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10 votes
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Why Vladimir Putin wants Alexei Navalny dead
8 votes -
Climate Crisis Font shrinks in response to Arctic sea ice data
9 votes -
Facebook to lift Australia news ban after government agrees to amendments to proposed legislation requiring them to pay publishers
6 votes -
Facebook will ban Australian users from sharing or viewing news
18 votes -
Preparing for “Yardi Gras” in New Orleans
9 votes -
'This used to be your favourite show': Polish media falls silent to protest tax
6 votes -
The Super Bowl through the years – in pictures
4 votes -
What publications do you subscribe to?
I've recently gotten into paying the wall rather than jumping it. Until recently my only paid subscription was The Correspondent, before it unfortunately passed away. I'm now subscribed to: The...
I've recently gotten into paying the wall rather than jumping it.
Until recently my only paid subscription was The Correspondent, before it unfortunately passed away.I'm now subscribed to:
- The New Yorker
A publication I've long wanted to subscribe to, but never did. It lives up to its reputation, only wish it had an Android app. - The New York Times
This one I started on the basic subscription, but upgraded to All Access for the crosswords and bonus subscription. I've found the Cooking subscription included to be quite interesting too. - The Wall Street Journal
I subscribed to this one to provide me another perspective apart from NYT. I also have known them to uncover many stories in the past, and would like to have access whenever that does happen. - The Washington Post
This one I'm not sure how I feel, I don't feel right giving Bezos money, or rather trusting him as a news source—but I got a pretty good deal on it for the year. I know The Washington Post rates highly in terms of credibility, but I can't help but be skeptical. - The Information
This one I started before all the ones listed above, I've enjoyed it, it provides tech news, but I think I'm going to cancel it as soon as my billing period is over. They make quality articles and such, but they're a bit pricey for my taste.
Anyway, I'd like to know what publications y'all subscribe to. Do you get paper or are you all-digital? And are there any credible conservative sources to broaden the perspectives I see?
15 votes - The New Yorker
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Google threatens to pull search engine in Australia
15 votes -
Still alive
10 votes -
Finding a foothold for Nordic skiing in rural Alaska
5 votes -
Why you should stop reading news
9 votes -
Art markets: New York bodegas in watercolor
5 votes -
Great walls of China: Beijing's burgeoning graffiti scene
3 votes -
Is Substack the media future we want?
8 votes -
Trump took a wrecking ball to media credibility—can Biden repair it?
7 votes -
Iceland's innovations to reach net-zero – in pictures
16 votes -
Hiding COVID-19: How Trump Administration guidance suppresses photography of the pandemic
6 votes -
A riveting ISIS story, told in a Times podcast, falls apart (Caliphate podcast)
8 votes -
‘This is the reality’: Far-right Newsmax and One America channels grapple uneasily with Joe Biden’s electoral college victory
20 votes -
Scenes from the wide variety of volcanic activity on Earth in 2020
5 votes -
A record breaking number of journalists arrested in the US this year
11 votes -
The Correspondent will stop publishing on 1 January 2021
15 votes -
Kimchi making, in pictures: Originally a means of preserving vegetables during winter, kimchi is emblematic of Korean cuisine and accompanies almost every meal served in the country
6 votes -
Faroe Islands are set to open an under-sea roundabout – the underwater tunnels connect the islands of Streymoy and Eysturoy in a network some 11km long
13 votes -
Most conservatives don't understand purpose of journalism, says founder of website on media bias
18 votes -
Matt Taibbi: Hate Inc., Why today's media makes us despise one another (Hosted by PennState)
6 votes -
Rubber ducks have become a symbol of Thailand’s pro-democracy protests in Bangkok after demonstrators used them as shields against police water cannon and teargas
12 votes -
Sportswriter Jack Falla dies at sixty-four
4 votes -
"Not married, but willing to be": Photos of men in love from the 1850s to 1950s
23 votes -
BuzzFeed to acquire HuffPost in multi-year partnership with Verizon Media
10 votes -
The world's first internet bench
5 votes -
"It is terrifying to face the reality that people with a full-time job have to have a home inside a tent": photos of a Seattle homeless tent camp
10 votes -
Do you read 'old news'/article archives?
Asked because I like the idea of reading about the past and feel unsatisfied by r/history and r/askhistorians mainly because reddit's search isn't that great and those subs have a much wider scope...
Asked because I like the idea of reading about the past and feel unsatisfied by r/history and r/askhistorians mainly because reddit's search isn't that great and those subs have a much wider scope than most news archives.
I'm gonna do this on a Q&A format. Note that "old news" doesn't need to be news articles, it can be blogs for example.
If you read old news/articles, where do you get them from/find them?
What kind of "old news" do you read?
What historical period do you tend to read about?
If you're reading an article about a historical event you remember, how does your memory tend to compare to those articles?
How often do you do it?
What do you think about subreddits like r/twentyyearsago, since they're basically trawling through those news archives?
7 votes -
Robin Kemp lost her news job in Clayton County, Ga. — but she kept reporting the news. It paid off on election week.
16 votes -
Inside the New York Times' heated reckoning with itself
7 votes -
Anti-Rupert Murdoch petition wins record support in Australia
9 votes -
A discussion of Glenn Greenwald's departure from The Intercept
Glenn Greenwald resigned from from The Intercept_ an online publication he helped start after the Edward Snowden Leaks. In that letter Glenn Greenwald goes into detail for the reason for his...
Glenn Greenwald resigned from from The Intercept_ an online publication he helped start after the Edward Snowden Leaks. In that letter Glenn Greenwald goes into detail for the reason for his resignation.
The final, precipitating cause is that The Intercept’s editors, in violation of my contractual right of editorial freedom, censored an article I wrote this week, refusing to publish it unless I remove all sections critical of Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden, the candidate vehemently supported by all New-York-based Intercept editors involved in this effort at suppression.
Editor-in-Chief of The Intercept's response with a heavy critique of Glenn Greenwald work as a Journalist.
it is important to make clear that our goal in editing his work was to ensure that it would be accurate and fair. While he accuses us of political bias, it was he who was attempting to recycle the dubious claims of a political campaign — the Trump campaign — and launder them as journalism.
Glenn Greenwald post the unedited article w/ typos and and all that The Intercept refused to publish.
Glenn has also posted the email exchange between himself and other editors at The Intercept.
26 votes -
A history of voter suppression in Georgia – in pictures
7 votes -
Since 2016, the Falun Gong-backed Epoch Times newspaper has used aggressive Facebook tactics and right-wing misinformation to create an anti-China, pro-Trump media empire
11 votes -
How Syria's disinformation wars destroyed the co-founder of the White Helmets
6 votes -
As local news dies, a pay-for-play network rises in its place
7 votes -
Pro-democracy protests in Thailand, in pictures
12 votes -
Twitter won’t let The New York Post tweet until it agrees to behave itself
13 votes -
How to interpret news about vaccine trials
5 votes -
Big banks entrusted money to GardaWorld. It secretly lost track of millions.
7 votes -
The Million Man March: Powerful images of Black men and brotherhood twenty-five years ago
9 votes -
If you read any news sources/publications for more specific/alternative subjects, what are they?
Tl;dr typical news sources tend to prioritize political and governmental events and the things that surround them, like economics and social issues, even if they cover everything, and by covering...
Tl;dr typical news sources tend to prioritize political and governmental events and the things that surround them, like economics and social issues, even if they cover everything, and by covering everything they probably stretch themselves thinly among what they don't prioritize. (At least that's how it feels.)
A few examples of what I'm thinking of are:
Foreign Affairs, who focus specifically on geopolitics
The Scientific American, which focuses specifically on... science.
Aeon, which seems to focus on "the humanities". (
vaaague.)So... what are your examples of news sources/publications like this that you follow?
8 votes -
Facebook and Twitter take unusual steps to limit spread of New York Post story
16 votes