Terry Glavin
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And that was the thing that I was watching over the years is that, you know, I spent a lot of, well, my last major book was about Afghanistan and I spent a lot of time in Syria and the Northeast with the Kurds and
And that was the thing that I was watching over the years is that, you know, I spent a lot of, well, my last major book was about Afghanistan and I spent a lot of time in Syria and the Northeast with the Kurds and
Okay, here's a proposition. Everybody likes to beat up on the news media, right? I've come up in the news media in the old discipline. You spend six years as an apprentice before you're a journeyman in the old guild system. Six years as a reporter. After that, well, maybe you'll be allowed to have an opinion about something.
Okay, here's a proposition. Everybody likes to beat up on the news media, right? I've come up in the news media in the old discipline. You spend six years as an apprentice before you're a journeyman in the old guild system. Six years as a reporter. After that, well, maybe you'll be allowed to have an opinion about something.
Okay, here's a proposition. Everybody likes to beat up on the news media, right? I've come up in the news media in the old discipline. You spend six years as an apprentice before you're a journeyman in the old guild system. Six years as a reporter. After that, well, maybe you'll be allowed to have an opinion about something.
Really elaborate conventions and disciplines in what was essentially a trade, a craft, right? Um, and with the, uh, you know, the golden era was about the 1980s, I would say 1970s, 1980s. And then with the advent of digital technologies and a whole bunch of other reasons, um, news, the news media, the conventional news media began to wither away and collapse.
Really elaborate conventions and disciplines in what was essentially a trade, a craft, right? Um, and with the, uh, you know, the golden era was about the 1980s, I would say 1970s, 1980s. And then with the advent of digital technologies and a whole bunch of other reasons, um, news, the news media, the conventional news media began to wither away and collapse.
Really elaborate conventions and disciplines in what was essentially a trade, a craft, right? Um, and with the, uh, you know, the golden era was about the 1980s, I would say 1970s, 1980s. And then with the advent of digital technologies and a whole bunch of other reasons, um, news, the news media, the conventional news media began to wither away and collapse.
And it's replaced by, you know, people talk about the mainstream media. Well, the mainstream media today is Twitter. That's the mainstream media now. And so in this period, it became increasingly difficult for journalists to actually tell a story. The results be damned.
And it's replaced by, you know, people talk about the mainstream media. Well, the mainstream media today is Twitter. That's the mainstream media now. And so in this period, it became increasingly difficult for journalists to actually tell a story. The results be damned.
And it's replaced by, you know, people talk about the mainstream media. Well, the mainstream media today is Twitter. That's the mainstream media now. And so in this period, it became increasingly difficult for journalists to actually tell a story. The results be damned.
It's much easier to basically fill your shift with three or four stories for deadline, each of which more or less uphold the narrative framework of the subscriber base that your media organization is targeting. A lot of it really is about the decline and the collapse of news media. I mean, I can talk about that a little bit because it's something I know.
It's much easier to basically fill your shift with three or four stories for deadline, each of which more or less uphold the narrative framework of the subscriber base that your media organization is targeting. A lot of it really is about the decline and the collapse of news media. I mean, I can talk about that a little bit because it's something I know.
It's much easier to basically fill your shift with three or four stories for deadline, each of which more or less uphold the narrative framework of the subscriber base that your media organization is targeting. A lot of it really is about the decline and the collapse of news media. I mean, I can talk about that a little bit because it's something I know.
But I think a lot of it too, I think, is language. It's simple language. that probably ends up with most ordinary people who are only casually interested in the struggle for democracy in China or events in the Middle East or this strange creature that has come to occupy all the spaces where the Liberal Party used to be. It's the language that we use. How conservative are the conservative?
But I think a lot of it too, I think, is language. It's simple language. that probably ends up with most ordinary people who are only casually interested in the struggle for democracy in China or events in the Middle East or this strange creature that has come to occupy all the spaces where the Liberal Party used to be. It's the language that we use. How conservative are the conservative?
But I think a lot of it too, I think, is language. It's simple language. that probably ends up with most ordinary people who are only casually interested in the struggle for democracy in China or events in the Middle East or this strange creature that has come to occupy all the spaces where the Liberal Party used to be. It's the language that we use. How conservative are the conservative?
How liberal are the liberals?
How liberal are the liberals?
How liberal are the liberals?