It's true that you regret things you didn't do more than things you do. Think of all of the mean things I could have been saying about WeWorks.
WeWorks is gonna fail but Adam Newman is going to walk away from the wreckage really rich. His insider games are positively Trumpian.
— Joe Nocera (@opinion_joe) August 30, 2019
Nocera has long been one of the best on this beat.CEO pay inflation really started with the 1980s bull market. It began in August 1982. By the time it ended in March 2000, CEOs had a completely different mindset about how much they should be paid, and why. “Maximizing shareholder value” had become the reigning ethos.
— Joe Nocera (@opinion_joe) August 24, 2019
Important to note that many of the areas most vulnerable to tropical cyclones also have the lowest coastal elevation.
“‘[With global warming, we could see] a 50-percent increase in the destructive potential” of the most powerful tropical storms,’ says meteorologist Kerry Emanuel of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.” - Emanuel said this in 1992: https://t.co/rfOppzSveE https://t.co/iRRwTkEzMn
— Peter A. Shulman 📚 (@pashulman) September 2, 2019
And this doesn’t address at all the acidification of the ocean.
— Brian Siana (@briansiana) August 24, 2019
You can't overstate the role of hierarchy in the press corps in general and the NYT in particular. Best example: Maureen Dowd. Unspeakably bad by both journalistic and literary standards, but at the top based on social standing, identification with the brand and tenure.
— Mark Palko (@MarkPalko1) August 31, 2019
Super into plague novels lately and would love some recommendations. (I have read or plan to read: The Stand, Severance, Station Eleven, Zone One, and Camus' The Plague)
— Rachel McCarthy James (@rmccarthyjames) August 31, 2019
The Decameron. (It's in the background, but it's an essential context for the stories.)
— Mark Palko (@MarkPalko1) August 31, 2019
(I got this from @jayrosen_nyu by the way)
— Mark Palko (@MarkPalko1) August 24, 2019
The damage done by the lapses at the New York Times is greatly exacerbated by its standing as the paper of record. If the paper and The Washington Post would switch positions in just this one aspect, it would do a tremendous amount of good.This piece is a good example of why I and most of the people I know in journalism believe — by a very wide margin — that the Washington Post has surpassed the New York Times in reporting on the president of the United States. https://t.co/jBo2uLNPgo
— Jay Rosen (@jayrosen_nyu) September 2, 2019
Along the same lines.
this was one of the paragraphs that seemed mindblowing to me "the presidency had grown somewhat stale under the old norms as its occupants increasingly stuck to carefully crafted talking points and avoided spontaneity, Mr. Trump has brought back a certain authenticity" 🤦🏽♀️
— Valdivia (@TheCorollary) August 24, 2019
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