I talked with an assistant chief with the Los Angeles Police Department who said that ‘we had your map up at the emergency options center’
Tag: media
Sorry PR people, you’re blocked
haha. i love the pr clock punchers piping up
Against NYT
The Times’ list is completely fictional. Made up. Divorced from reality. The stated goal of the list is to find (and promote) books that Times editors want people to read, not books that are actually selling a lot. So, they make up ‘rules’ to appear consistent. When Harry Potter was selling like crazy, they invented a new list so that they could take JK Rowling’s books off the real list. When diet and other books started selling a lot, they made up a new ghetto (miscellaneous) for those books. When books started selling in places like Walmart (thus driving the snootiness factor down) the Times penalized sales in chain outlets. And books like the Bible are banished because they’re not current enough.
Carefully curated so as not to have dreck like harry potter or diet books on it.
2013-02-14: Aww, how inconvenient. NYT makes up story, gets owned by pervasive data logging in the car.
After a negative experience several years ago with Top Gear, a popular automotive show, where they pretended that our car ran out of energy and had to be pushed back to the garage, we always carefully data log media drives. While the vast majority of journalists are honest, some believe the facts shouldn’t get in the way of a salacious story. In the case of Top Gear, they had literally written the script before they even received the car (we happened to find a copy of the script on a table while the car was being “tested”). Our car never even had a chance. The logs show again that our Model S never had a chance with John Broder. In the case with Top Gear, their legal defense was that they never actually said it broke down, they just implied that it could and then filmed themselves pushing what viewers did not realize was a perfectly functional car. In Mr. Broder’s case, he simply did not accurately capture what happened and worked very hard to force our car to stop running.
2013-09-12: NYT got trolled by Putin. Syria op-ed by Putin, publication date 9/11. Masterful pr.
RECENT events surrounding Syria have prompted me to speak directly to the American people and their political leaders. It is important to do so at a time of insufficient communication between our societies.
2014-03-19: NYT fails at economics. The rag of record apparently slept through economics class.
most states have limits on direct sales by auto manufacturers. These rules are meant to ensure competition, so that buyers can shop around for discounts from independent dealers, and to protect car dealers from being undercut by automakers.
2016-03-21: NYT middlebrows Terrrrists
To summarize, if you see something on someone’s computer screen that fits the description below, the person with the computer could be an ISIS terrorist!
It looks like “a line of gibberish across the screen.”
It’s “a bunch of lines, like lines of code.”
There’s “no image.”
There’s “no Internet.”
2020-06-26: nyt delenda est
This morning, like many others, I woke up to the terrible news that Scott Alexander—the man I call “the greatest Scott A. of the Internet”—has deleted SlateStarCodex in its entirety. The reason, Scott explains, is that the New York Times was planning to run an article about SSC. Even though the article was going to be positive, NYT decided that by policy, it would need to include Scott’s real surname (Alexander is his middle name). Scott felt that revealing his name to the world would endanger himself and his psychiatry patients. Taking down his entire blog was the only recourse that he saw
2021-02-21: NYT is middlebrow. The reason the NYT is so smug, and yet also consistently wrong about everything, is because it is middlebrow.
The NYT has 7.5M subscribers, mostly progressives in the 90-99% range. These people feel very smart, and they are in fact smarter than 90% of the population. So there’s no point bemoaning the fact that the NYT is not about to tell it’s readers that, “Actually, we provide middlebrow news analysis, and if you want brilliant inspired analysis you need to read blogs like SlateStarCodex.”
Yes, the NYT story is awful in all the ways that are currently being discussed by its critics, but the fundamental problem is inescapable. Any time a powerful middlebrow entity (which wrongly thinks it’s highbrow) evaluates an actual highbrow entity, you will end up with a mixture of resentment and incomprehension. This case is no different. It’s just how things work.
2022-10-24: NYT pretends to do corrections, but only on things that do not matter.
if you’re willing to correct the spelling of 1 vowel in somebody’s middle name or the location of a statue of a rambunctious horse, you should be willing to correct the erroneous statement, “Researchers find that female-named hurricanes kill 2x as many people as similar male-named hurricanes because some people underestimate them,” or various erroneous economic and education statistics.
For Brooks or Kristof to admit to a non-trivial error, as you suggest they do, would be for their admissions to immediately become high-profile fodder for their critics. And not just then, but forever more — a link to the admission, a quote of it, will be repeated at any occasion when a club to use against their credibility is wanted. But more to the point, such a club will work. It will work because people strongly recall that someone was proven wrong about something and especially they recall when someone admitted to it and, finally, they weight that information very heavily when evaluating credibility.
Tecno Brega
The music lies outside the realm of traditional copyright. Every weekend the “sound system” parties attract 1000s of people to listen to the Tecno Brega music. The parties are advertised by the distribution of the music itself.
WSJ getting more web savvy
Wait that’s not just a journalist quoting from your twitter channel – that’s a WSJ writer quoting your tweets. As a web property it is taking risks and playing the digital game with some aplomb.
+1
Young cohorts favor UGC

i think in 2 years the gap will be closed for the 25-41 crowd, too
Lying Media
American media is complicit in an immoral propaganda campaign against China. Now that 2 Chinese officials are dead over the fiasco, the Vice President of Mattel admits that the news was all lies. “The vast majority of those products that were recalled were the result of a design flaw in Mattel’s design, not through a manufacturing flaw in China’s manufacturers.” It’s a bad day indeed for America when the VP of a toy company comes across as being more honest and transparent than the American media.
2007-11-30: another industry that deserves to, and will, die.
Now I want to highlight the subscription offers that magazines send through the mail. They’re full of lies. Here’s one I got today, which I’ve taken the liberty of annotating:
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2013-03-28: when legacy media feeds technopanic you gotta wonder about ulterior motives. creating fear to stave off christensen style obsolescence?
What’s not OK is a company trying to scare the internet’s residents thinking they’re the residents of Dresden in order to drum up business. There are plenty of scary things, people, and plots online. There are plenty of bad guys. There are plenty of attacks. There will be plenty more. If you’re in the anti-hacker business, business has no signs of slowing down. So if your product is worth a damn, you shouldn’t have to lie to the internet to sell it. Don’t believe the hype.
2014-02-10:
The gardener used a “lawn mower” to “mow” the lawn.
technopanic at moribund organizations like the NYT runs very deep indeed.
2019-06-12:
Yes, the world has changed. But the NYT seems to think that the government should now just force the internet companies to hand over money after their own members spent years twiddling their thumbs and squandering any attempt to build up loyal followings and sustainable business models. It’s not easy to keep a media business sustainable these days, but so much of it has to do with those companies refusing to recognize how the internet was changing the business, and how to take advantage of those changes.
Hulu Doomed?
NBC will start offering its top television shows as ad-supported downloads this fall from the NBC Direct website. The announcement is a major setback for the NBC/ News Corp joint venture Hulu, which was originally set up to offer this very content. The announcement also follows on from NBC’s decision to discontinue offering its TV shows via iTunes by the end of the year.
what are those assclowns doing to The Office? i was willing to pay for it on itunes, but now they force me into bittorrent.
NYT to Stop Charging
In addition to opening the entire site to all readers, NYT will also make available its archives from 1987 to the present without charge, as well as those from 1851 to 1922, which are in the public domain.
Social Media Consumption
The study found that while the mainstream media talked about important issues like immigration (10%) and Iraq (6%), the only story gaining traction on social news sites was the iPhone. No surprise there. The study does concede that these user generated newsfeeds may not mirror the important news of the day because they may serve has an auxiliary source. Moreover, the study of social sites reveals what users are actually reading, whereas the mainstream news statistics point only at what they’re writing. Much of that “hard-hitting” journalism may not be getting the readership the coverage suggests.
it makes you dumb if you look at short tail crap.