jason hirschhorn's @MediaREDEF: 06/18/2018 - Steamrolling Interviews, Conservative Conference, Net Neutrality Framework, Beautiful Game, Bike Share War...

Whoever is careless with the truth in small matters cannot be trusted with important matters.
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The BBQ episode of David Chang's UGLY DELICIOUS. With Masahiko Kodama, chef/owner of Masakichi. Pure joy and food coma.
(Netflix)
Monday - June 18, 2018 Mon - 06/18/18
rantnrave:// I enjoy good news programming on television. In doses that my head and heart can take. The topic doesn't much matter. The story does. But the most important thing is the interviewer. The journalist. Now more than ever. Especially with the powerful and elite. The relationship between journalists and power is supposed to be adversarial. I don't mean that in a pejorative way. An interview isn't a series of questions written down waiting for one to get through them. Answers beget follow-ups, new directions in the conversation. But I'm worried some of those tasked with these big interviews get run-over, or don't do their homework, or don't know how to stop a steamrolling subject. That journalist is our advocate. It is the backbone of the fourth estate. And some of the subjects are bombastic. Some bullies. Some very dangerous to the fabric of our morality and ethics as a country. ABC NEWS Chief White House Correspondent JONATHAN KARL is very good. But STEVE BANNON ran over him on THIS WEEK like MARSHAWN LYNCH used to run over a defense. He talked over him. He spoke louder. He kept hitting him and insulting everyone along the way. With every dog whistle keyword, you can imagine. He kept hitting. TRUMP does this too but doesn't have the intelligence of BANNON. In a recent 60 MINUTES SPORTS interview on SHOWTIME, LYNCH described how he became one of the greatest running back ever: "If you just run through somebody's face. A lot of people ain't gonna be able to take that over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over again. They just not gonna want that... Run through a motherf***** face then you don't need to worry about them no more." That's what people like BANNON do and thus your defense and offense needs to change. Whereas, GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS didn't let RUDY GIULIANI run through his face. Karl will be back stronger I'm sure... Virtual kidnapping is a thing and recently a friend was targeted. He didn't fall for it... If we keep turning our back to innocent victims, we will one day be the victim... BILLIONS season 3 is done. WTF am I supposed to do now? May have the scene of the year. The marriage speech CHUCK RHOADES, SR., played by JEFFREY DEMUNN, delivered. Just genius... People I want to meet: DAVID CHANG, BEN MACINTYRE, ALEC BALDWIN, MICHAEL RAPINO, NATALIE PORTMAN, DAVID CHOE, SARAH HUCKABEE SANDERS, LIZ PLANK, MICHAEL HAYDEN and DAN RATHER... Happy Birthday to JAY GALLUZZO, SCOTT VENER, DAN YORK, and BRIAN TERKELSEN.
- Jason Hirschhorn, curator
kim philby
BuzzFeed
I Went To A Conference Full Of Conservatives Who Hated My Guts — And Told Me So
by Scaachi Koul
The organizers of The Rebel Live weren't interested in having a conversation, but they seemed happy to hurl slurs and insults.
Stratechery
AT&T, Time Warner, and a Framework for Neutrality
by Ben Thompson
The first thing to understand about the decision by a federal judge to approve AT&T's acquisition of Time Warner, over the objection of the U.S. Department of Justice, is that it is very much in-line with the status quo: this is a vertical merger, and both the Department of Justice and the courts have defaulted towards approving such mergers for decades.
The Weekly Standard
Understanding the'Beautiful Game'
by Alan Jacobs
Laurent Dubois devotes around 10 pages of The Language of the Game to describing how soccer's offside rule has changed over the decades. "Negotiating the offside rule is one of the most complex and absorbing features of the game both for strikers and defenders, an intricate dance that involves positioning and timing of the most nuanced kind," he writes.
The Washington Post
Instead of Trump's propaganda, how about a nice 'truth sandwich'?
by Margaret Sullivan
Last weekwas a particularly rough one for journalists and truth-seeking citizens. President Trump declared the news media the nation's worst enemy. And time after shocking time, his acolytes demeaned or threatened reporters for doing one of their most basic jobs: asking questions of those in power.
Wired
The Bike Share War Is Shaking Up Seattle Like Nowhere Else
by Mark Harris
Sean Healy was driving for Uber in Seattle when a passenger offered him an intriguing job. It wasn't the first time a rider had proposed a new line of work; in the bustling tech scene in Seattle, his passengers often seemed to be scouting for people to hire.
Nieman Journalism Lab
Mirror, mirror on the wall
by Raju Narisetti
"The next time you are being told about yet another round of fundraising, whatever the increased on-paper valuation the company now claims, ask yourself before you hype that news: Why is putting additional money into a business that is clearly spending more than it is making, a sign of success...
NPR Music
Finding The Meaning Of Success, Deep Within Tokyo's Musical Underground
by Ian Martin
Through the process of translating his book about Japan's robust independent music scene into the country's native language, an author finds himself reckoning with where he's really at.
The Outline
How alt-right Twitter tricks the media into panicking
by Paris Martineau
@thebradfordfile has been cited as evidence of the rise of the alt-right, but its popularity is faked through power-engagement groups and networks of sockpuppets.
The Guardian
Five myths about the refugee crisis
by Daniel Trilling
The long read: The cameras have gone - but the suffering endures. Daniel Trilling deconstructs the beliefs that still shape policy and public opinion
Wired
How Pro-Eating Disorder Posts Evade Filters on Social Media
by Louise Matsakis
For almost as long as the internet has existed, so too have pro-eating disorder communities: blogs, groups, forums, and social media profiles where users share stories and photos related to disordered eating and body image.
nicholas elliott
Medium
Dear Journalists: Stop letting liars use your platforms as loudspeakers
by Dan Gillmor
(First of a series in how journalists need to change their ways in response to unprecedented challenges in the age of Trump.) An open letter to my friends and colleagues in journalism: Please, just stop. Please stop giving live airtime to liars. Stop publishing their lies. Please examine what you're doing.
The New Yorker
Paisley Park, Prince's Lonely Palace
by Amanda Petrusich
Six months after Prince's death, his estate opened to the public. But without its owner it feels like a husk.
Longreads
Sex Workers vs. The Internet
by Rick Paulas
Since the dawn of the internet, online platforms have allowed clients to take advantage of sex workers. Now, they're fighting back.
The Atlantic
Chasing the 'Holy Grail' of Baseball Performance
by Ben Rowen
Inside the wide-ranging search-led by economists and psychologists-for the elixir that turns good squads into great ones
Billboard
As Market Cheers Spotify's Direct Deals With Artists and Managers, Labels Mull Their Options
by Hannah Karp
Spotify isn't seeking ownership of artists' masters like the majors do, nor is it asking for exclusive content, sources say.
TechCrunch
After twenty years of Salesforce, what Marc Benioff got right and wrong about the cloud
by Jonathan Shieber
As we enter the 20th year of Salesforce, there's an interesting opportunity to reflect back on the change that Marc Benioff created with the software-as-a-service (SaaS) model for enterprise software with his launch of Salesforce.com.
The Conversation
From billboards to Twitter, why the aesthetics of protest matters more today
by Olu Jenzen
Activism increasingly relies on strong visuals that can be shared online, and - somewhat surprisingly in a digital world - physical billboards still play an important role.
CNNMoney
Inside the dismantling of GE
by Matt Egan
General Electric is slowly taking apart an empire that once included NBC, Universal Studios, an appliance company and one of America's biggest banks.
Smithsonian Magazine
RETRO READ: Why We Should Teach Music History Backwards
by Geoffrey Himes
Rock fans do their own investigative work to understand their favorite groups' influences. So why can't the rest of us get with the program?
BBC Future
Why stressed minds are more decisive
by Tali Sharot
When we're put under pressure, our brains can suddenly process information much faster - but only in certain situations, says neuroscientist Tali Sharot.
MUSIC OF THE DAY
YouTube
"Love of the Common People"
Paul Young
"REDEF is dedicated to my mother, who nurtured and encouraged my interest in everything and slightly regrets the day she taught me to always ask 'why?'"
@JasonHirschhorn


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