I like the old saw, "you are what you eat." But I like it with twist. Instead of what I take in with my mouth, I measure myself on what I take in (and put out) by eye and by ear. It would be fair to call me a news junkie.
[Editor's note: I just reread this post and it might sound pretentious to some. I'm not trying to be pretentious or condescending, but I don't know how to write it differently. Apologies in advance.]
[Editor's note: I just reread this post and it might sound pretentious to some. I'm not trying to be pretentious or condescending, but I don't know how to write it differently. Apologies in advance.]
Here is a list of the sources that I check every day (in chronological order, because that is my daily habit to listen to these things in strict order)
- NPR Morning Edition (starts at 5AM)
- Dilbert
- AP News
- The Guardian (US edition
- Fox News
- Google News
- NY Times (10 articles per month)
- Washington Post (10 articles per month)
- APOD (Astronomy Picture of the Day)
- Slashdot
- Drudge Report
- Al Jazeera English
- WOA (Westsail Owners Association)
- ARs Technica
- PF (Physics Forum)
- Professor Leonard Susskind's Courses on Modern Theoretical Physics (15-30 minutes per day)
- Marathon Cruiser's Net
- NPR Diane Rehm Show
- Wall Street Journal (read in dead tree format at the library)
- NPR All Things Considered
- Radio Sweden Podcast
Of all the sources above, the Wall Street Journal is the most professional IMHO, and the NY Times is the most biased IMHO. Fox News Daily is also biased, but not as bad as the NY Times. I judge bias more on the basis of what the news organization chooses to ignore, than by what they say. Drudge Report headlines are fun to scan, because again and again what I read on Drudge becomes front page news in all the mainstream media three days later.
Other things that I consult regularly, but not daily are (in random order):
- The ACM Risks Forum
- WBUR On Point Podcast
- Lawfare Podcast
- Schneier on Security
- Steptoe & Johnson Cyberlaw Podcast
- The Volokh Conspiracy
- SCOTUSblog
- NPR Car Talk Podcast
- NPR Wait Don't Tell Me Podcast
- WNYC On The Media Podcast
- WAMC The Media Project Podcast
- WAMC Vox Pop Science Forum
- WAMC Vox Pop Bob Berman
- Federalist Society Podcasts
- WNYC Radiolab Podcast
- The Inbtercept
- The Oyez Project SCOTUS Oral Arguments
- WNYC This American Life Podcast
- WNYC Freakonomics Podcast
- Fox News Sunday Podcast
- Intelligence Squared debates (Libby and I are big fans of these.)
SCOTUS oral arguments work wonderfully to put me to sleep. So do Federalist Society panel discussions. Lawyers are very long winded.
Lots of people trash talk Fox News or The Intercept. I hate being told what to think. When there is something controversial, I read it first hand and make my own opinion. I try to follow the advice of William F. Buckley Junior. He once said, "I spend my time reading what my opponents have to say. I already know what my side says." IMHO, we all should follow Buckley's advice.
I'm not much of a joiner, but below are some organizations of which I am a present or past active member. I am not, nor have I ever been a registered member of, or a donor to, any political party. Ditto for Libby {except that Libby once registered Conservative, and got nominated (without her permission) and I think elected to an Albany County NY supervisor's seat. But she never took the seat, and she never registered with a party again}.
- EFF (Electronic Frontier Foundation)
- Wikimedia Foundation
- The Federalist Society
- WOA (Westsail Owners Association)
- SSCA (Seven Seas Cruising Association)
- IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers)
- SCS (Society for Computer Simulation)
I also spend about 30 minutes per day writing posts for this blog and another 30 minutes commenting on online forums and about 60 minutes per week writing Op Eds for national newspapers (which almost never get published)
When we are out at sea and cut off from Internet and Radio, I listen to podcasts that I have downloaded to my phone before departure. I can hold 30 hours of podcasts on my phone.
[Some people say I spend too much time on the computer. To that, I say raspberry.]
You realize of course, that 6 companies control 95%+ of all news media in this country. (I'm not sure of the exact percentage. I've seen numbers that range from 95% to 97%) At this point, even NPR and PBS have become suspect as purveyors of the "corporate" agenda.
ReplyDeleteA truly balanced perspective on how we are doing as a country would need to include European, Asian, Middle Eastern and Russian news sources. Bottom line is, we are lied to every day. There are things going on in the world every day, that we are not being told about, because it does not suit the corporate agenda.
But hey, we know all about Justin Beaver's latest zit and all the fear porn they can throw at us.
Life is good.
You might like Naked Capitalism:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.nakedcapitalism.com/
They have a tremendous daily links selection