Quote from: Tamas on Today at 08:40:43 AMIf you are published weekly and a major news item JUST lands before you go to print perhaps indicate that fact? But no, a grabbing headline was just as important back then as it is now. That's my point. Grab the attention, clarify/disclaimer later. Just as nowadays. Same standards.I think it slightly depends. If you're, say, the London Review of Books or the New Yorker then you can take your time. If your purpose is to be a newspaper then I think you have to scramble and go with what you've got at the point you're going to print - so if you're a Sunday and there's a terrorist attack like the Bataclan say on Saturday evening you have to scrap the front page you've got and go with what's breaking.
QuoteDo we think that? I think we see all the time that initial reporting is inaccurate and even when the narrative coalesces we are left with open questions.I actually was thinking less about reporting. In a way I think the sheer volume of immediately available information increases our suspicion of reported news and creates a (in my view) false impression that we are able to know ourselves because it's all there.
QuoteI'm not sure when actual knowledge arrives given it will always continue to be revised.Oh yeah - totally agree. I don't think the first revision is conclusive
I think knowledge may be building up all the time but not sure we ever reach actual complete knowledge.QuoteIt's interesting to think how papers would have worked in earlier times. Pre radio, pre telegram....Not just in relation to news. You see it in the creation and running of large trans-contnental colonial empires. "Since my last letter, which you won't have yet, we are now at war with China" (genuine example in the First Opium War - although that's not the actual quote). Ambassadors, plenipotentiaries etc had huge power and importance.
Something happened in the US!... Last week.
They have lots and lots of other reporting on France atthe time but nice to see that the need to be right v Fleet Street rivals is also a venerable tradition. It's very "well actually" on Twitter.Quote from: Tamas on Today at 11:23:09 AMThere is no way those cowards will risk pissing off Daddy Trump
Quote from: crazy canuck on Today at 11:31:38 AMWithout Yu there is no Ming.
Quote from: Tamas on Today at 11:23:09 AMThere is no way those cowards will risk pissing off Daddy Trump
Quote from: crazy canuck on Today at 11:10:30 AMWhen I began practising law, we still relied on something called the postal acceptance rule. I won't get into the details of what the rule was, but suffice it to say that it was necessary because communications were delayed by the time it took the post office to deliver a letter.
And that was in the early 90s. Think about how much more inefficient communications were during the time you are being critical of.
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Quote from: Oexmelin on Today at 10:52:31 AMYes. They wrote and received letters, and had postal services. And yes, they had dated news, depending on the length of travel.
Quote from: Tamas on Today at 11:23:09 AMThere is no way those cowards will risk pissing off Daddy Trump
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