Paul Steiger: What I Read
The ProPublica editor explains two of his media obsessions: Sports and women's fashion.
In Friday's Wall Street Journal there's a deeply evocative piece on the many and varied mustache styles of baseball players and the many evocative words used to describe said mustaches.
The ProPublica editor explains two of his media obsessions: Sports and women's fashion.
What exactly is the saddest/funniest thing about The Wall Street Journal's landmark new article "Cool Arrives in a Slice of Chinatown"? Let's try to figure that out.
Zynga doesn't think there's anything wrong with forcing certain employees to give up their soon-to-be-very valuable stock options.
Newspaper maintains that editorial integrity was what sunk the WSJ Europe Publisher
The Guardian reports the European publisher quit over a scheme to boost print sales
Les Hinton, will testify about the News Corp. phone hacking scandal later this month
The billionaire investor takes on the media mogul over taxing the rich
The post-holiday media moves require a scorecard to keep track of
Aging democracies, Murdoch as Macbeth, and Google+ as alternative reality
The New York Observer joins the small group of people supporting News Corp.'s CEO
The Murdoch-owned paper argues that politicians and rivals are exploiting the scandal
On the WSJ's 'Fox-ification,' Google's origins, and a slavery lesson for Bachmann
The New York Times paints a much more lively picture than the Journal
Web security expert shreds Journal's Wikileaks clone
The country's largest newspapers convey the Al-Qaeda leader's death
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