The material here (below) is an archive of my columns and articles. Thank you for reading them.
To stay fully up-to-date from October 10, 2024 onwards, please join me at my new site, TheMediaBeat.com.
The material here (below) is an archive of my columns and articles. Thank you for reading them.
To stay fully up-to-date from October 10, 2024 onwards, please join me at my new site, TheMediaBeat.com.
IT’S NOW AT LAST the homestretch for the two presidential contenders. For news organizations, too, it’s a time to get all their operations fully fine-tuned to meet whatever events might develop as the finishing line gets ever closer — and beyond it too. Continue reading “Exposing Voting Interference: Journalism’s Vital Task” »
I’VE BEEN ON A SHORT HIATUS, far removed from my home-base in the “Media Capital of the World,” New York City. And I have to say, rural Maine offers a perspective not always fully taken into account during mainstream media coverage of our presidential contest. Continue reading “Country vs City in Presidential Race Coverage” »
LET’S TAKE A BREAK, shall we, from American media’s most intense preoccupation, as evidenced by yesterday’s supposedly crucial, but inevitably inconclusive White House press conference?
I of course mean a break from the Democratic Party’s restiveness and confusion over their President being or not being the best person to articulate his own record in office and lead them into victory, re-installing him in that office. Continue reading “Media Election Coverage – Turn-Out Levels Are Critical” »
IN MY ROLE OF MONITORING the media I inevitably have to deal with a lot of screaming. Literal screaming – as in so-called discussions on cable television’s so-called news channels. And written screaming, in headlines and text on paper and online. So I’m grateful to have a solid, dependable, and quietly-spoken news outlet like the Financial Times to turn to. Continue reading “Computers for the Brain and Body” »