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Gray Lady Down: what the decline and fall of the New York times means for America
William McGowan

Gray Lady Down: what the decline and fall of the New York times means for America

what the decline and fall of the New York times means for America

Encounter Books (Nov 16, 2010)
9781594034862
300 pages | 152 x 229 mm
Dewey 071.471 McG
LC Classification PN4899.N42 .M35 2010
LC Control No. 2010019445

Genre

  • Non-Fiction

Subject

  • Journalism
  • Journalism/ Objectivity/ United States
  • New York Times
  • Press And Politics
  • Press And Politics/ United States/ History/ 21st Century

Plot

The New York Times was once considered the gold standard in American journalism and the most trusted news organization in America. Today, it is generally understood to be a vehicle for politically correct ideologies, tattered liberal pieties, and a repeated victim of journalistic scandal and institutional embarrassment. In Gray Lady Down, the hard-hitting follow up to Coloring the News, William McGowan asks who is responsible for squandering the finest legacy in American journalism. Combining original reporting, critical assessment and analysis, McGowan exposes the Times' obsessions with diversity, "soft" pop cultural news, and countercultural Vietnam-era attitudinizing, and reveals how these trends have set America's most important news icon at odds with its journalistic mission--and with the values and perspectives of much of mainstream America. Gray Lady Down considers the consequences--for the Times, for the media, and, most important, for American society and its political processes at this fraught moment in our nation's history. In this highly volatile media environment, the fate of the Times may portend the future of the fourth estate.