Revibed « PREV | NEXT »: When Asian Still Means Oriental

August 26, 2009

Watch It and Weep

Or giggle, or shrug, or shake your head--and since I don't keep up with this stuff, my apologies if this link about the perceived future of electronic journalism in 1981 was old hat to the hip kids days, hours, or minutes ago. It comes to me courtesy of my old friend Larry Dietz, editor of the short-lived Cheetah, which was just today the subject of an email inquiry from a young scholar with a nose for cultural esoterica.

August 26, 2009 10:15 PM | | Comments (0)

Leave a comment

















Archives

Creative Commons License
This weblog is licensed under a Creative Commons License.


About

    ARTicles Arts journalism is changing underneath us. Every news organization is rethinking how it covers culture, and every week brings new evidence of those changes. We are members of the National Arts Journalism Program, an association of some 500 arts and cultural journalists in the United States. ARTicles is edited by Laura Collins-Hughes. To contact her, click here. This is a blog about
    more

    Current NAJP Bloggers Meet our bloggers: Sasha Anawalt, MJ Andersen, Alicia Anstead, Laura Bleiberg, Larry Blumenfeld, Jeanne Carstensen, Robert Christgau, Laura Collins-Hughes, Thomas Conner, Lily Tung Crystal, Richard Goldstein, Patti Hartigan, Glenn Kenny, Wendy Lesser, Joe Levy, Ruth Lopez, Nancy Malitz, Douglas McLennan, Tom Moon, Abe Peck, Peter Plagens, John Rockwell, Patrick J. Smith, Werner Trieschmann, Lesley Valdes and Douglas Wolk. more

    NAJP NAJP is America's largest organization dedicated to the advancement of arts and cultural journalism. The NAJP has produced research, publications and discussions and works to bring together journalists, artists, news executives, cultural organization administrators, funders and others concerned with arts and culture in America today. more

    Join NAJP Join America's largest organization of arts journalists. Here's how more

see all archives

Contact: articles@najp.org