news aggregator

The articles listed below are taken from several online news sources. They do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Center for Media and Democracy or its staff.

Veeps and Bounds

CJR Daily - 21 min 15 sec ago
A couple months ago, when Veepstakes speculation was at its inane/pointless/baffling height, Campaign Desk asked a favor of the press: that, in the flurry of Veep speculation, they'd take a moment to step back and contemplate, in light of The Cheney Years, what the role of the vice president should be in the next administration. ...
Categories: Media

Talk of the Brown

CJR Daily - 35 min 14 sec ago
CNN's Campbell Brown, from a New York Times profile on Saturday: As journalists, and certainly for me over the last few years, we’ve gotten overly obsessed with parity, especially when we’re covering politics. We kept making sure each candidate got equal time — to the point that it got ridiculous in a way. So when you have...
Categories: Media

A Higher Register

CJR Daily - 41 min 53 sec ago
Today is the deadline, in nineteen states, for residents to register to vote in the presidential election that will take place four weeks from tomorrow. So, knowing a good news peg when they see one, several outlets are using that fact as an opportunity to report on voter registration issues. The Washington Post has a cover story discussing...
Categories: Media

All Poppies Must Die

CJR Daily - 52 min 32 sec ago
Did you know the one thing missing from Southern Afghanistan was an increased focus on eradicating poppies? After a whopping three day visit to the country, U.S. Army Gen. John Craddock, Supreme Allied Commander of NATO forces in Europe, certainly thinks so. He is pushing for a NATO mandate to eradicate opium crops and “go after traffickers,” or...
Categories: Media

The Economist's "Nerd Chic"

CJR Daily - 1 hour 9 min ago
In naming The Economist "Magazine of the Year," Ad Age paraphrases an ad agency VP saying that the publication is "riding the currents that are relentlessly pushing business and global perspectives to the forefront," and: I think it has a bit of nerd chic to it -- economic nerd chic. When in the recent past have there been best-sellers...
Categories: Media

Who Will Do the Best Job on Health Care?

CJR Daily - 1 hour 44 min ago
A friend of mine asked if I thought Joe Biden was spinning health care to the Democrats’ advantage during last week’s debate. Was he telling the truth, she asked? Was John McCain really going to tax the value of health insurance benefits from employers? I thought you would know, she said, and I told her that Biden’s remarks on this...
Categories: Media

Inside Baseball, All Right

CJR Daily - 2 hours 35 min ago
CNN has a deep bench on debate nights -- rows of seated pundits, laptops glowing before them, telling us what to think about what we just heard. Gizmodo seems to confirm what you already suspected: there might be some multi-tasking going on there...
Categories: Media

Stephanopoulos Snoozes, Public Loses

CJR Daily - 2 hours 45 min ago
What was the public to make yesterday of the health care repartee between Governors Tim Pawlenty of Minnesota and Ed Rendell of Pennsylvania and Senators Sherrod Brown of Ohio and Mel Martinez of Florida on ABC’s This Week with George Stephanopoulos? Probably not much. The discussion was he said/she said journalism at its very best—unfortunately on a complex...
Categories: Media

Talking Shop: Carla Savalli

CJR Daily - 3 hours 23 min ago
Last Thursday, Steven A. Smith resigned as editor of The Spokesman-Review in Spokane, Washington, after he was ordered by his publisher to cut 25 percent of the editorial staff. Later that same day, assistant managing editor Carla Savalli followed Smith out the door. Savalli, considered a rising star at the Spokesman-Review, had been instrumental in plotting the paper's new media...
Categories: Media

Campaign Drama in Three Minutes

CJR Daily - 3 hours 56 min ago
More Monday Morning Movie-ing, this one courtesy of the good people at Slate V. The clip below offers a neat little summary of the campaign thus far...tongue in cheek, yes, but if you're one of those mythical voters who are, you know, Just Now Starting To Pay Attention To The Campaign, it's actually a quite useful summary of...
Categories: Media

Kristol: Wrong on Wright. Twice.

CJR Daily - 3 hours 58 min ago
New York Times columnist Bill Kristol gets a Palin interview before any of his colleagues on the, you know, news side of the paper. What a scoopmeister! Towards the end of the column, after Kristol notes that Palin has recently begun to raise the (non)-issue of Bill Ayres comes this exchange: I pointed out that...
Categories: Media

Brilliant (Debatably)

CJR Daily - 4 hours 1 min ago
Tina Fey And The Gang might just have outdone themselves: -->
Categories: Media

Audit Roundup: Mallaby's Fallacy

CJR Daily - 4 hours 18 min ago
Sebastian Mallaby of the Washington Post says all this talk about the crisis being caused by deregulated markets failing is dangerous “nonsense.” He’s right that one of the chief causes was the Fed’s easy money policy, but he's dead wrong in arguing that lax oversight didn’t play a huge part. Here's one foolish argument: The key financiers in this...
Categories: Media

Good Morning America (It Was, 'Til Now)

CJR Daily - 4 hours 19 min ago
What's worse (low-information-, high-headache-quotient) than a morning news show segment pitting Campaign A's spokesperson against Campaign B's spokesperson (headline, "Getting Offensive: new attacks start campaign week")? A news article summarizing that segment? Good Morning America this morning hosted Robert Gibbs and Nancy Pfotenhauer (Obama and McCain campaign advisers, respectively) to attack one another over how their campaigns have been attacking...
Categories: Media

Sunday Watch 10-5-08

CJR Daily - 4 hours 57 min ago
Sometimes it’s hard to know when Tom Brokaw is actually gauche or playing gauche; actually ironic or ironizing his own irony. On Meet the Press, Brokaw played a clip of McCain’s interview last week with the editorial board of the Des Moines Register, featuring a woman off-camera who notes that “fairly conservative Republicans have expressed doubts about Palin.” “Really!” says...
Categories: Media

Social media important in the 2010 election says Moderate Party

Media Culpa - 5 hours 17 min ago
Moderaterna, the Swedish Moderate Party which is part of the ruling right-wing coalition, predict that blogs and social media will become an integral part of the 2010 election campaign. In a speech this weekend in Sollentuna outside of Stockholm, Secretary-general Per Schlingmann said that the web will be the hub in the next campaign (my translation below). The web will be the hub in the campaign. In ten days we will release our new digital platform which will create new opportunities. How well it turns out depends on us. How open do we dare to be? Dare we let go? For me one thing is clear: in the election 2010, every Moderate blog will be valuable, every Moderate video, every Moderate Facebook group. Let us make sure that there will be as many as possible. I am also convinced that we will carry out more activities where we will meet voters directly, but these activities will be co-ordinatet online and will make it easier for people to take part of our campaign. The prediction that the next election will be web-centric is not very risky, but nevertheless it is interesting to see that the Moderate Party is stressing social media tools so actively almost two years ahead of the election.

During the last few months, blogs have made a huge impact on the political arena, first and foremost from the FRA debate, i.e. the resistance to the new controversial Swedish wiretapping law that enables FRA, Swedish National Defence Radio Establishement, to screen and store all digital traffic passing Swedish borders. Blogs about politics and society are also one of the most popular categories in the Swedish blogosphere. The blog portal Knuff.se lists the 50 most linked to blogs in Sweden and currently about 24 of the top 50 are commenting regularly on political topics.

A question I would like Swedish party strategists to answer is how they plan to engage with female voters via social media. If my latest blog survey BlogSweden 3 is anything to go by, female blog readers don't see blogs as an interesting channel for news about politics and society. While this was the most popular topic among male blog readers (49.2% of all male blog readers), the situation was radically different among female blog readers.

Female blog readers prefer reading blogs about (Jan 2008):
- Fashion and design (53.0%)
- Everyday life experiences (51.6%)
- Photography and art (26.6%)
- Parenthood and children (24.3%)
- Music (22.0%)
- Literature and writing (17.2%)
- Movies and tv (16.9%)
- Journalism and media (16.7%)
- Sex and dating (16.5%)
- Politics and society (14.4%)

Tags: , , , , , . Ping.

The Right to Know

CJR Daily - 5 hours 23 min ago
An interesting two-part documentary from the BBC about freedom of information laws, their evolution and limitations, and applications, in Europe, America, and around the world. Former president and FOI activist Jimmy Carter says that despite the requirement that FOI requests be answered in twenty days, the agriculture department takes more than nine hundred, and the health department more than...
Categories: Media

McCain Campaign No. 1 at Self-Parody; McCain support for Mujahideen Papered Over

Juan Cole's Informed Comment - 13 hours 37 min ago

Sarah Palin's jab at Barack Obama on Sunday attempting to tie him to terrorism (!) is another in a long line of gaffes that will hurt her ticket tremendously.

You always suspected that McCain, if he got in trouble with the electorate, really would stoop to calling his rival a terrorist.

Saturday Night Live writers don't even have to create parodies any more. They've just been quoting Palin verbatim.

The comedy writers have another wild statement from Palin/McCain to work with now.

As for the real terrorism, someone should please ask McCain about his support in the 1980s for the mujahideen (Muslim holy warriors) blowing up things in Afghanistan, which ultimately led some of the mujahideen to form al-Qaeda. Or about McCain's friendship and support for Gen.Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan, who refused to help capture Bin Laden in 1999 and who continued to support and use the Taliban.

Oh, I forgot, if you declare yourself right wing, it is all right to foment terrorism and the corporate media will never question you about it because, well, because it is the corporate media.

Categories: Iraq

Saudi Arabia mediates between Karzai Gov't, Taliban

Juan Cole's Informed Comment - 13 hours 39 min ago

Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah recently hosted talks in Mecca, between Taliban and the Karzai government.

And that's the good news!

Categories: Iraq

11 Family Members killed in US Raid; GI likely torured in Iraq;

Juan Cole's Informed Comment - 13 hours 46 min ago

A US raid on a suspected guerrilla safe house left 11 members of a family dead on Sunday, including three women and three children. The US military insists that the dead men were members of "al-Qaeda" and that the house was full of arms, and that, indeed, some of the destruction was caused by a secondary explosion. Iraqis seem to be denying the US charges.

The main political significance of the dead women and children is that they certainly will be thought relevant by at least the Sunni Arabs in parliament to the status of forces agreement being hammered out between Prime Minister al-Maliki and the Bush administration.

A bomb attack on a British convoy in Basra on Sunday wounded an Iraqi civilian.

One of the reasons the US military prefers to follow the Geneva Conventions, which forbid torture, is that when America tortures it encourages its enemies who capture GIs to torture them. It is therefore sad to know that Bush, Cheney, Rice and Rumsfeld ordered that prisoners be tortured and that "the parents of Spc. Byron Wayne Fouty believe he was tortured by his captors . . ." Fouty was from Texas.

Egyptian foreign minister Ahmad Aoul Gheit made a surprise visit to Baghdad on Sunday and talked about reopening the Egyptian embassy. The last Egyptian diplomat sent there was killed. For his part, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak roiled relations with Iraq by saying that Arab Shiites are more loyal to Iran than to their own countries. But Egypt needs energy and Iraq has a lot of oil, and Cairo is inching back toward a correct relationship with Baghdad.

Turkey, facing a terrorism threat from radical Kurdish separatists based in Iraq, asks the US and Iraq to control Iraqi borders.

Internally displaced Iraqis are being pressured to return to the former domiciles, with aid being withdrawn and tents taken down by the government. This despite the changed political geography of Iraq in the wake of the 2006-2007 massive ethnic cleansing, which has left many Sunni areas without Shiites and vice versa. Shiites cannot return to towns such as Habbaniya because they would stand out like a sore thumb. Anyway, many of them have been personally threatened by name by militias of the other sect, and will not go back as long as they think those militiamen who menaced them are still active and armed.There is no more effective threat than one backed up by thousands of previous murders.

Tina Susman of the LAT reports that more Iraqis are still fleeing the country than are returning, and that the brain drain of professionals is still extensive..

Iraq is rebuilding the Askariya Shrine in Samarra, the destruction of which kicked off the Shiite campaign of ethnic cleasning of Sunnis. Some hope the rebuilt shrine will improve Sunni-Shiite relations.

McClatchy reports other political violence in Iraq on Sunday:
' Nineveh

. . .Gunmen killed four men and injured six in a drive by shooting that targeted a funeral in Al Zinjili area in Mosul. One of the deceased was Iraqi army officer.

- Police found three bodies in Wahda neighborhood in Mosul. The three men were kidnapped yesterday.

- Gunmen attacked a police patrol in central Mosul injuring two policemen.

Diyala

- Gunmen attacked Hussein Al Hamad village near Khan Bani Saad area, about 18 miles south of Baquba, killing three citizens and destroying five houses.

Kirkuk

- Police found one dead body of a Kurd young man near a bridge one day after his kidnapping.'

Categories: Iraq
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