media
Fox Business News Guy Sick of 'Obama Chugging 40s'
Hamilton Nolan · 05/25/11 10:53AMLeading Researcher Calls Vanity Fair Writer 'Simply Disgusting'
Ryan Tate · 05/24/11 09:56PMAmerica Is Tired of Rush Limbaugh
Hamilton Nolan · 05/24/11 02:00PMFederal Prosecutors Subpoena New York Times Reporter in CIA Leak Case
John Cook · 05/24/11 12:59PMThe World's Last Handwritten Newspaper
Maureen O'Connor · 05/24/11 12:25PMThe Musalman is the world's oldest Urdu-language daily newspaper. It is also thought to be the world's last handwritten daily newspaper. Every day, four katibs—practitioners of the ancient art of Urdu calligraphy—write The Musalman's four broadsheet pages from right to left, by hand. Mistakes sometimes require rewriting the entire page. They then send it to a printer for reproduction, and sell it on the streets of Chennai, in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu. The 10-minute documentary above depicts the process.
Frank Bruni Is the New Frank Rich
Hamilton Nolan · 05/23/11 03:27PMHow Long Before PBS Is Just as Commercialized As Everyone Else?
Hamilton Nolan · 05/23/11 02:09PMFat Jackass Roger Ailes Thinks Fat Jackass Chris Christie Should Be President
John Cook · 05/23/11 12:20PMReporter Admits the Awful Truth: 'I'm Stupid'
Hamilton Nolan · 05/23/11 10:11AM'Is Bin Laden in Hell?': A USA Today Debate
Hamilton Nolan · 05/23/11 09:23AM
USA Today is what used to be called a "newspaper" back in the days before the internet, but after the majority of adult Americans became functionally illiterate. In this confusing "new media" age, USA Today has pursued a strategy of becoming the news outlet of choice for angel-believers. Hey, it's a demographic!
Glenn Beck Launches a Groupon Knockoff
Hamilton Nolan · 05/23/11 08:38AMAmerica's Most Trusted Political Reporter: 'Don't Know'
Hamilton Nolan · 05/20/11 03:20PMWhy Buy Barnes & Noble?
Hamilton Nolan · 05/20/11 10:27AMCraven Newspaper Editor Apologizes for Story on Lesbian Moms
Hamilton Nolan · 05/20/11 08:32AMFamily Says Missing Photographer Killed in Libya
Jeff Neumann · 05/20/11 04:15AM
Three journalists who were captured and detained by Qaddafi loyalists in early April — James Foley, Clare Morgana Gillis, and Manu Brabo — were released yesterday. The fate of a fourth journalist who was with them, 41-year-old South African photojournalist Anton Hammerl, had been unclear for
the past six weeks. Hammerl was shot on April 5 outside of the Libyan town of Brega after the group came under fire from Qaddafi troops in armored vehicles. GlobalPost spoke with Foley and Gillis after their release in Tunisia:
Watch Katie Couric Sign Off of the CBS Evening News for the Final Time
Matt Cherette · 05/19/11 07:55PMKatie has left the building. After a five-year run as anchor of the CBS Evening News, Katie Couric signed off for the last time this evening.