Re: Are bloggers journalists?
David Patrick Columbia talks about the media establishment attacking bloggers, and why he thinks this is wrong.
Filed under:
Media And The Press
Posted at:
10:16 PM on December 26, 2007
David Patrick Columbia is the founder and editor of New York Social Diary, a website that chronicles the lives of the Big Apple’s elite. Since graduating from Colby College in 1962, Columbia has led numerous lives: he's been a stockbroker, an owner of a head shop in upstate New York, a sportswear designer, a freelancer (he wrote a firsthand account of one of Truman Capote's "lost weekends"), and a scriptwriter for a courtroom television show. In 1988, Columbia finally found his calling when he collaborated with Debbie Reynolds on her autobiography. In 1994, Columbia began writing the New York Social Diary for Quest Magazine (a condensed version of the website is still printed in Quest every month). The New York Social Diary website was launched in September, 2000. Columbia has since become something of social fixture himself: he's been the subject of articles and blog posts in New York Magazine, Gawker, and the New York Observer.
Read more about David Patrick Columbia »
This civilian journalist is the only USA media with the 'thatchers' to stream 2005 and 2006 video of Mordechai Vanunu the whistle blower of Israel's WMD Program, who is forbidden by Israel to speak to foreigners or leave Jerusalem.
Vanunu was sentenced to 6 months more in jail for 2004 interviews he gave and the MSM has been MIA all during his historic 1 1/2 year long trial.
This civilian journalist has been doing their job.
On January 7, 2008 Israel backed down on sending Vanunu back to jail and gave him community service instead.
Israel and the USA Government are well aware of my video interview with Vanunu:
"30 Minutes with Vanunu" which is FREELY streaming on WAWA along with Vanunu's video messages to Bush, Hillary and USA Christians to WAKE UP that Israel is NOT a democracy unless you are a Jew.
WAWA:
http://www.wearewideawake.org/
I wouldn't call them Journalists or reporters though.
They're from the rich American tradition of the pamphleteer.