Huffington Post Freelancer Files Class Action Suit Against HuffPo
A Huffington Post contributor who had no expectation of being paid for his contributions is suing HuffPo for $105 million.
A Huffington Post contributor who had no expectation of being paid for his contributions is suing HuffPo for $105 million.
You remember how the House GOP was trying to pass laws without the Senate or the President agreeing? Yeah, about that….
The New York Times wins for “Afghans Avenge Florida Koran Burning, Killing 12.”
I’ll be on Birmingham’s News Radio 105.5 WERC around 11:10 Eastern to discuss the allegations that Auburn University was paying players (and the larger implications this has for college athletics) and rise of concierge vacations for the rich.
A photo suggesting oral sex on the cover of a student newspaper has generated controversy.
A handful of young male bloggers have launched themselves to the head of the line, leapfrogging those who’ve spent years playing the game by the old rules.juice
Vice President Joe Biden’s team forced a reporter to wait in a tiny closet in order to cover the vice president’s remarks at a fundraiser.
Matthew Doig of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune posted a want ad for an investigative reporter and it’s gone viral.
Shailagh Murray becomes the latest reporter to join the Obama White House.
In less than two weeks, much of the content of The New York Times will go behind a paywall.
New York Times journalists Anthony Shadid, Stephen Farrell, Tyler Hicks, and Lynsey Addario have not been heard from in more than 24 hours.
Philippa Thomas has a fascinating take on how she broke the news of (now former) State Department P.J. Crowley’s condemnation of the Obama administration’s treatment of Bradley Manning.
NPR is a collection of local stations, not a single station. And it’s run that way.
While there are doubtless flaws with the journalistic values and culture of the New Media, we too often contrast today with a Golden Age of Media that never existed.
While the prestige outlets of the halcyon days of the last millennium still hold some cachet for those of us old enough to remember that era, they mean next to nothing on the Web.
Some conservatives are finally waking up and realizing what people like Glenn Beck are doing to the movement. It’s probably too late, though.
The Wall Street Journal is joining the modern era and dropping the practice of referring to people as “Mr.” and “Ms.” But only on the sports pages.
Politico (Jay Carney got $270K from Time magazine after leaving) has uncovered a major payola scandal. Or is hyping a complete non-story.
The White House Press Office produces a blog, YouTube channel, Flickr photo stream, Facebook and Twitter profiles, and daily video programming.
Michael Medved wishes that conservatives would stop implying that the President of the United States wants to destroy the United States.
Sports Illustrated is trying to force subscribers to pay for a bundle of web and print services. Bad idea.
The media are wildly exaggerating the heckling at a gathering of conservatives.
Glenn Beck seems to have more in common with End Time preachers than he does with a serious political analyst.
Al Jazeera English is kicking the butts of the American news networks on the Egypt story. Why?
The coverage of Egypt shows an over-reliance on pundits and an under-reliance on actual experts.
A suit against a newspaper for not removing an old story about a college football player was tossed.
The speculation on Keith Olbermann’s abrupt departure from MSNBC’s top-rated show continues. Was he fired? Did he quit? Did the Comcast overlords push?