OT: Elrod in Boston
Posted: Sat Jan 30, 2010 4:50 pm
Fellow Cs junkies--
My day job brings me to Boston on Tuesday February 2. I will be talking about my new book at the Harvard Coop Tuesday night at 7:30. http://www.artsboston.org/event/detail/54659
If the topic interests you and you decide to attend, please come up and introduce yourself.
Here is some info on the book: The Death and Life of American Journalism, which I wrote with my friend John Nichols, has just been published by Nation Books. I think it is the best and most important book we have written, and of the utmost importance. It provides a comprehensive and original explanation of the current crisis in journalism, a critique of the current favored “solutions” to the crisis, and an argument for strong public subsidies to create a viable, independent news media. It is based on years of research, but has been written to address the deep crisis of the immediate moment and visible future.
For a taste of our argument, see last week’s cover story in The Nation. http://www.thenation.com/doc/20100125/nichols_mcchesney We also discussed the book with David Brancaccio on PBS’s NOW on Friday, January 15. http://www.pbs.org/now/shows/603/index.html.
The argument and the proposals we make are controversial and go against the conventional wisdom, so we provide considerable original evidence to make our case. The response from experts who have read the book has been heartening. Lawrence Lessig calls it a “beautifully crafted and compelling book.” Juan Gonzalez calls it “the best depiction yet of the rapid disintegration of America’s old system of news.” Mark Crispin Miller calls it a “landmark history/diagnosis of our current journalistic crisis.” Dan Rather said “This is an important book. It offers many new sunbursts of thought.” After reading the book, Naomi Klein said of us, “no two people are more dedicated to the transformative, democratizing power of journalism not as it is, but as it should be.”
If you do read the book, I would love to get your feedback. And, again, if you attend, please come up and say hello.
elrod enchilada
My day job brings me to Boston on Tuesday February 2. I will be talking about my new book at the Harvard Coop Tuesday night at 7:30. http://www.artsboston.org/event/detail/54659
If the topic interests you and you decide to attend, please come up and introduce yourself.
Here is some info on the book: The Death and Life of American Journalism, which I wrote with my friend John Nichols, has just been published by Nation Books. I think it is the best and most important book we have written, and of the utmost importance. It provides a comprehensive and original explanation of the current crisis in journalism, a critique of the current favored “solutions” to the crisis, and an argument for strong public subsidies to create a viable, independent news media. It is based on years of research, but has been written to address the deep crisis of the immediate moment and visible future.
For a taste of our argument, see last week’s cover story in The Nation. http://www.thenation.com/doc/20100125/nichols_mcchesney We also discussed the book with David Brancaccio on PBS’s NOW on Friday, January 15. http://www.pbs.org/now/shows/603/index.html.
The argument and the proposals we make are controversial and go against the conventional wisdom, so we provide considerable original evidence to make our case. The response from experts who have read the book has been heartening. Lawrence Lessig calls it a “beautifully crafted and compelling book.” Juan Gonzalez calls it “the best depiction yet of the rapid disintegration of America’s old system of news.” Mark Crispin Miller calls it a “landmark history/diagnosis of our current journalistic crisis.” Dan Rather said “This is an important book. It offers many new sunbursts of thought.” After reading the book, Naomi Klein said of us, “no two people are more dedicated to the transformative, democratizing power of journalism not as it is, but as it should be.”
If you do read the book, I would love to get your feedback. And, again, if you attend, please come up and say hello.
elrod enchilada