new york times

The Green Report: Begin Anew in 2009 with Green Resolutions

Friday, January 9th, 2009

Looking to make some green resolutions in 2009? The Daily Green and the National Resources Defense Council’s (NRDC) Simple Steps have developed a great list of 15 green resolutions. Although many of us may think it is difficult to go green, the site suggests simple to-do’s like recycling and reducing the number of mailed catalogs (through CatalogChoice.org). And while drinking water is good for the body, the disposable plastic water bottles are not. According to NRDC, “it takes 26 bottles of water to produce the plastic container for a one-liter bottle of water, and that doing so pollutes 25 liters of groundwater.” So, instead of buying plastic bottled water, a suggested resolution is to buy a reusable water container. Of the 15 items listed, there should be at least a couple that are easy for you to implement in 2009.

Bush helps the environment. (No, I’m not kidding.) According to a recent New York Times article, President Bush “will designate vast tracts of American-controlled Pacific Ocean islands, reefs, surface waters and sea floor as marine national monuments on Tuesday.” This presidential action will limit mining, fishing, oil exploration and other commercial activities.  The protected zones, which include a total of 195,280 miles (bigger than Oregon & Washington combined), are home to hundreds of rare fish and bird species.

“With the designation of the world’s largest marine reserve in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands in 2006, and now these three other sites, George W. Bush has done more to protect unique areas of the world’s oceans than any other person in history,” said Joshua Reichert, managing director of the Pew Environmental Group to the New York Times.

And luckily for environmentalists, this presidential action doesn’t require Congressional approval. Yippee!

Alert: Bush Administration Hasn’t Protected Marine Mammals?? Contrary to his recent presidential order to protect marine waters, the Bush Administration has failed to provide “protections required by law to more than a dozen marine mammals potentially at risk of death or injury due to commercial fishing,” according to a recent Government Accountability Office (GAO) report.  The congressional investigators examined the National Marine Fisheries Service and found that out of 30 marine mammals, which are protected under federal guidelines, the agency had not provided expert teams to protect 14 of them. These animals, such as endangered whales and dolphins, are getting caught in fishing gear and traps. Hey Bush, you need to protect the marine waters and the mammals too!

Flying a plane using algae fuel? Yes! On Wednesday, Continental Airlines became the first U.S. commercial airlines to make a flight using alternative fuels derived from algae and jatropha plants. In this case, the Boeing 737-800 ran one  of its two engines on a mixture of half biofuel and half regular jet fuel. The demonstration flight lasted 1 hour and 45 minutes and didn’t have any passengers. Although use of biofuels for commercial planes is said to be years away, this trip was a “flight” in the right direction.

Angry Asian Man: Sung J. Woo’s ‘Everything Asian’

Tuesday, January 6th, 2009


Sung J. Woo has a really great essay in the New York Times about the ever evolving ritual of grocery shopping, started many years ago, with his Korean immigrant family: Not Just a Place for Food, but for Bonding.

If you like this piece, you might want to consider picking up Sung’s first novel, Everything Asian, when it’s published this April from Thomas Dunne Books/St. Martin’s Press. It’s about a young Korean immigrant and his family as they adjust to life in suburban New Jersey.

I actually received an advance copy of Everything Asian a little while back, but I have to admit, it’s been sitting in a large, growing stack of books I’ve been meaning to read. Now I’m really looking forward to reading it.

This post originally appeared on the Angry Asian Man blog.

Media Watchdog: Rangel vs. the NYTimes

Thursday, December 4th, 2008

The New York Times has had Rep. Charles Rangel in its sights since July, when the paper reported on the New York congressman’s four rent-stabilized apartments. Last week, the Times raised the stakes, reporting on Nov. 25 that Rangel kept open a tax loophole for a corporation whose chief executive had made a large donation to Rangel’s charity.

Rangel responded to the story’s allegations the next day by letter. Instead of running a shortened version of the 700-word letter in the hard-copy version of the paper, the Times posted the entire letter online Wednesday afternoon, with a 1,500-word point-by-point rebuttal of Rangel’s complaints and clarifications by the original story’s author, David Kocieniewski.

News outlets reporting on the Times and Rangel back and forth have called it a “war of words.” And the verdict is in: After a “beatdown,” “the Times is winning the battle.”

The strangest description of the fight comes from the Congressional newspaper Roll Call, which said the Times‘ response was a “bizarre new twist.” The response is hardly bizarre—after the paper asked Rangel multiple times for an interview, only his lawyers spoke with the reporter. Immediately after the story ran, Rangel offered a lengthy explanation, but one that still raised questions. The Times used the expanded space of the its Web site to put Rangel’s response in context.

Charles Rangel’s actions deserve to be scrutinized; he wields a lot of power as chair of the House Ways and Means Committee. And that scrutiny has turned up plenty of questionable behavior (all documented here). But the Times‘ extraordinary response to Rangel’s letter shows just how much power the paper wields, too. There’s no question more people read Rangel’s letter and the Times‘ response because it was posted in full on the paper’s home page.

What kind of precedent does the paper’s devastating rebuttal set? The Times‘ reporting was rock-solid in this instance, so it had no problem with doing a point-by-point takedown of Rangel’s letter. What happens when the reporting isn’t so solid? Will the protesting letter get relegated to the paper’s letters page?

The interaction between the Times and Rangel has been fascinating to watch. Will Rangel respond again to the paper’s reporting? And if it doesn’t run his next letter on the Web site, Rangel can always call a press conference to dispute the Times‘ claims.

There is no point in wringing our hands about the slippery slope of posting letters and responses to the Web—more dialogue between papers, sources, reporters and the reading public is a good thing. But it’s important to remember that the Times took the step of running Rangel’s letter because it knew it had the goods to dispute him. Every story should be as well-reported as the work David Kocieniewski has done on Rangel. If it isn’t, let’s hope the Times is still willing to publish a takedown, even if it takes down itself.

This Day in History: Benazir Bhutto

Monday, December 1st, 2008

Twenty years ago today, Benazir Bhutto became the first ever female to lead a Muslim country when Pakistan appointed her prime minister December 1, 1988.

Oldest child of Pakistani Prime Minister Zulfikar Al Bhutto, Benazir received a B.A. from Harvard University where she graduated Phi Beta Kappa, later studying at Oxford. She was repeatedly to call her four years as an undergraduate in Cambridge, Mass. the four happiest of her life, as they instilled in her a deep-rooted respect for democracy.

She married in 1987, taking office a year later. She was twice accused of corruption and went into “self-imposed” exile to Dubai 10 years ago. She returned to the post last fall, only to be assassinated a couple of months later by Al-Qaeda on December 27, 2007.

Whether the corruption charges were founded on true crimes and indiscretions or not, it would be difficult to deny the fact that Bhutto is both a legendary and inspiring figure, if only because of what she represents.

…Other significant events to occur today:

1864 President Abe Lincoln gives a State of the Union address that reinforces the Emancipation Proclamation he had made a mere 10 weeks before, urging the end of slavery.

1913 Greece annexes Crete a year after the mini-Minoan island had achieved independence from Turkey following the first Balkan War.

1918 Iceland, though remaining a member of the Danish kingdom, achieves sovereignty, Transylvania unites with Romania and Serbs, Croats and Slovenes proclaim a kingdom by that name in the land that will later become the fraught Kingdom of Yugoslavia.

1934 Russia continues to replace the old-guard Bolsheviks with Stalinist henchman in another killing, this one of Politburo member Kirov.

1944 Axis power-controlled U-869, the sub that would later become the subject of New York Times riveting bestseller Shadow Divers, departs from Norway with an American Northeastern destination.

1955 Ms. Rosa Parks refuses to give up her seat to a White man on the bus, sparking the Montgomery Bus Boycott and creating another watershed moment in the Civil Rights Movement.

1981 The world officially recognizes the AIDS virus’ existence and threat, making today World AIDS day.

Six Apart Offers a Bailout Program for Journalists—Including Me

Monday, November 24th, 2008

With the economy in serious trouble, automakers and financial institutions are seeking a government bailout. And the banks and financial folks got one to the tune of $700 billion. Well, The New York Times recently reported that Six Apart, the maker of Moveable Type blogs called TypePad, has created a bailout program of their own: “The Journalist Bailout Program.” (Spoiler alert—they interviewed me!)

The new initiative is designed to help journalists who recently lost their jobs get back on their feet. Once accepted into the program, Six Apart will give 20 to 30 individuals a TypePad pro blog with full technical support (worth about $150 a year), inclusion in its advertising program (which is an opportunity to earn money) and his or her blog featured on Blogs.com, a blog aggregator site. Six Apart’s Moveable Type software and platform is used by some great sites like Barack Obama’s campaign site, The Washington Post, and NPR—just to name a few. This is a huge gesture and generous offering for struggling journalists who may need both financial and technical help to start blogging.

About a week or so ago, I saw a Tweet about the program. (I’m a bigger Twitter user and advocate.) So, I immediately clicked on the link and saw blogger and Six Apart vice president, Anil Dash’s, blog post about the opportunity.

Dash wrote: “Hello, recently-laid-off or fearful-of-layoffs journalist! We’re Six Apart (you know us as the nice folks who make Movable Type or TypePad, which maybe you used for blogging at your old newspaper or magazine) and we want to help you.”

I read Dash’s invitation and thought the program was perfect for me. Although I haven’t been laid-off, I’m concerned about the availability of jobs for myself, fellow journalists and graduating students. And as I said in the New York Times article, this program is perfect for journalists who now have to build their careers more guerrilla-style by constantly selling their stories and promoting their work. I viewed the “bailout program” as an opportunity to increase the visibility of my stories and the chance to earn some revenue from my work. I’m hoping to take my site, CaramelBella.com, and another online site in the works to the next level.

The media industry is changing to a world where journalists have to be entrepreneurs and good marketers, as well as great writers. Writers who are solely depending on writing and hoping for success, are doing themselves a great disservice. We need to be writing and promoting. Journalists can’t afford (literally) to be quiet wallflowers.

And I know for many journalists, the current state of the industry is discouraging and depressing. Lately, the future of journalism is all we talk about in class and in the real world. Yet despite the seemingly bad news and continuous layoff reports, I’m optimistic about the possibilities and opportunities. Yes, there are less “traditional” jobs with big media organizations, but there are new opportunities being created, especially online, even as I type.  And I’m jazzed about that.