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Old Media:

podcastThe Man Who Brings the Nation to the Nation:

“In the United States today, five companies control the majority of all media revenue: Yahoo, Google, Microsoft, Time-Warner, News Corporation…. From the standpoint of revenues, the Internet is the most consolidated media ever in the United States…. When you look at the revenue flow from the Internet it is all going into the pockets of Yahoo, Google, Reuters and the AP…. In the Blogosphere… we’ve got millions of blogs, but only a handful that are generating enough money to sustain the operations of those people that are producing them. And that revenue is ia direct function of their ability to actually crack through the Blogosphere and gain some visibility.” — Richard Landry

Just how do all the small circulation news and opinion magazines get on (some) news stands around the country? Richard Landry and the Independent Press Association have a lot to do with it.

Richard Landry is executive director of the Independent Press Association, a non-profit organization whose mission is to amplify the power of independent media so as to foster a more just, open, and democratic society. The IPA supports the growth and development of over 525 independent magazines, newspapers, and web sites throughout North America.


podcastHow to Really Intimidate the Media

The Muddled Thinking of Mainstream Media Clarified by Arthur Jensen: “You are an old man who thinks in terms of nations and peoples. There are no nations. There are no peoples. There are no Russians. There are no Arabs. There are no third worlds. There is no West. There is only one holistic system of systems, one vast and immane, interwoven, interacting, multivariate, multi-national dominion of dollars. Petro-dollars, electro-dollars, multi-dollars, Reichmarks, rins, rubles, pounds, and shekels.” — Network, 1976



podcastThe Fearless Arianna Huffington

“The more we exercise our fearlessness the more available to us it is.” — Huffington

Author, poltician, blogger and gadfly to the media and the political establishment, Arianna Huffington is her own introduction. And unlike some post-post-modern Athena springing from the head of Zeus. Huffington is her own creation as well. She did it by overcoming her own deep seated fearfullness. In this interview with PJM Special Corrrespondent Andrew Keen, Huffington discusses her new book, On Becoming Fearless, a text pointed at women, but which, she explains men can profit from as well.



podcastShould Reuters Be Investigated? Caroline Glick, Cliff May & Thomas Lifson interviewed by Roger Simon

Blog investigation forced the vaunted British news agency to withdraw the Beirut photos of Adnan Hajj and fire the photographer. Is this just the tip of the iceberg? Should Reuters be investigated and, if so, by whom? PJM’s Roger Simon moderates this exclusive podcast discussion with Caroline Glick of the Jerusalem Post, Cliff May of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracy and Thomas Lifson of The American Thinker.
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A Production of Pajamas Media, the Best of the Blogs, and POLITICSCENTRAL. More 24/7 MidEast War Coverage HERE. More MidEast War Podcasts HERE.

Articles

January 10, 2007

The "Don Quixote Kids" of Paris
In France today the only heroes are the homeless, the new Pet Rocks of Paris and its prime time media.

by Nidra Poller, PJM’s Paris Editor

One hundred days from the presidential elections, what is on the mind of an aspiring world power like France? The nuclear threat from Iran? The Hizballah putsch fomenting in Lebanon? War between Fatah and Hamas? The defeat of Islamists in Somalia?


December 21, 2006

"Old Farts" vs. Bloggers

By Catherine Seipp

The Michael Richards n-word incident continues to take its toll, especially in media circles. I just noticed, for instance, that former Los Angeles Timesman Bob Baker’s attempt at “satirizing” Richards’ recent comedy club implosion used the n-word 23 times and therefore got him in trouble with a “reporter/friend,” (presumably nonwhite, otherwise I suspect Baker would have tried to come up with some sort of argument.) But the sometime L.A. Times writing coach quickly backed off from his Lenny Bruce-inspired parody regretfully and fully.


November 29, 2006

Kramerology 101: Of the N-Word and Smarm
"Was it something I said?

By PJM’s Media Correspondent Catherine Seipp

My sympathy for Michael Richards (a.k.a. Seinfeld’s “Kramer” who erupted in a racist tirade at two black hecklers last week at a LA comedy club), was quite limited to begin with. It shrank even further when Richards appeared on David Letterman the next day to apologize for his obscene outbursts.


November 16, 2006

Careers Always, Readers Never

Soft Writing and Hard Times at the LA Times

By Catherine Seipp

I’ve been struck by the odd notion - reportedly run up the flagpole by David Geffen, a possible Los Angeles Times buyer - that the way to improve my favorite paper is to lure Maureen Dowd and Frank Rich and Alex Witchel from the New York Times out to Spring Street. Now that’s just crazy, because why should they go, when everything about them is so essentially New York?


October 19, 2006

Al-Dura: The Verdict (Part Four)
"What to do?"

Nidra Poller on the disappointing conclusion to the French state media’s prosecution of a man accused of “insulting” the press by suggesting that they report the truth.


October 18, 2006

Heads on Platters at the LA Times

By Catherine Seipp, Special Correspondent to PJM, Media

I have no idea whether the Los Angeles Times should cut even more staff positions or not. On the one hand is the odd notion that a 20% profit margin is somehow not enough. On the other hand is Times features columnist Al Martinez’s tirade the other week when he discovered blogs… and his remaining readers discovered that Martinez himself is still mysteriously occupying one of those coveted staff positions.


September 19, 2006

MSM, NGOs AND PARANOIA
Nelson Ascher

In an essay exclusive to PJM NELSON ASCHER looks at the strange symbiotic relationship between the Mainstream Media and Non-Governmental Organziations and what it means to our lives.-ed.


September 18, 2006

AL-DURA: THE TRIAL (PART THREE)
Philippe Karsenty- founder of Media-Ratings

Nidra Poller concludes her coverage … for now … of the Al-Dura Trial in Paris with a blow-by-blow account of the trial with analysis of the proceedings.
Paris 18 September 2006

Disclosure: I make no pretense to objectivity in my reports on this trial. Philippe Karsenty is a friend and colleague; we have often discussed this case that was brought against him but aimed at all of us who share a commitment to destroying the al-Dura blood libel.


STUDIO 60: "If I Ran the Zoo, er, Studio, er, World..."
Studio 60: The West Wing with Punchlines


Catherine Seipp finds that NBC’s Sorkinesque “Studio 60” is a drama about about a comedy about “Characters of proper liberal moral clarity making rousing speeches to each other while the swelling soundtrack tells viewers what to feel.” No laughtrack.

Conventional wisdom has it that Aaron Sorkin’s “The West Wing” was a liberal fantasy about what the White House might have been with Martin Sheen’s fictional president in charge rather than Bill Clinton. But after watching “Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip,” Sorkin’s new NBC drama about a “Saturday Night Live”-like comedy series, I suspect “The West Wing” was actually an Aaron Sorkin fantasy about the White House with Sorkin in charge rather than of Bill Clinton.


September 14, 2006

AL-DURA: THE TRIAL (PART TWO)

Nidra Poller with a breaking report from the Al-Dura Trial
Paris 13 September 2006

Flash:
Here are my first impressions of the trial. A proper account will follow tomorrow.
The trial was beautiful, the Palais de Justice is beautiful with its aspiring architecture and gilded gates, it was a beautiful late summer evening in mid-September as we walked out of the Courthouse at 8:30 PM, exhausted and relieved. Richard Landes and I danced out of there singing Vive la France.


September 13, 2006

AL-DURA: THE TRIAL (PART ONE)
Zola - "J'accuse"

Starting September 14, three Frenchmen go on trial in Paris for questioning the veracity of the 2000 videotape of the putative murder of Palestinian child Mohammed Al-Dura by Israeli soldiers. This tape - promulgated by the French state-run channel France 2 - is often credited with helping instigate the so-called “Al-Aqsa Intifada”. Now, six years later, in the shadow of revelations about media manipulation and “fauxtography” by Reuters and others, these trials take on extraordinary unexpected resonance. Not since the days of Alfred Dreyfus and Emile Zola has the French legal system been put to such a test on basic issues of racism and freedom of expression.

While the mainstream media largely ingnores this event, Pajamas Media is proud to present extensive coverage. We begin here with a stage-setting report from our Paris Editor Nidra Poller who will be attending the trials on our behalf.-ed.


September 12, 2006

A Scent of Dreyfus: A Trail of Jihad

September 12, 2006
Ellen W. Horowitz

We wander over to place de la République, perhaps the most schizophrenic of all of Paris’s major places.
-The Paris Free Voice Magazine, June 1999
——

If Place de la Republique was schizophrenic back in the summer of 1999, then by the autumn of 2000 it was overtly psychopathic.

You would think that the bronze lady of of the republic would have felt a bit violated by the keffiyahs, swastikas, and hatred gracing her foundation - but she didn’t protest too much.


September 4, 2006

The USS Couric's Maiden Voyage: New Anchor. Same Titanic.
"Obviously, we can't sugarcoat what's going on in the world...."

[ For media critic Catherine Seipp, Katie Couric can be more, much more than just another perky face. In the short and long run, it makes no difference. —- Editor ]


I don’t normally watch TV news, because when I do I can practically feel myself getting dumber. Presenting information out of context, combining superficially similar things in specious and misleading ways - it all just seems like an inane whirlwind of murder, freakish animal attacks, and lotto results.


August 21, 2006

"River Rose All Day. River Rose All Night." Spike Lee's HBO Flood Conspiracy Flick

“Listening to Lee at the HBO press conference reminded me of an afternoon I once spent with an elderly aunt….”At a press conference for Spike Lee’s new documentary, Catherine Seipp wonders if he is a brilliant filmmaker, a deft promoter of himself, a conspiracy nut, or perhaps all three.

I was standing around with a French journalist friend of mine after HBO’s press conference this summer for Spike Lee, whose new film is “When the Levees Broke,” an HBO documentary about the Katrina devastation that premieres in two parts Aug 21 and 22, then runs as a single four-hour movie Aug. 29, Katrina’s anniversary. Another French journalist at this press conference, who writes for Le Monde, ran up to tell my friend about a “scoop” she’d just gotten from the director.


August 18, 2006

The Dominion of Opinion and How to Know When You're In It

Many bloggers now think of themselves as “journalists.” Blogger and journalist Catherine Seipp says, “Not so fast.”

I’m a journalist first and blogger second, so I’ve never joined that reflexive “down-with-the-mainstream-media” cheer I often hear from the blogosphere. Noodling about the antics of your kittycat, or what you had for breakfast, or how brilliant your prose — even though it gets almost no hits — does not make you a journalist. (Or even a writer, for that matter. Sorry.)

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