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| Wednesday, October 12, 2005 |
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Homeward bound
| | It's 4:15 here on the East Coast (in White Plains, which is neither), and I'll start heading home when a cab picks me up about an hour from now. |
Toward a journalism of disclosure
| | As it happens I'm reading Deborah Branscum's latest, about companies "bribing" reporters (starting with interesting differences between Swedish and American traditions on matters of honesty), on a side trip to New York that's paid for (flight costs and hotel) by a company that wanted to gather experts on a subject of interest to them, and about which I they are so uninterested in publicity that they had every expert sign an NDA (non-disclosure agreement). So I'm giving them the opposite of publicity. |
| | Still, as always, Deborah's making me think. Especially with her last question: |
| | What's your take? Anybody try to "bribe" you recently? |
| | Before you answer, consider this: If you're a blogger, you're a journalist. Literally. Don't let the Journalist label stick only to people who write for money. Or for journals other than blogs. Blogs are journals. If you're a blogger, journalism concerns you. |
Educational leverage
| | One guy and his Blog, doing more real good for his company than any multi-million dollar ad agency campaign could ever hope to achieve. |
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