General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsTHIS IS HOW IT'S DONE: The hero ABC reporter who interrupted Trump's rude ass to say, "can you answer the question?"
is Karen Travers.
Donald Trump only attacks female reporters who are vastly smarter and more professional than him, so Travers was an obvious target.
Link to tweet
orangecrush
(29,129 posts)vapor2
(4,039 posts)of a vile, despicable POS
Prairie Gates
(7,473 posts)The next reporter should ask the exact same question.
What is wrong with these people?
eppur_se_muova
(41,198 posts)Deuxcents
(25,865 posts)yaesu
(9,105 posts)I think Bush jr started doing that.
Sam I Yam
(60 posts)Lose your souls, but don't lose your sources!
msongs
(73,186 posts)dem4decades
(13,826 posts)Ferrets are Cool
(22,576 posts)The person who was called on next should have defered their question to the former one that was ridiculed.
They don't seem to give a shit about each other.
Skittles
(170,055 posts)still, Trump would probably love it if no one was able to ask a question
littlemissmartypants
(32,440 posts)Traditional news, by newspapers, established long ago the competitiveness required to get the "scoop" and be the first to print a big story. It sold newspapers and made men like those in the referenced article* very rich. For some, their family fortunes exist today thanks to media empires.
Now, we have a diluted mess of tabloids and propaganda machines that basically just steal from each other.
History of journalism
Newspapers in all major countries became much more important in the 19th century because of a series of technical, business, political, and cultural changes. High-speed presses and cheap wood-based newsprint made large circulations possible. The rapid expansion of elementary education meant a vast increase in the number of potential readers. Political parties sponsored newspapers at the local and national levels. Toward the end of the century, advertising became well-established and became the main source of revenue for newspaper owners. This led to a race to obtain the largest possible circulation, often followed by downplaying partisanship so that members of all parties would buy a paper. The number of newspapers in Europe in the 1860s and 1870s was steady at about 6,000; then it doubled to 12,000 in 1900. In the 1860s and 1870s, most newspapers were four pages of editorials, reprinted speeches, excerpts from novels and poetry and a few small local ads. They were expensive, and most readers went to a café to look over the latest issue. There were major national papers in each capital city, such as the London Times, the London Post, the Paris Temps and so on. They were expensive and directed to the National political elite. Every decade the presses became faster, and the invention of automatic typesetting in the 1880s made feasible the overnight printing of a large morning newspaper. Cheap wood pulp replaced the much more expensive rag paper. A major cultural innovation was the professionalization of news gathering, handled by specialist reporters. Liberalism led to freedom of the press, and ended newspaper taxes, along with a sharp reduction to government censorship. Entrepreneurs interested in profit increasingly replaced politicians interested in shaping party positions, so there was dramatic outreach to a larger subscription base. The price fell to a penny. In New York, "Yellow Journalism" used sensationalism, comics (they were colored yellow), a strong emphasis on team sports, reduced coverage of political details and speeches, a new emphasis on crime, and a vastly expanded advertising section featuring especially major department stores. Women had previously been ignored, but now they were given multiple advice columns on family, household, and fashion issues, and the advertising was increasingly pitched to them.[9][10]
*Many of these are "media men" ...
https://finance.alot.com/personal-finance/richest-founding-families-in-american-history--21898
Scoops are important and likely to interest or concern many people. A scoop may be a new story, or a new aspect to an existing or breaking news story. It may be unexpected, surprising, formerly secret, and may come from an exclusive source. Events witnessed by many people generally cannot become scoops, (e.g., a natural disaster, or the announcement at a press conference). However, exclusive news content is not always a scoop, as it may not provide the requisite importance or excitement. A scoop may be also defined retrospectively; a story may come to be known as a scoop because of a historical change in perspective of a particular event.[further explanation needed] Due to their secret nature, scandals are a prime source of scoops (e.g., the Watergate scandal by Washington Post journalists Woodward and Bernstein).
Scoops are part of journalistic lore, and generally confer prestige on the journalist or news organization.[1]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scoop_%28news%29
Fun fact: the word scoop used in journalism is of uniquely American origins.
Another fun fact: The word ferret in journalism is often used as a description of journalists and journalistic work.
~assiduous searcher
~to search for persistently and discover (facts, the truth, etc.)
~to search out, discover, or bring to light
https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/ferret
https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/ferret
Can you tell I'm having fun this morning? And in case anyone is wondering, I put my smarty pants on one leg at a time just like anyone else. 😉 ❤️
AverageOldGuy
(3,491 posts). . . after Trump attacked her and ABC and refused to answer the question, he called on someone else --- and all the reporters stood silent, leaving the question hanging there and leaving Trump looking like the asshole that he is.
Jack Valentino
(4,585 posts)I actually prefer to watch the ABC national newscast, If I watch ANY of the 6:30 pm EST news shows....
(even though they paid off Trump in that lawsuit settlement
about when George S. called him a 'rapist''--- I wasn't happy about that,
but they still seem to challenge the administration the MOST
out of the former 'Big Three' news networks---
and Trump clearly dislikes them the most!)
littlemissmartypants
(32,440 posts)Over the air broadcasting last year. Which is a shame. I'm a creature of habit and tradition. I was raised on a routine that included the 6 o'clock news on television and I don't particularly care to change a routine that I've had more than fifty years.
Though I do like the flexibility of "on demand" programming, I miss the journalistic quality we rarely see in these "modern" times.
The evening news set a daily routine, like having dessert, coffee or a digestif at the end of a meal. It used to add a sense of commonality and community to American life for many. It's a tradition that I miss for all of us.