Journalists
Posts about journalists and the way they work.
Taking Notes Paid Members Public
I’ve been watching the blame-storming with increasing interest over the last few days. However, one comment in an Evening Standard roundup of the controversy [http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/news/articles/5859398?source=Evening%20Standard] caught my eye, mainly for this paragraph: > There are also rumours in the
Seminar Report: political blogging at the Houses of Parliament Paid Members Public
The crowd gathered at the bottom of the stairs that lead up to the Great Committee Room were exactly as one would expect: a smattering of suits, a good measure of geeky types, a fair few trendy new media types and a few journalists staring intently at the crowd and
What this blog <i>won't</i> be Paid Members Public
I’m not about to turn myself into a pundit. I have no interest in turning myself into an opinionated commentator on the world’s news. I won’t be able to resist doing it from time to time, of course, so it won’t be the thrust of the
ITN journalist Terry Lloyd killed in Iraq Paid Members Public
I have no idea how widely this is being reported in the US, so I thought I’d post it here: ITN news journalist Terry Lloyd is dead [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/2878777.stm], quite possible killed by “friendly fire [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/
The journalists who stayed in Baghdad, and those who left Paid Members Public
Here’s an interesting titbit from today’s Snowmail [http://www.channel4.com/news/snowmail/], a useful little daily e-mail that Channel 4 news sends out every afternoon. This is from Lindsey Hilsum, their reporter in Baghdad. > I don’t know the exact numbers, but I think about half
Guardian man cracks up... Paid Members Public
It could be that this article [http://sport.guardian.co.uk/cricketworldcup2003/overbyover/story/0,12864,914033,00.html] is for Comic Relief. I do hope it isn’t, though. The bitterness with which this Guardian journalist speaks about London seems too real, too heartfelt to be part of some