Marvin Gaye discussed what was goin' on!

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21, 2023

The online Post doesn't seem to care: It's been a while since we chronicled the difference between the hard-copy Washington Post and its pitiful online edition.

The hard-copy Washington Post is still an actual newspaper. Online, the story is different. Consider this morning, for instance:

The print edition of the Post seems to be crafted for adults. Six reports appear on the paper's front page. Each report concerns an obvious "hard news" topic.

Above the fold, the headlines on the three reports look like this:

Justices pivotal to 2024 election
MULTIPLE CASES INVOLVE HIGH COURT
Trump's eligibility for office, immunity at stake
12 states could see abortion on ballot
Measures are being put forward to codify right or ban in constitutions

A historic surge of migrants, and few solutions in sight

Those were the topics appearing above the fold. Below the fold, three more reports concerned serious hard news topics, including the war in Ukraine. 

The online Post was a whole different critter. When we clicked there at 8 a.m., these were the four featured articles—the four articles which topped the paper's website and featured full banner headlines:

Colon cancer is rising in young Americans. It’s not clear why.

The lives upended by Florida’s school book wars

U.N. Security Council tries to avoid U.S. veto on resolution to stop fighting

How fake sugars sneak into foods and disrupt metabolic health

There's nothing "wrong" with any of those reports. The third report actually deals with the war in Gaza.

(Yes, it's still going on.)

That said, in the immediate aftermath of the Colorado court decision, there was nothing about that major political topic. The report about "Florida's school book wars" involves a handful of "upended lives." In our assessment, this was simply the Washington Post pushing a hobbyhorse topic which has largely gotten stale.

By the time we reached the fourth of those topics, it was clear that we were mainly dealing with "human interest" / personal health reporting. At that point, the website transitioned to a section called the Daily Mix. 

The Daily Mix offered four more reports. These reports did not receive banner headlines. The new, smaller headlines said this:

Winter solstice, shortest day of the year, arrives this evening

He quietly built a $13 million fortune. In death, he gave it all away.

A runaway steer escaped Newark Penn Station and changed his destiny

Here's how to harvest rainwater—and why you might want to

By now, we were being invited to click on the destiny of a runaway steer, or possibly on the best way to use rainwater. Also, someone had saved $13 million, then had given it all away!

Immigration, abortion, election issues, Ukraine? Such topics remained unmentioned.

We'll admit it—we found this digest of topics insulting. As always at the online Post, you could find world and national news if you were prepared to try. But such reports will often be found way, way down the Post's endless front page, buried under many reports about runaway steers and rainwater.

In our view, the online Post panders to bullroar and human interest in a way the print edition still doesn't. Almost surely, this is intended to allow the online Post to make sufficient money. This question popped in our heads this morning:

How much money does the world's richest man really need to have in his coffers?

Online, the Post is all about "human interest"—human interest and "first world problems." The print edition of the Post seems like a whole different newspaper.

We haven't mentioned this state of affairs for a while. But we thought what we encountered this morning was an insult to human intelligence.

As we perused those top eight reports, we thought of what Marvin Gaye once said:

"Talk to me / so you can see / what's goin' on." 

So the late Marvin Gaye bravely sang in one of his greatest hits.

With admirable self-confidence, Gaye did discuss what was going on in the America of that day. It seems to us that the online Post prefers to pander and clown.

As we close, a special bonus giveaway feature:

For news about that runaway steer, you can just click here.


38 comments:

  1. "It's been a while since we chronicled the difference between the hard-copy Washington Post and its pitiful online edition."

    Nobody cares about this. This is like comparing oliomargarine to butter or the buggy to the horseless carriage. Online newspapers are what they are and anyone with half a brain can find the stories they want in them. This series has to be the stupidest waste of time on earth!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Rudy Giuliani has filed for bankruptcy.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. What else would he do?

      Delete
    2. How about not ruthlessly attacking innocent poll workers in the first place, 2:52?

      Delete
    3. hunter biden is one of giuliani’s creditors

      Delete
    4. rudy hacked hunter’s computer

      Delete
  3. None of those stories show up on the front page of my online Washington Post. It doesn't seem like a good idea to be writing an essay about online stories when different people have different viewing experiences, perhaps customized to the data sharing received from other apps a person has been using.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The so called free market journalism of Bezos's newspaper strangles your information system and you compliment the careful customizable grip

      Delete
    2. Choke my information supply harder Daddy Jeff

      Delete
  4. Somerby doesn't care about the things that interest other people. That doesn't mean the Washington Post should reoorganize its "endless" front page to suit him. Is he still thinking he needs to scroll down to wherever the political news is? No one who is the least bit computer savvy actually does that.

    Meanwhile, shouldn't he go out and yell at those kids who are playing on his lawn again?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. What a strange and illogical thing to say.

      Delete
    2. We got a great Marvin link. Chill out.

      Delete
    3. Marvin Gaye was woke, but because he is dead, Cecelia can claim to be a fan.

      Delete
    4. I’m not like you. I’m a normal person.

      I don’t let politics get in the way of my admiration for talent or genius.

      Delete
    5. If he were alive, he would be treated by you like Colin Kaepernick.

      Delete
    6. Oh, yeah, if it weren’t for Colin Kaepernick I’d be the world’s biggest sports fan.

      Delete
    7. There is no place for the National Anthem at sporting events. Save it for baby showers and funerals, where it belongs.

      Delete
  5. What about those tunnels?

    https://jabberwocking.com/wapo-says-no-evidence-of-hamas-activity-at-al-shifa-hospital/

    ReplyDelete
  6. Replies
    1. Clearly, stories about rising colon cancer in young people are click bait human interest “fluff” stories. I am not a crank.

      Delete
    2. I'm so scared of ass cancer oh no

      Delete
  7. How do I evaluate media that is not searchable is a good question. When any dumb idea goes mainstream, people feel more positive to the brand saying it. Podcasts and spam are difficult to monitor for misleading content.

    It's possible to measure this from the outside. This has been studied recently in podcasts versus searchable transcripts which the daily howler also noticed can be laggy.

    You can use pure logic to debunk the Shakespeare authorship legend that he's several people etc.

    https://guides.library.utoronto.ca/c.php?g=721294&p=5157335


    https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/20531680211067640


    https://www.brookings.edu/techstream/the-challenge-of-detecting-misinformation-in-podcasting/

    https://shakespeareauthorship.com/#how

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hunter's laptop is all the evidence you need. Look at Biden's approval ratings.

      Delete
    2. Who cares about one spoiled soul do you want the power or not?

      Delete
    3. Hispanics are encouraged by Biden's age.

      Delete
    4. Hispanic women are very beautiful.

      Delete
  8. David and Cecelia. That’s the ticket.

    ReplyDelete
  9. From Kevin:

    https://jabberwocking.com/sometimes-a-few-felonies-just-make-you-more-popular/

    https://jabberwocking.com/does-joe-biden-really-want-lots-of-illegal-immigrants/

    ReplyDelete

  10. I ♥ the Latinx.
    I hate the Arabs, the Persians, the Russians, and half of the Americans.

    I ♥ my blankie. I smell my fingers.
    Somerby is no liberal.
    I am Corby.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. To heck with Latinx. I like Latin Americans. I am the better Corby.

      Delete
    2. You are breaking rules and norms. You are not nice. You are a right wing troll funded by Russia via Iran and Qatar.

      Somerby is no liberal.
      I ♥ Joe. Joe ♥ children.
      I am nice. I am Corby.

      Delete
    3. OK, we both love Joe. And I don’t accept foreign funding. I am the new improved Corby.

      Delete
    4. I can see right through your little games. That is exactly what a Boris would say.

      I am Corby.

      Delete
    5. Boris imitates me because he knows I’m the authentic Corby.

      Delete
    6. It is unconscionable for Boris @10:26 AM to pretend being a woman. He is not a woman.

      I am Corby.

      Delete
  11. More from Kevin:

    https://jabberwocking.com/todays-supreme-court-is-the-most-partisan-in-modern-history/

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. In Leonard Leo and Harlan Crow's defense, this is the worst Supreme Court they could afford.

      Delete