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Places to send in News Tips |
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Topic: Media |
6:49 pm EDT, Aug 19, 2006 |
This is a good collection of general purpose press contact points. ABC News 77 W. 66 St., New York, NY 10023 Phone: 212-456-7777 General e-mail: netaudr@abc.com Nightline: nightline@abcnews.com 20/20: 2020@abc.com CBS News 524 W. 57 St., New York, NY 10019 Phone: 212-975-4321 Fax: 212-975-1893 Email forms for all CBS news programs CBS Evening News: evening@cbsnews.com The Early Show: earlyshow@cbs.com 60 Minutes II: 60II@cbsnews.com 48 Hours: 48hours@cbsnews.com Face The Nation: ftn@cbsnews.com CNN One CNN Center, Box 105366, Atlanta, GA 30303-5366 Phone: 404-827-1500 Fax: 404-827-1906 Email forms for all CNN news programs Fox News Channel 1211 Ave. of the Americas New York, NY 10036 Phone: (212) 301-3000 Fax: (212) 301-4229 comments@foxnews.com List of Email addresses for all Fox News Channel programs Special Report with Brit Hume: Special@foxnews.com FOX Report with Shepard Smith: Foxreport@foxnews.com The O'Reilly Factor: Oreilly@foxnews.com Hannity & Colmes: Hannity@foxnews.com, Colmes@foxnews.com On the Record with Greta: Ontherecord@foxnews.com NBC 30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, NY 10112 Phone: 212-664-4444 Fax: 212-664-4426 List of Email addresses for all NBC news programs NBC Nightly News with Tom Brokaw: nightly@nbc.com NBC News' Today: today@nbc.com Dateline NBC: dateline@nbc.com MSNBC One MSNBC Plaza Secaucus, NJ 07094 Phone: (201) 583-5000 Fax: (201) 583-5453 CNBC 2200 Fletcher Ave. Fort Lee, NJ 07024 Phone: (201) 585-2622 Fax: (201) 583-5453 List of Email addresses for all MSNBC news programs Hardball with Chris Matthews: hardball@msnbc.com MSNBC Reports with Joe Scarborough: msnbcreports@msnbc.com PBS 1320 Braddock Place, Alexandria, VA 22314 Phone: 703-739-5000 Fax: 703-739-8458 The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer: newshour@pbs.org National programs National Public Radio 635 Massachusetts Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20001-3753 Phone: 202-513-2000 Fax: 202-513-3329 E-mail: Jeffrey Dvorkin, Ombudsman ombudsman@npr.org All Things Considered: atc@npr.org Morning Edition: morning@npr.org Talk Of The Nation: totn@npr.org List of Email addresses for all NPR news programs The Rush Limbaugh Show 1270 Avenue of the Americas, NY 10020 Phone: 800-282-2882 Fax: 212-563-9166 E-mail: rush@eibnet.com Sean Hannity Show E-mail: Phil Boyce, Program Director phil.boyce@abc.com National Newspapers The Los Angeles Times 202 West First Street, Los Angeles, CA 90012 Phone: 800-528-4637 or 213-237-5000 Fax: 213-237-4712 Letters to the Editor: letter... [ Read More (0.3k in body) ] Places to send in News Tips
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RE: Photo Fraud in Lebanon |
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Topic: Media |
5:26 pm EDT, Aug 18, 2006 |
terratogen wrote: Examples of photo manipulation to create more dramatic news stories. It's odd that they didn't pick out things which didn't have to do with lebanon. This sort of thing is pretty much standard. Decius wrote: There is a degree to which the sort of manipulation performed by the media is mirrored by those who expose it, as most have an agenda. Little Green Footballs is a right wing blog. They have an interest in demonstrating a particular kind of media manipulation and only that kind. Noam Chomsky and groups like Ad Busters often demonstrate a different kind of media manipulation, and only that kind. The media is a megaphone. Input goes in and is amplified. Its interest is in the dramatic, not the true. Its agents create drama where none exists. Those who are skilled at manipulating the media know how to point it toward favored drama. Those who are unskilled risk being the drama pointed at. The media's focus can bring wealth or recrimination, depending on how it comes. Mastering this is the key to mastering the broadcast society. As we've matured, it has become clear to many of us that the media manipulates. As more information has become available the people are awakening. The political powers have managed this problem by injecting the fantasy that the media is only manipulated by the other guys, never by us. Widespread realization that the media is manipulated by everyone is the next step, but unfortunately few have an interest in such a development.
RE: Photo Fraud in Lebanon |
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Wikipedia Celebrates 750 Years Of American Independence | The Onion |
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Topic: Media |
11:49 am EDT, Jul 26, 2006 |
The Onion on Wikipedia... Wikipedia, the online, reader-edited encyclopedia, honored the 750th anniversary of American independence on July 25 with a special featured section on its main page Tuesday. "It would have been a major oversight to ignore this portentous anniversary," said Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales, whose site now boasts over 4,300,000 articles in multiple languages, over one-quarter of which are in English, including 11,000 concerning popular toys of the 1980s alone. "At 750 years, the U.S. is by far the world's oldest surviving democracy, and is certainly deserving of our recognition," Wales said. "According to our database, that's 212 years older than the Eiffel Tower, 347 years older than the earliest-known woolly-mammoth fossil, and a full 493 years older than the microwave oven." The special anniversary tribute refutes many myths about the period and American history. According to the entry, the American Revolution was in fact instigated by Chuck Norris, who incinerated the Stamp Act by looking at it, then roundhouse-kicked the entire British army into the Atlantic Ocean. A group of Massachusetts Minutemaids then unleashed the zombie-generating T-Virus on London, crippling the British economy and severely limiting its naval capabilities. The entry also addresses several traditionally taboo subjects, such as the influence of LSD on the drafting of the Constitution and the role of funk-slaves in painting the White House black. Founder Wales, a closeted homosexual and hot-dog freak, according to his user-edited bio on the site, also hosted a symposium of amateur historians at the New School in New York on Saturday.
Wikipedia Celebrates 750 Years Of American Independence | The Onion |
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AOL founder says he is 'sorry' for Time Warner merger - Jul. 24, 2006 |
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Topic: Media |
3:09 am EDT, Jul 25, 2006 |
In an interview broadcast on Friday, Case, who was shoved aside as chairman in 2003 and who left the board entirely in 2005, said, "Yes, I'm sorry I did it," referring to the 2001 merger of Time Warner Inc (Charts). and AOL.
Another episode of Charlie Rose I need to watch.. I can't think of anyone I was conversing with at the time who though the AOL/TW merger was a good idea, myself included. Case and Turner should go horseback riding together. AOL founder says he is 'sorry' for Time Warner merger - Jul. 24, 2006 |
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Topic: Media |
12:53 pm EDT, Jun 30, 2006 |
Mosaic features selections from daily TV news programs produced by national broadcasters throughout the Middle East. The news reports are presented unedited and translated, when necessary, into English. Some of the broadcasters are state controlled and others are private networks, often affiliated with political factions. These news reports are regularly watched by 280 million people in 22 countries all over the Middle East.
Link TV - Mosaic |
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Friendster lost steam. Is MySpace just a fad? |
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Topic: Media |
8:13 am EST, Mar 23, 2006 |
A lot of folks have asked me "What went wrong with Friendster? Why is MySpace any different?" I guess i never directly answered that question, even though i've addressed the causes in other talks. Still, i guess it would be helpful to piece some of it together and directly attend to this question. * Social technologies succeed when they fit into the social lives and practices of those who engage with the technology. * People use the social technologies that all of their friends are using. * Social technologies need benevolent dictators who love their constituents. * It's not all about productivity. * It is not about technological perfection. * Is it all a fad?
This essay by Danah Boyd is worth a read. Danah is a Berkley PhD student who has been watching this space very closely for quite some time now and has always shown some good insight. Also take a look at the followup post where she talks about the term "super publics" in the context of traditional communications theory. Friendster lost steam. Is MySpace just a fad? |
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Boing Boing: Media shutdown in Kenya -- TV station, newspaper torched |
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Topic: Media |
3:31 pm EST, Mar 2, 2006 |
Masked, plainclothes police carrying assault rifles staged a midnight raid on the country's oldest newspaper and its sister television station early Thursday, burning tens of thousands of newspapers in the most dramatic attack on the press in Kenya's history.
Boing Boing: Media shutdown in Kenya -- TV station, newspaper torched |
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BBC NEWS | China editor 'died after beating' |
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Topic: Media |
9:29 pm EST, Feb 7, 2006 |
A Chinese editor has died as a result of a police beating he received for his paper's reporting on corruption, journalists and rights groups say. Wu was reportedly attacked by some 50 policemen after his paper accused them of charging illegal bicycle fees.
These are dark days for the global media estate... BBC NEWS | China editor 'died after beating' |
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Topic: Media |
4:22 pm EST, Jan 10, 2006 |
The 38 million subscribers to MySpace, which News Corp bought for $629m (355m) last July, discovered that when they wrote to each other about rival video-swapping site YouTube, the words were automatically deleted, and attempts to download video images from YouTube led to blank screens. However, MySpace managers promptly shut down the blog forum on which members had complained about the interference. An online notice said the problem was the result of "a simple misunderstanding". The explanation did not, however, calm the bloggers. "There was an outcry by some members after MySpace's acquisition by News Corp. People were afraid they might start monitoring or censoring MySpace," Ellis Yu wrote to the Blog Herald. "At the time, their CEO said nothing like that would happen. Well, now it has. MySpace was built on an open community and now they're trying to censor us, putting business interests above its members!"
I'm pretty sure I'm on the record, somewhere, predicting News Corp would do just this kind of thing. MySpace is, and will continue to be, a journey in learning about the necessary dynamics of Social Networking sites, and not the final solution to the online community. Mr Murdoch, 74, last week appointed 33-year-old Jeremy Philips to run News Corp's internet strategy and armed him with a $1bn fund to buy more sites.
Let me give my complete assurance that Industrial Memetics will never entertain a buyout offer from News Corp. Myspace stumbles |
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