|
|||||||
|
Info/Contact for David Akin
Search this blog:
Login
Who pays for this blog? I receive no fees, considerations, etc. etc. for the posts on this blog nor do I have any plans to accept any. My salary is paid by Canwest Global Communications Corp. I work for that company as the Ottawa-based National Affairs Correspondent for Canwest News Service. The blog publishing platform used here is called Blogware and it's developed by Tucows Inc. of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. My use of Blogware should not be taken as an endorsement of that company. Like all Blogware users, I do not pay any fees for the use of this service. I participate in program. Google pays me some money and, for that, I give Google some space on this site to display ads. Google sells those ads and Google, not me, decides what advertising content you are seeing. I do not filter these ads and take no responsibility for them. Readers should not assume I endorse any of the products or services advertised here. If you think other disclosures are appropriate in this space, I'd like to hear from you. All of my contact details are always at www.davidakin.com You can read more about this section |
More on that Pew Report on the Press, the Internet, and Politics
I
blogged on this about a minute ago and immediately ran across more
discussion. So here's what I found:
Survey: Internet Grows as Campaign News Source
Reuters - Daily newspapers and nightly network newscasts are
declining as primary sources of presidential campaign news for many
Americans, says a new survey from the Pew Research Center.
This Just In: Late-Night News?
Hollywood Reporter Is Jon Stewart the new Walter Cronkite? The new
Pew Research Center report suggests that an increasing number of young
adults are getting their news from late-night comedy and talk shows.
Next Anchor is the Big Story at 'Nightly News'
USA Today NBC's Brian Williams rejects the theory that it's only a
matter of time before the Internet and cable news become the main source of
news in America. "I'm not fond of the dinosaur argument," he says.
A
Morbid Finger on the Pulse of Politics
Washington PostIn today's cable and Internet age, says President Bush
media adviser Mark McKinnon, "the role and importance of the White House
press corps today have diminished -- perhaps significantly."
Comments
No comments found.
|
Recent Comments
Top Stories This Month
Month Archive
|
|||||
|
|||||||

