THE MEDIA BEAT

Veteran journalist David Tereshchuk’s ongoing review of global media coverage.

New columns appear periodically on this page, below. 

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The Media Beat columns.

Rosa Parks Centennial: Untold Story Clouds Legacy

Rosa Parks Centennial: Untold Story Clouds Legacy

I GET TO TELL a little-known story on TV this weekend.

Just ahead of the centenary of Rosa Parks‘ birth, when she will be fêted throughout the nation as “Mother of the Civil Rights Movement,” I report for PBS on a terrible injustice being done to her memory.

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Media Get Things WRONG! - Who Knew?

IF COLUMNISTS WANT to follow tradition, they’ll face a binary choice at this time of year. Look back over the 12 months just gone — or look forward to those to come.

I’ve generally tended to avoid trying to predict the future. (Last year, when I gave in to the temptation, I got one entirely obvious prediction right, of course — the surge, if you’ll pardon the phrase, of Titanic coverage around the disaster’s April centenary. But I got one grim expectation utterly wrong, thankfully … that Nelson Mandela would likely die in 2012.)     

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Tension: Media-Celebrity vs. Art

Tension: Media-Celebrity vs. Art

AN INTER-MEDIA TRANSFER is in place that celebrity-chasing reporters have been eagerly awaiting.

Movie star Katie Holmes (movie star, that is, and still newly-divorced wife of a movie mega-star, of course) takes to the boards of a Broadway live-action theater. The play is Dead Accounts, by Theresa Rebeck, opening officially tonight (Thursday, November. 29th).

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The Precision of Gore Vidal, Broadcaster

The Precision of Gore Vidal, Broadcaster

A LOT OF WORDS – many of them just too easy – have been applied to Gore Vidal since he died on Tuesday.

Adjectives have proliferated that evoke eras long gone by — like “patrician“… “aristocratic“… even “Augustan” (though I’m skeptical that John Dryden or Alexander Pope would have embraced him in their circles).

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Google Beats All at Keeping Secrets ... So Far ...

THREE MEDIA BEHEMOTHS — all threatened by small snippets of information. And brought low by the discovery of that information. Or not, as the case may be.

The difference in outcomes, so far at least, is key to a telling tale about today’s media landscape.

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Message of Accountability for Murderous Leaders?

SO IT’S POSSIBLE. This week’s news tells the world that a criminal head of state can be made — eventually — to pay for his crimes.

It inescapably felt historic to take in the live feed from The Hague as Presiding Judge Richard Lussick read in his matter-of-fact Australasian tones (he’s from Samoa) the sentence on Liberia’s ex-President Charles Taylor — 50 years’ imprisonment. Lussick spelled out that it was for — still no vocal inflections from the judge — “some of the most heinous and brutal crimes recorded in human history.” 

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Rupert's Grip on Output Getting 'Wobbly?'

Rupert's Grip on Output Getting 'Wobbly?'

AMID THE MURDOCH EMPIRE‘s many and multiplying hard knocks — now for instance, police charges on obstruction of justice against the former Chief Executive of all its British newspapers, their Head of “Security,” and others — it’s easy to overlook intriguing items in the empire’s actual editorial output.

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Under-reported: Man-Bites-Dog Story of Global Poverty

Under-reported: Man-Bites-Dog Story of Global Poverty

OH WOW! — A MEDIA STORM over the great Goldman Sachs being disavowed by one of its own, in an Op-Ed article (for The New York Times) that became, controversially, a news story. Overtaken only by a storm over a semi-journalistic public radio show (This American Life) disavowing one of its own episodes attacking the great Apple, Inc.

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