Editorial Substance vs. Online Style
Here's one way the print version of a daily newspaper beats the online version.
Paul Krugman's NYT column this morning, Freezing Out Hope, begins:
After the Democratic "shellacking" in the midterm elections, everyone wondered how President Obama would respond. Would he show what he was made of? Would he stand firm for the values he believes in, even in the face of political adversity?
Halfway down the column a pullquote, in large type, underscores its theme. The online version of the column doesn't have the pullquote. It could have. There's no technical reason for not having it.
Maybe it's a style choice. None of the articles in the online Times have pullquotes. But it's a stupid choice -- style over substance. For that matter, using pullquotes online to break up those long columns of type would be a stylistic improvement.
Postscript: Speaking of substance, there are those on the left of course, including me, who believe "Obama is something like a Manchurian candidate," as a friend put it, "a so-called extreme liberal who gets into office and just coincidentally behaves not so differently from Bush/Reagan."
Sites to See
Abstract City
AmericaBlog
American Leftist
Andante
Antiwar.com
ArkivMusic.com
Articulate
Arts & Letters Daily
Blogcritics
Booknotes
Bright Lights Film Journal
Buck Fush
C-SPAN
Center for Cooperative Research
Noam Chomsky
Consortium News
Cost of War in Iraq
Council on Foreign Relations
Crooks and Liars
TheCuttingFloor
The Daily Howler
David E's Fablog
Dark Roasted Blend
Democracy Now!
Devil Ducky
Editor's Cut
Ehrensteinland
Eschaton
Film Threat
Robert Fisk
Fluxlist Europe
Glenn Greenwald
Good Reads
The Guardian (London)
Herman (Literary) Archive, Northwestern Univ. Library
The Huffington Post
Inter Press Service News Agency
International Relations Center
Internet Movie Database (IMDb)
Doug Ireland
Henry Kisor
Krugman's Blog:
Conscience of a Liberal
Lannan Foundation
Life During Wartime
Los Angeles Times
Low Culture
Metacritic
Museum of Television & Radio
Nat. Arts Journalism Program
National Security Archive
The New York Times
NO!art
Onion Radio News
Open City
Open Library
Osborne & Conant
The Overgrown Path
Greg Palast
Political Irony
Postclassic Radio
Poynter/Romenesko:
Media People
Rain Taxi
The Raw Story
RealityStudio.org
Bill Reed
The Reeler
Rhizome
Rwanda Project
Salon
Seeing Black
Slate
Studs Terkel
TalkLeft
The Theater Times (Cris Gross)
The 3rd Page
ThugLit: Writing About Wrongs
Times Square Cam
The Tin Man
Truthdig
t r u t h o u t
Wading in the Velvet Sea
Walking Man
The Wall Street Journal
Wikigate
Wikipedia
The Washington Post
James Wolcott
World O'Crap Man

Leave a comment