On credentialism, income gaps and accidental elitism: Should I go after Tiffany’s ads?
Credentialism: A few months back I groused about credentialism in media and elsewhere, and I also urged the Washington Post
The Solomon Scandals novel, politicians, the media, the Washington area, tech and other surrealism:
Credentialism: A few months back I groused about credentialism in media and elsewhere, and I also urged the Washington Post
TBD.com’s hyperlocal site is drawing more local Web traffic than WUSA-TV and the Washington Examiner and may close in on
Update, September 20: The Washington Post tells me that it prefers to stick to Nielsen statistics in public. I’m checking
Right here in the Washington, D.C. area, TBD is one of the most-watched rolls of the dice in American journalism.
In The Solomon Scandals, George McWilliams runs a word-mill at the fictitious Washington Telegram—using his Rolex to time reporters writing
Jack Shafer, the Slate “Press Box” columnist, is mourning the “fallen status” of the traditional paper book, which he thinks
TBD’s new hyperlocal Web site for the D.C. area is no great shakes so far in the visitor count department,
The Solomon Scandals, my D.C. newspaper novel, is solidly rooted in Washington and suburbs. But could future Jonathan Stones break
Late to the hyperlocal series in the Solomon Scandals blog? In reverse order, here’s a list of key parts. —How