SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : Media Stocks--Newspaper, TV, Radio, etc. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Carolyn who wrote (519)9/3/2012 1:50:39 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 826
 
Valerie Jarrett Ruins Awards Dinner with Talking Points

freebeacon.com

Valerie Jarrett

BY: Washington Free Beacon Staff
June 25, 2012

Valerie Jarrett, President Obama’s senior adviser, was badly received at the National Association of Black Journalists’ annual awards banquet after she flouted convention by delivering Obama campaign talking points.

The Root reports:

At such occasions, speakers traditionally wish the organization well and speak to an issue of journalism. Veterans said they found the remarks inappropriate.

Some rolled their eyes. “Why not just send a [campaign] video?” one said. “That was out of line,” said another afterward.




To: Carolyn who wrote (519)9/5/2012 1:20:39 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 826
 
Do not be deceived by all that talk of delegates and floor speeches: This is a convention of the media, by the media and for the media. There are some 15,000 representatives of the media here for the convention, and only about 5,000 delegates. This mathematical imbalance means most journalists spend their time with other journalists at events sponsored by corporations and hosted by media organizations for the purpose of entertaining advertisers and promoting themselves to each other.

There’s the Politico Hub (Ketel One Martini bar!), the Bloomberg Link (hot breakfast and goodie bags!), the CNN Grill, the MSNBC Experience and many more. The Atlantic, National Journal and CBS started offering mimosas at 9:30 a.m., and the Hill had a full bar open at 10:30 a.m. in its hospitality suite atop the Charlotte City Club. I attended these events for five hours straight on Tuesday and could not identify a single delegate.

Last week’s storm-shortened Republican convention in Tampa, visited by a similar media mob, produced no bounce in the polls for Mitt Romney. The situation in Charlotte — thousands of idle journalists and not a serious news story in sight — is one more reason to consign political conventions to the dustbin of history.

My Tuesday began at the Politico Hub, where Mike Allen was interviewing President Obama’s confidant Valerie Jarrett.

“He’s a human being and he likes to laugh,” Jarrett disclosed.

Allen asked if it’s true that “they’re incredible parents.”

“They’re absolutely amazing,” Jarrett confirmed.

“The young ladies have turned out to be remarkably normal, right?”

“They are very normal.”

The dozens of reporters in the crowd, NBC’s Mike Isikoff and the Daily Beast’s Lloyd Grove among them, munched on scones and fruit (sponsor: Bank of America). Nearby were other pieces of the Hub to be used later in the day: a bar (sponsored by BAE Systems and others) and a Coca-Cola “Refresh Station.”

An hour later, the Bloomberg Link held its breakfast event — also featuring Jarrett. Attendees, including Time’s Mark Halperin, BuzzFeed’s Ben Smith and three from The Post editorial page, got purple Bloomberg beachbags containing sunglasses and water bottles. The Bloomberg hosts were pleased with their glitzy digs, two floors above the plaza with MSNBC’s set. “It’s like spring break out there, and this is like the cool party everybody wants to get into,” one Bloomberg guy explained to a guest.

In the plaza, a whiteboard listed MSNBC’s scheduled festivities, including a pizza party at noon, “Rev. Al’s Blueberry Pie Cafe” at 6 p.m., and viewing parties throughout the day. This was much like the offering at the nearby CNN Grill, which sent out daily updates with the political and media stars “sighted” at the grill, including Charlie Rose, Dave Barry, Wolf Blitzer and Anderson Cooper.

From there, I hurried to the National Journal-CBS Breakfast (sponsors include United Technologies, Volkswagen and Pfizer), which featured Obama pollster Joel Benenson informing a roomful of journalists that the president’s crowds have been getting bigger.

There was little time to process this wisdom, because I was late for a breakfast done by the Hill (sponsors include Tyco, Allstate and lobbying firm Holland and Knight), where Rep. Jim Cooper (D-Tenn.) announced that Obama’s advisers have been “astonishingly successful.” By then I was behind for the Yahoo-ABC News event, so I missed Obama campaign manager Jim Messina telling the roomful of reporters that “the president is building an economy built to last.”

There were a dozen media events to go, including Asian-fusion food at Politico, Politics and Pints trivia with The Post’s Chris Cillizza, and a RealClearPolitics party. But if I went to the late-night BuzzFeed party at a children’s museum, I wondered, could I still make it to Wednesday’s breakfast sponsored by Bloomberg and The Post?

washingtonpost.com



To: Carolyn who wrote (519)9/6/2012 11:03:29 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 826
 
Reporters Using 'Fake Names' to Buy Obama Campaign Merchandise and Donate at DNC...

Reporters Using 'Fake Names' to Buy Obama Campaign Merchandise and Donate at DNC...



To: Carolyn who wrote (519)9/10/2012 2:43:58 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 826
 
Media Racism - When The Media Plays The Race Card and Loses

Media Racism - When The Media Plays The Race Card and Loses



To: Carolyn who wrote (519)9/21/2012 1:22:50 AM
From: joseffy1 Recommendation  Respond to of 826
 
PBS Anchor Gwen Ifill Touts Pro-Obama Polls, Dismisses Mideast Violence As a 'Dust Up'

PBS Anchor Gwen Ifill Touts Pro-Obama Polls, Dismisses Mideast Violence As a 'Dust Up'