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One of the cooler aspects of modern technology is that ordinary people can report on news, complete with visual evidence. Gelf has reported on this nebulous phenomenon, called citizen journalism (Wikipedia), previously; see our piece about Dog-Shit Girl to get some background. Now, some real news outlets are realizing that there are some benefits to using citizen journalists as well (besides not having to pay them). Take CNN during the height of Hurricane Katrina.
A comic-books retailer in Georgia is facing up to three years in prison for handing a comic book containing nudity to a minor. After last week's racy cover, New Yorker executives might want to avoid visiting Georgia for a while; a zealous prosecutor could target the magazine because subscribers' children might have pulled the magazine out of their mailboxes.
In this week's edition of Zooming In, Gelf's quasi-weekly round-up of undercovered local stories from around the world: A country bans lip-synching; a band gets portrayed as a gang; Coke's PR problem; and Australia's drug problem. One of our favorite stories this week concerns a Swedish library's attempt to break down prejudices.
Ah, summer. Heat, beach, ice creamand ill-founded ice-cream trend articles. Behold: "For the old-fashioned ice cream truck businessnow serving nostalgia alongside modern-day munchies like the Fantastic Four ice cream barbusiness is booming," the Associated Press reports. Surely the AP has numerical support for that statement. Let's check the record:
In this week's edition of Blurb Racketthe Gelf feature in which we take a close look at those critic blurbs that are a fixture of ads for movies, books, and moresee breakdowns of blurbs for The Dukes of Hazzard, Must Love Dogs, The Truth About the Drug Companies, and more. This week's winner of the Bogus Blurb of the Week award comes in an ad for The Aristocrats, the flick about a single, obscene joke:
A few weeks ago, Slate's Jack Shafer wrote a Press Box column in which he asked Tom Friedman of the New York Times to quit saying that things are "flat." (Gelf seconded the notion.) One of the reasons, certainly, was that Shafer was tired of seeing Friedman using the Times op-ed page to plug his book The World is Flat. Presumably, though, he also thought that writing narrowly makes a columnist boring. But Shafer has fallen into a similar trap. Six of his last eight Press Box columns have concerned reporting about drugsin particular, crystal meth.
The mystery of the "Piano Man"the supposedly mute and amnesiac virtuoso pianist who was found in early April soaking wet on a beach in Southern Englandhas been solved, to the great humiliation of several news organizations who have been covering the story.
Yesterday's Washington Post notes that no one, not even the World Food Program (nor, it goes unsaid, the Washington Post), paid attention to the growing humanitarian crisis in Niger until a BBC camera crew showed up and started broadcasting pictures of emaciated children around the world. "It went virtually unnoticed for a good many months," notes the WFP's executive director James Morris, explaining that what with the tsunami and all, "People do get preoccupied by the high-profile emergencies."
Note: This article has been updated. See the end for a response from The Onion. The idea that the government would want to promote teaching a theory of "Intelligent Falling" alongside gravity in science classes around the nationas reported by the Onion this weekis a hilarious commentary on the state of this country. It has also been done before.
In today's New York Times, reporter Tamar Lewin writes that many high-school graduates do not have the skills necessary to succeed in college. How does Lewin know? The ACT said so, and the ACT is the new arbiter of all things educational.
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