CNN Features Report On People Smoking Weed And Taking Driving Tests
Who says investigative journalism is dead?
Who says investigative journalism is dead?
Check out the mash-up of Wolff’s contentious appearance on HuffPost Live — and its fallout.
The looks on the faces of Maureen O’Connor and Lola Ogunnaike in a segment about Grammy side-boobs makes watching this week’s Reliable Sources in its entirety worth the effort.
There’s no shame in Geraldo’s political game. “I’ll be here every Friday, until as such time as it’s no longer legal.”
How a copied-and-pasted excerpt of a story can still outrank an 8,000-word original. And why publishers aren’t the ones to blame.
The magazine weighs in France’s marriage equality debate with the “Marriage For All” issue, which hits stands on Friday, January, 18th.
Beck went on an extended rant against the New York Governor’s use of the term “assault rifle” during yesterday’s State of the State address, something Beck calls a “progressive game.”
The venerable magazine is reinventing itself, while staying true to its Norman Rockwell heritage.
Sullivan talks about his decision to leave The Daily Beast and strike out on his own — breaking six figures on his first day. “I should have been dead 10 years ago, so I figured, what the hell.”
Attack of the show, IRL.
While listening to the Glenn Beck radio program, sometimes it’s hard to tell if you’re hearing a news segment or the most sophisticated form of product placement known to man.
Cavuto, like a total pro, pretends like it didn’t even happen. Something tells us Shep was just joshing.
“Guns have nothing to do with the culture we live in!”
It looks like talking about the fiscal cliff every ten minutes is starting to take its toll over at CNBC
Jeff Zucker has a difficult task ahead of him, and his first day in Atlanta will be crucial. Here are some tips to help him survive.
Perhaps the Fox News producers didn’t care for writer Tom Ricks’s accusations that the network is “operating as the wing of the Republican Party.” (via https:)
Here’s a supercut of the most indecipherable moments from last week’s Gaza debate on HuffPost Live!
Conservative readers love Drudge and Ayn Rand; liberals like the Times and Noam Chomsky; and there’s not much in the middle. The last infographic from Engage.
Elated in Boca. “The media is always rooting for drama,” says Costa.
The magazine cover is dead. Next: homepages?
Circa takes aggregation to its logical endpoint.
Buzz Bissinger is a little touchy today.
Bipartisan group of lawmakers demand site closure, slam ownership for effort to hide ties to company in wake of sexual exploitation complaints.
A new study finds that girls’ desire to look like skinny models in magazines may be influenced more by their genes than by their exposure to the magazines themselves.
One of the many highlights from the video bomb Tucker Carlson and Sean Hannity dropped on Fox News.
The MSNBC weekend host invoked Notorious B.I.G. during a monologue that described Republican strategists who question the credibility of national polls as being caught in a “bubble trap” of “smoking what they’re dealing.”
Texas paper, Round Rock Leader, published the results of a poll which asked readers who they would vote for today, Romney or Obama. The top answer: “No.”
Santorum tells values voters to be wary of the media elite.
A frustrating week in Boston. “The polls are close, and so the media starts cheering on their guy,” says one adviser.
“Women and men” is the new “men and women,” and “wife and husband” is the new “husband and wife.”