The real sadness is that the Mayor of Paris, home of the French Revolution and Paris Commune didn't send the New York Times a letter about the Audacity of the American Aristocracy to claim everything that's not nailed down as their domain.
I read that letter this morning and thought it was just a typical snobby Frenchman passing judgement. Fuck you, I thought. Then I meant to Google to figure out who this Delanoe character was. But I didn't Google. And now I find out that it was all a hoax. How could they NOT verify this? Stupid.
@6 roberto, are you as humorless as you are pop-culturally clueless? Go watch The Simpsons sometime. Anyway, it is spelled: D'oh! with an apostrophe.
As to the question at hand:
1. The French don't have a word expressing "D'oh!", as far as I know. The closest is perhaps "Zut!", or "Bon Dieu!", or "Suce mon cul!". Well, that last one isn't correct exactly.
2. It's not the French who would be exclaiming 'D'oh!', it is the NYTimes, since they are the ones who f*cked up.
The Village Voice actually called me to check my facts before running my LTE. And the Christian Science Monitor did not run my LTE because I did not call them back in time.
Odd when the tabloids have higher journalistic standards than the NYT.
'I got the equivalent of Britain’s Pulitzer Prize for [my story investigating Tony Blair]. That’s because I didn’t know shit about journalism. If I had, I would’ve just made a few phone calls and written, “This guy said this,” and, “That guy alleged that,” and, “Who can say?”'
journalists aren't taught in school to fact check, investigate, think critically, or consider alternative explanations for lies told to them by marketers issuing press releases... or anything like it. why are we surprised when professional journalists fail to do these things?
nearly any blogger can do a better job of reporting than a journalism school graduate. and they're not necessarily dependent on advertiser dollars, the way all print media, nearly without exception, is today.
The real sadness is that the Mayor of Paris, home of the French Revolution and Paris Commune didn't send the New York Times a letter about the Audacity of the American Aristocracy to claim everything that's not nailed down as their domain.
As to the question at hand:
1. The French don't have a word expressing "D'oh!", as far as I know. The closest is perhaps "Zut!", or "Bon Dieu!", or "Suce mon cul!". Well, that last one isn't correct exactly.
2. It's not the French who would be exclaiming 'D'oh!', it is the NYTimes, since they are the ones who f*cked up.
Odd when the tabloids have higher journalistic standards than the NYT.
God it's great to always be right.
originally reported here
journalism schools don't teach reporting:
'I got the equivalent of Britain’s Pulitzer Prize for [my story investigating Tony Blair]. That’s because I didn’t know shit about journalism. If I had, I would’ve just made a few phone calls and written, “This guy said this,” and, “That guy alleged that,” and, “Who can say?”'
journalists aren't taught in school to fact check, investigate, think critically, or consider alternative explanations for lies told to them by marketers issuing press releases... or anything like it. why are we surprised when professional journalists fail to do these things?
nearly any blogger can do a better job of reporting than a journalism school graduate. and they're not necessarily dependent on advertiser dollars, the way all print media, nearly without exception, is today.
can't. wait.