Showing posts with label Yorker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yorker. Show all posts

Friday, 10 August 2012

Fareed Zakaria Sure Looks Like He Stole From The New Yorker [Updated]

CAMBRIDGE, MA - MAY 24: Author Fareed Zakaria attends the Annual Meeting of the Harvard University Alumni Association at the 2012 Harvard Commencement on May 24, 2012 in Cambridge, Massachusetts. (Photo by Paul Marotta/Getty Images) Zakaria.

Gentlemen, start your engines and then drive to a bookstore and pick up some books authored by Fareed Zakaria and check them for plagiarism! Newsbusters has noticed that a passage from a recent Zakaria article on gun control in Time is very, very similar to a passage from an April New Yorker article by Jill Lepore. Here's Lepore's:

As you can see, Zakaria does not lift Lepore's passage word for word. He tweaks the language ever so slightly — enough, in his mind, perhaps, that crediting Lepore in any way was no longer required. It's shady. If you're going to rewrite an entire passage, with only the most imperceptible and inconsequential alterations, you might as well just quote the passage and source it to the person who wrote it. Otherwise, you are taking credit for work that isn't yours. This is generally frowned upon.

The Atlantic Wire has been "told" that Zakaria "will be releasing an apology shortly," while a Time statement says it "takes any accusation of plagiarism by any of our journalists very seriously, and we will carefully examine the facts before saying anything else on the matter." We've asked Lepore for her reaction and have yet to hear back.

The best-case explanation is that Zakaria's transgression was the result of sloppiness, as opposed to intentional deceptiveness. But this isn't even the first time that Zakaria has been accused of taking ownership of another writer's work. We hope those are the only examples and that there's no larger pattern of plagiarism here. But, if there is, the Internet will find it, eventually, once it has a reason to look. Ask Jonah Lehrer.

Update: Zakaria's apology, via Atlantic Wire:

Update II: Zakaria has been suspended. The full statement from Time, via Dylan Byers:


View the original article here


This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.

Tuesday, 7 August 2012

New Yorker Photographer on Instagram Experiment: My Kid Could Make That

The artist Instagrams real film.

As with every social network that takes over the world (however briefly — hello, Pinterest!), media companies are fooling around with Instagram. Even a legendary magazine like The New Yorker, whose old-fashioned reputation favors the printed words to images and the Internet, is using the Facebook-owned photo-filtering app, a favorite of small-time foodies and big-time rappers. How and why remains to be seen: With just around 2,000 followers, the magazine decided to hand its account over from the PR department to real photographers who will rotate control, like an insider version of Sweden's Twitter.

First up was Martin Schoeller, whose recognizable portraits have turned up in the magazine since 1999. As for why he got to be the Guinea pig, "I have no idea," the photographer told Daily Intel.

"I'm not that up on this new media technology myself, so I haven't been on Instagram before," Schoeller said after his trial period. "I'm not even on Facebook." (New Yorker PR director Alexa Cassanos said, "He's been a longtime staff photographer for us, so we thought it would be appropriate for him to do the Instagram takeover. We were hoping it would be a fun thing and a little different.")

Schoeller said he "enjoyed it in the sense that I felt like a photo student again, having a fresh outlook on my environment," but was too busy taking real photographs to really focus on the app. "I was just snapping away without overthinking it," he said.

"The problem with this Instagram is that I could hand the phone over to my 3-year-old son and he could come up with a good picture," Schoeller said. "Maybe I should've come up with a concept instead of just using it how everyone else uses it, with no meaning or depth."

Over about a week, he took eighteen pictures and the account gained around 2,000 followers. Cassanos said the next photographer in line will be announced soon, and that those being considered "have some Instagram experience."

"I'm glad people are taking an interest in photography," Schoeller stressed. "I just don't think those pictures are important or should be given much thought."


View the original article here


This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.