T O P I C R E V I E W |
harringk |
Posted - 10/14/2004 : 13:54:32 Ok so we all know that the mainstream media is biased, some more blatantly obvious about it than others, but they all have their own point of view.
So where do you go on the web, on the radio, or on TV to find straight reporting (if it exists)? Where are the real journalists out there that you trust to give you the just the facts?
I'll get the ball rolling with a site that I use for basic news and commentary. It is mostly just links to other online news articles and editorials, but it also has some exclusive stuff written by the staff on the site. It is run by a self-proclaimed independent, but he is definately more conservative than liberal. The commentary page has editorials from lots of different points of view.
I don't claim that this is a source for good investigative reporting, but it is a nice overview of what is making the headlines at any time and different points of view are presented.
http://www.wnd.com
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16 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
VoVat |
Posted - 10/17/2004 : 12:06:18 Just because you put in the www, most likely. It's probably going to show up as a link in this message, too.
EDIT: Okay, it didn't. Maybe you need to put a dot after it for it to become a link.
"Signature quotes are so lame." --Nathan |
darwin |
Posted - 10/16/2004 : 23:25:16 I don't know why my last news source showed up as a link. I'm not trying to push that one. |
apl4eris |
Posted - 10/16/2004 : 15:55:46 Relevant to internet news...
Oct. 7th - Feds seize Indymedia servers in London: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/10/08/fbi_indymedia_raids/
Oct. 14th - IndyMedia Gets Its Servers Back: http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,65338,00.html
IndyMedia's background on the story: http://indymedia.org/en/static/fbi
RIP Rest In Peace Jacques Derrida. rasta. ruowa. freedom from activity. a brief pause in reading. a rhythmic silence in music. |
darwin |
Posted - 10/16/2004 : 00:38:02 quote: Originally posted by Chip Away Boy
www.christiansciencemonitor.com is really good, don't get turned off by the name, if you read the FAQ you can get the story behind the name.
I want to second that. They really do some great reporting from Iraq and Afganistan.
My main news sources: NPR, Newsweek, Yahoo News for headlines throughout the day
Politics: dailykos.com, politicalwire.com, www.talkingpointsmemo.com |
Ebb Vicious |
Posted - 10/15/2004 : 22:03:46 another vote for news.bbc.co.uk here. i've used it since it came into existence.
news.google.com is entertaining for the variety of terrible sources. |
Stuart |
Posted - 10/15/2004 : 21:53:18 For me BBC website (if it hasn't been blocked by the Government) I tend to not waste my time reading news papers, or watching the news here in China. It really is complete and utter nonsense. I also regularly visit www.guardian.co.uk, which is the website of the Guardian newspaper.... very good site.
Was actually thinking about having a gander at the Al Jazeera website, as a few people I know have informed me that it is actually pretty good at reporting the news from Iraq. Is this true?
Just the good ole boys, never meaning no harm, that all you ever saw been in trouble with the law, since the day they were born |
betty |
Posted - 10/15/2004 : 15:53:07 don't pet the sweaty things, are you mad?
what were we talking about?
(note, betty bothered with the "shift" key, take heed)
THE DAILY SHOW
i also have a thing for stephen colbert.
i'm so lonely and funny.
(sobbguffaw)
love,
betty
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Chip Away Boy |
Posted - 10/15/2004 : 15:24:03 www.christiansciencemonitor.com is really good, don't get turned off by the name, if you read the FAQ you can get the story behind the name. |
SpudBoy |
Posted - 10/14/2004 : 21:42:15 Bloomberg and Dow Jones market and article feeds, Associated Press wire, BBC, slashdot, newsforge, rightie and leftie radio, Harper's, Punk Planet, the Wall Street Journal, and gregpalast.com for investigative journalism since you can't do that in america anymore.
*festoon* |
Domestiques |
Posted - 10/14/2004 : 21:22:30 the bbc's website every morning, and then penny on gmtv.
------------------------ “I want to be a star!” I cried They said, “You’re overqualified. Why don’t you learn to tune your damn guitar?” |
Perk |
Posted - 10/14/2004 : 20:31:46 A little bird comes to my window every day.
Don't sweat the petty things and don't pet the sweaty things |
n/a |
Posted - 10/14/2004 : 17:30:53 I don't sleep much so BBC news 24 does it for me, sometimes I'll check the BBC website although the ex usually sends me the funny stories at least by e mail, I don't buy papers usually, on rare occasions the sunday times, I get new scientist most weeks (reminds me I must actually subscribe) and, er, sometimes NME
()
I look like the kind of guy who pimps his sister not just for the money, but because he hates her
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Alpha Soixante |
Posted - 10/14/2004 : 16:41:58 BBC's good. And Harper's.
Here are some useful meta-news sites that lean left, but tend to link only (not always) to articles in generally respectable papers. They're great since they'll spotlight important articles which that get buried in mainstream papers.
http://www.alternet.org/ http://www.commondreams.org/ http://www.truthout.org/ http://www.buzzflash.com/
And some generally good blogs that are good for news and commentary:
http://www.juancole.com/ http://www.atrios.blogspot.com/ http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/ |
apl4eris |
Posted - 10/14/2004 : 14:23:42 I listen to the radio all day while I work: NPR (plays BBC as well), Clear Channel Talk Radio and news, Air America, etc. I had to stop listening to Rush about 2 months ago - he is just too shrill and lies too often, and he was making me feel ill. Sometimes I tune into Shortwave radio news from around the world. Depends on what I can pick up. Usually the only thing I can pick up is several different iterations of the conservative think tank's/Christian right's radio stations run by Radio America, and distributed in places like Taiwan, Iraq, South America, Africa...well, just about everywhere, etc. (www.radioamerica.org)
I read Harper's Magazine (www.harpers.org), occasionally the Atlantic (www.theatlantic.com), and www.slashdot.org for a centralized area with links to topics not carried elsewhere.
TV, not so much, but when I go there for news I usually skim through every channel to get an idea of what they choose to cover and how they present it: CSPAN 1 and 2 www.c-span.org (Best by FAR), Bloomberg, World News International,
Absolutely awful, hardly ever cover the news (and when they do it's couched in commentary, not jouralism) but I check in to follow the agendas: FoxNews, CNN, MSNBC, and hardly ever the networks (can't remember the last time I watched Network television).
I've also been reading nonfiction/historical books relevant to US government, geopolitics, the Middle East, intelligence, basically background info relevant to current events, etc.
The rest? I google for deeper research into news items that interest me.
RIP Rest In Peace Jacques Derrida. rasta. ruowa. freedom from activity. a brief pause in reading. a rhythmic silence in music. |
Broken Face |
Posted - 10/14/2004 : 14:23:27 i usually try and rotate tv networks between cnn, abc, nbc and cbs - i refuse to watch fox news for the obvious reasons
-brian
- "I joined the Cult of Frank / And they tried to cut off my nuts and make me put on a blue jumpsuit"
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bumblebeeboy2 |
Posted - 10/14/2004 : 13:58:56 hardly 'indie' news or anything... but heck, it's hard to find objective news, we're all human, we all have opinions... i say you can't go wrong with http://www.bbc.co.uk/news - incredibly quick at uploading breaking news (always before other news sites i've observed) and i've never found it to be particuarly biased. easy to navigate, news from which ever region/area you require news for. sections for other categories of news...
The Monkey Helper has arrived http://www.monkeyhelper.co.uk (that is my band) |
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