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NYT Lies Again: Tech Writer Didn't Go Offline


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2018 Mar 10, 3:41pm   739 views  0 comments

by MisdemeanorRebel   ➕follow (12)   💰tip   ignore  

In fact, his twitter feed has hundreds of tweets from the period he claimed to be "unplugged from the internet"

SO MANY WRITERS HAVE PRODUCED “I went offline, and here is what I learned” stories that they became a tedious cliché years ago. Cliché or no, however, those stories had one thing in common: the writers of them all actually went offline. Farhad Manjoo, technology columnist for The New York Times, took a different tack. He didn’t go offline at all: he just said he did, in a widely discussed column. Manjoo wrote about what he learned from his two months away from social media, and dispensed avuncular advice to his readers about the benefits of slowing down one’s news consumption.

But he didn’t really unplug from social media at all. The evidence is right there in his Twitter feed, just below where he tweeted out his column: Manjoo remained a daily, active Twitter user throughout the two months he claims to have gone cold turkey, tweeting many hundreds of times, perhaps more than 1,000. In an email interview on Thursday, he stuck to his story, essentially arguing that the gist of what he wrote remains true, despite the tweets throughout his self-imposed hiatus.

https://www.cjr.org/analysis/farhad-manjoo-nyt-unplug.php

Oh, and of course Manjoo "discovered" that Print Media wasn't so bad, and 'realized' that the internet wasn't so great.

In other news, a GM Executive who stopped driving his Prius for 2 months and instead drove up a Sierra, reported that the Sierra was better than he expected, really good actually, and that the Prius wasn't so great in comparison.

#Shill #ShillingIsntJournalism #NotNewsFitToPrint
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