Jump to content

The Media/Journalism Thread


Faulkner

Recommended Posts

  • Replies 3.1k
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted Images

  • Members

Maybe I am being philosophical about this because from the moment that I learned that Musk was in talks to buy Twitter, I knew this is where things would land. I even warned someone who urged that I give him a chance (didn’t some folks say the exact same thing about Trump?)

It is unfair that bad actors, especially deep-pocketed ones are allowed to be so abusive and destructive and go on with their lives (especially as well-intentioned people who are just trying to live suffer). I think of this often as my mind flashes to the likes of Leslie Moonves, who is somewhere enjoying his millions after having left such chaos and destruction (and even in a few cases, despair) over decades in his wake.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

Same, which is why I've never had an account. 

I'll also really miss the more lower-case elements of film twitter, wherein you can plug in the name of virtually any film or director and find people with new or unique appreciations of anything.

I think Musk bought it genuinely thinking he could conquer. Men like that will almost always stay well-off, but his ego is imploding and will continue to do so.

Edited by Vee
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

I am gonna really miss Twitter. I am praying that something saves it in the 11th hour, however, I am sick of getting my hopes up about stuff like this. 

 

I know Mark Zuckerberg is probably giddy as this will cause a huge surge to IG and FB until the next hot platform emerges. 

 

I wouldn't be surprised if a surge occurs on all forums (too) for the time being. 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

This Alex Cohen twitter account says in its profile "Mostly parody account".
Yet what they say sounds plausible in light of all the other insanity.

I mean, at this point, things have gotten so bad at Twitter, how would I even know if someone was tweeting truth or parody about Twitter?

Edited by janea4old
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

They did.

 

I was just dipping my toe into it due to my writing group all have various degrees of success after saying no for decades and I do like to be practical from time to time. So I must admit...I can see why people do like it for its good and its bad. And It has come in handy on more than one occasion by showing facts that we otherwise would never know. 

 

I am curious to see where everyone (like Black Twitter for example) will wind up again. 

I agree with the surge. But...if some of us can migrate from SOC to here...anything is possible. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

I was just reading an article in one of the British tabloids about the ratings and their soaps and I would like to propose that we officially retire the word "woke".  In this example, a former writer suggested that Corrie's ratings are down because it has become too "woke", by producing stories about mental health and racism.

Conservative media has latched onto the phrase making it meaningless.  I am unsure why conservatives are so bothered about minority voices asking for respect, but the derision attached to the word "woke" makes me uncomfortable.  We all know nobody had ever been "cancelled", under-represented populations are not "censoring" anyone, and those in power still feel free to spew offense language all the time.  So, let's retire the phrase as it has lost all significance in our culture and is only used to mock those without power requesting some degree of tolerance.

Edited by j swift
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

Musk let Tr*mp back on Twitter.

 

 

 

CBSNews announced that it is halting its activity on Twitter.
According to this NBC report, the CBSNews twitter account, and the CBSEveningNews twitter account, and some local CBS channels have already stopped tweeting.
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/cbs-news-suspends-twitter-posting-light-uncertainty-musk-owned-social-rcna58029
 

Edited by janea4old
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.



  • Recent Posts

    • Not having news about Tomas being recast is super disappointing. This triangle could be great if there was an actor with an actual pulse playing Tomas.    Leslie showing up at Nicole’s, I absolutely liiiive. AND this nasty heffa is gonna blame Eva for Laura’s accident

      Please register in order to view this content

      . All of the cast mixing and mingling today was great! I never imagined some of these cast members ever interacting.
    • Guiding Light 1976 continues... Dr. Joe Werner’s double load, covering Ed’s patients as well as his own, has taken its toll, and he’s having chest pains. Joe arranges for a checkup at another hospital and then confesses to Sarah that the results show he has angina pectoris and must slow down. Dr. Justin Marler arrives in Springfield to join the Cedars staff. His purpose is to organize improvements for the surgical-cardiac wing. He immediately disrupts the staff by giving a premature interview, saying the hospital needs much improvement.  Sarah tries to avoid Marler and is noticeably cool to him. They were in love while in medical school, but Marler broke with her to marry a girl whose money and social position could help his career. Since Marler has criticized him for cutting back on his patient hours, Joe once again picks up his pace. After performing emergency surgery, he collapses in the scrub room, a victim of cardiac arrest. Marler finds him, and his fast reactions save Joe’s  life. Sarah,learning of Marler’s efforts for Joe, expresses unlimited appreciation.Although he’s recovering well, Joe now fears for his future and insists upon revising his will. Sarah is frightened by his attitude, but Joe is adamant. Mike’s client, Ben McFarren, was wrongly convicted of a crime and was in prison for fifteen months. When Mike informs Ben he’s been exonerated, Ben, embittered by his imprisonment, blames Mike for his having been there in the first place. Ben, released, will have a professorship in art at the local college in the fall. He’s working temporarily at the hospital and at the Metro, and he meets Mike’s daughter, Hope.Ben and Hope hit it off well from the first and soon begin dating. Ben tells Hope she’s naive and innocent, but she wants him to think otherwise. However, Ben’s increasing ardor frightens Hope, and she finally insists she won’t be pressured into sleeping with him just to prove-she likes him and is with it. Ben retorts that she’s letting them both down and walks out. Hope visits his studio, hoping to make him understand that she’s torn between her desires and the way she was raised. Ben tells her he understands but makes it clear that it’s his terms or not at all. Hope, to help Ben out, offers to replace the nude model for his art class. When the moment comes, however, she can’t do it, and poses in a bikini. But a local gossip columnist exploits the incident, and Mike finds himself defending his daughter to all his friends. But when Mike discovers that Ben has sketched a nude of Hope, he questions her integrity, whether her denial was truthful. Hope is upset that she must defend her morality to her father. Mike also can’t help but wonder about Ben’s intentions toward Hope. Hope becomes confused, as Ben’s feelings for her seem to vary day by day. At one meeting he will be open and affectionate with her, at the next remote and cool. Finally Ben explains to her that this is the  first time in his life that he has someone he can trust, and he still occasionally can’t overcome his suspicions and fears of being hurt and withdraws. Unable to discuss this with her father, Hope confides the situation to Ann, who has helped her with advice and a listening post before. Ann is able to understand, as she can empathize with the problems of living through an unhappy and difficult life, something beyond Hope’s experience. She makes Hope see that Ben has found only betrayal in his life until now and he can’t help but be cautious. Hope soon discovers there’s a side to Ben she’s never seen before. When his boss at the Metro imposes on him unfairly and then rides him about being an ex con, Ben reacts with a rage that frightens Hope, but he manages to keep his control.. Ben realizes he overreacted when Hope remarks about his violent temper, but is surprised and deeply affected to see that she’s offering him support instead of castigation or rejection, when she defends him to Mike. This leads Ben to admit to Hope that he loves her.  But Mike is worried. He tells Hope that while he was defending Ben he looked into the young man’s background and found that he had a history of short temper and violent outbursts. And, based on what’s recently happened, Mike warns Hope that Ben has apparently not changed. Hope refuses to let Mike’s argument deter her; in fact, she asks Mike if it’s not possible that this very past just might be the best incentive Ben has to do differently in the future. Now that she has recovered from surgery, Mrs. Stapleton is eager to return home, but Evie is very upset by this news. She wants to stay in Springfield, particularly since she has just started dating Tim. Rita, understanding her sister’s wish not to return to the slow-paced small-town life she so recently left, convinces her mother to delay her departure, explaining that Evie stands a much better chance to plan her future here. Rita herself is delighted that Ed’s attentions now seem exclusively hers. Her helping him study for the neurology boards has paid off: He’s passed the state boards and can now begin his neurology practice. Rita has told her mother that Ed is the first man she has ever seriously considered sharing her future with, and her mother concludes that her daughter is finally. in love. Rita is eagerly anticipating a celebration dinner with Ed following the good news, but her happiness is shattered when she catches sight of a man in the corridor at Cedars whose presence forms ice around her heart. She is so shaken that Ed, coming upon her at the nurses’ station, is concerned and asks her what has happened. She cannot discuss this with him but is withdrawn and upset. And, indeed, her worst fears are realized when late at night, after Ed has left Malcolm Grainger shows up at her door. Grainger bitterly threatens to ruin Rita by exposing the truth about what she did in Texas to her family and all of Springfield. Rita thinks she has managed to stall him, for a day, and, assuming he has gone, she rushes to the Metro to tell Roger that Malcolm is in town. Rita and Roger are unaware that Grainger followed her and is standing outside the door of Roger’s office, listening to their conversation. Roger tells Rita he doesn’t want Grainger to know he is also in Springfield, and orders her to meet with Grainger.
    • So limited that he was on Dynasty and AMC.
    • Denise was the best thing about that otherwise ridiculous plotline. I wasn't familiar with her work on Days of Our Lives or General Hospital but I could see her warmth and charisma as Mary even though the Another World storyline was a bit lacking.   
    • I don't know what else to say except we have lost another legend at a time when it feels like we are losing too many. I love that Denise Alexander never played Lesley as some perpetual victim, but as a woman and physician with integrity and backbone.  Rick and Monica made an absolute fool of her with their affair; yet, Lesley was someone who never made you pity her. Ladies and gentlemen, we aren't just losing veteran actors here.  We're also losing vital parts of this genre's legacy, and that just breaks my heart. God bless Ms. Alexander and her loved ones.  May she RIP.
    • Michael Nader was limited too? 

      Please register in order to view this content

    • For some reason, Tomas reminds me of a younger Dimitri from AMC.
    • Very sorry to see this news.  My first memory of her and Days was the story of her character Susan Martin shooting her husband after their baby died, and then of course Susan introduced Doug to Julie.  Enjoyed all of her work though.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy