are to be partners. Bertelsmann will drop its copyright infringement suit against Napster if the free file-sharing service can convert to paid subscriber services, using a secure system that grants access to Bertelsmann Music Group's catalogue...

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