Word: printings
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...screen. It is awful, evil, dehumanizing. But does that mean it?s not also a part of history? Last week a weekly newspaper declared that it was. The Boston Phoenix provided a link to the footage from its Web page and showed Pearl?s decapitated head in its print edition. (In May, CBS News aired non-gruesome segments.) Seeing the video, wrote the Phoenix?s publisher, "should galvanize every non-Jew hater in the world." Many media critics called the link a cruel stunt with no public benefit. The Pearl family was unequivocal: Those who share the video, they said...
...What distinguishes a snuff film from a historical document? Showing crime-scene photos from a murder-rape adds nothing to the public discourse. The media chose not to print death photos of Princess Diana, and we were none the poorer. But there are exceptions. The Nazis? victims stacked in mounds, the Viet Cong executed with a gunshot to the head, the dead at Kent State and in Rwanda all had families and a human right to dignity. But their deaths had an unfortunate significance for the world; they were conscripted into history in a way that someone knifed...
...before beginning his studies, Dunn took two years working at Time Magazine in the marketing department. There he began to notice the strong influence television was having on the print media market...
Television, he says, is “so much broader in its impact and more immediate in its feedback” than print media. He points to the daily ratings that cable executives receive...
...sign up for a plan and discover that the coverage isn't good enough where you need it, cancel immediately. In your new service contract, read the fine print of the buyer's remorse clause. Some carriers, such as VoiceStream, give you only 72 hours to decide whether to keep their service. Others give you 15 to 30 days. These deals usually have a string attached: you pay for the minutes you used before you canceled...