My friends at the invaluable Mirror of Justice blog have noted and commented on New York
Times editor Bill Keller's snarky questions for and about the religious beliefs of various Republican candidates, but I feel compelled to add my two cents» worth.
Not exact matches
HuffPo has poached a number of
Times staffers this year, and this past spring, former executive
editor Bill Keller wrote a column trashing HuffPo's editorial strategy and business model.
Within Fortune senior
editor Roger Parloff's canonical feature about hedge fund manager
Bill Ackman's audacious, indefatigable attack on Herbalife — an at
times seemingly pyramid - scheming nutrition company — the following quote rings out: «Who the hell does he think he is?»
Now that
Bill Keller, executive
editor of the New York
Times, has weighed in on the issue, I realize that Goldberg only wrote the second dumbest column of the year.
A New York
Times column by outgoing Executive
Editor Bill Keller has unleashed a hailstorm of online criticism among religious bloggers and conservative activists.
The presumed Republican nominee for Governor, Rick Lazio, attacked the
Times» behavior as «psychological warfare» in a letter to its
editor in chief,
Bill Keller.
In a story published in the newspaper today,
Bill Keller, the executive
editor of the New York
Times, said: «Scotland Yard has declined our repeated requests for interviews and refused to release information we requested months ago under the British freedom of information law.
New York City health commissioner Dr. Mary Bassett wrote a letter to the
editor of The New York
Times advocating for the metzitzah b «peh deal Mayor
Bill de Blasio made with the Orthodox community.
The executive
editor of The New York
Times,
Bill Keller, told the paper's public
editor in a column published Sunday morning, that addressing rumors «spreads them and gives them an aura of credibility, even if the intent is the opposite.
Times Union investigations
editor Brendan J. Lyons reported yesterday that records in Bharara's custody reveal transactions in Cancun, Mexico, from Ball's campaign account, including a $ 500 ATM withdrawal and a $ 700 hotel
bill.
In November of 2010, at the height of the revelations published by WikiLeaks of US actions in Iraq, Afghanistan and other countries, former New York
Times executive
editor Bill Keller published a piece stressing that in considering whether or not to disclose state secrets, the
Times engaged in «extensive and serious discussions with the government.»
Just prior to the screening Anderson gathered before a few hundred fans at The Apple Store a few blocks from Lincoln Center for a Q&A in their Meet The Filmmaker series (moderated by our own
editor - in - chief Rodrigo Perez) before heading down to Alice Tully Hall to introduce the screening, this
time joined by
Bill Murray, Gwyneth Paltrow and Anjelica Huston along with his brother Eric Chase Anderson, who provided all of Ritchie's artwork in the film.The Q&A, moderated by Anderson collaborators Noah Baumbach and Antonio Monda (who had a bit part in «The Life Aquatic»), was loose, lively and rather candid, with Murray keeping his fellow cast and the audience in frequent hysterics.
This
time, the Sun - Sentinel
editors not only relied on a moot report regarding a dead
bill, they also misread it.
Cars in My Life — Nick Baldwin reflects on some of his all
time family favourites / The Greatest Race III — Marc Douezy's story of the 1914 Grand Prix de l'Automobile Club de France moves on to the pre-race scrutineering and practice / Working on a Chain Gang — The
Editor drives arguably the rarest pre-war Frazer - Nash sports car / Travelling First Class — Zoe Harrison assesses Austin's flagship limousine of the 30's — the Mayfair / The French Brooklands IV —
Bill Boddy's epic story of the Montlhery track reaches its final lap / Missing Link — Frank Lugg tells us why he thinks Guiseppe Coda was an unsung hero of early Italian car design / Vital Spark — Roy Berry journeys westward to visit a magneto specialist / Dew Drop — Michael Worthington - Williams on the cars of Harold E Dew.
Brooks Brierley tells the sad story of America's most expensive vintage thoroughbred / Driving a boat - tailed AC — The
Editor gets to grips with a rare Anzani - engined survivor from the early days of the Thames Ditton marque / Magic Morris Minor — Alec Issigonis's postwar masterpiece is as collectable today as ever — Michael Worthington - Williams inaugurates our new series of expanded and very comprehensive Buyer's Guide / Wizardry in the land of Oz — There may not be many bushes in the Bush but you can trust Nick Baldwin to find a rusting relic / Prescott in 1950 — It's spot - the - celebrity
time as Brian Heath pores over a newly discovered hoard of old hillclimb photos / Brighton revisited — Tom Threlfall describes the other Brighton Run while Peter Corrana gives us his driving impressions of one of the most covetable contestants in the main event / Immortal Austin 7 —
Bill Boddy (who has owned nine of them) tells what it is about Herbert Austin's little wonder that keeps it at the top of the old - car parade / A summer affair For Vitoria Ainsworth — marriage meant an adventurous initiation into the joys of owning a Roesch Talbot / The real McCurd — Michael Worthington - Williams researches yet another obscure but fascinating UK motor manufacturer of the 1920s / Styled by the Wind — Touring 4 - seater lightweight bodywork on the Alfa Romeo 6C 2300B Mille Miglia was one of the first attempts at introducing aero technology to automotive coachbuilding.
Plastic Explosive — David Hawtin drives an unspoilt example of one of the first post-war British GT cars — Jensen's handsome all - glassfibre 541 / Jenks — The Last Word For
Bill Boddy memories of the little man just keep flooding back... / Barn Fresh — An astonishingly original 1914 Model T Ford provides Douglas Blain with unexpected food for thought / Racing Stars —
Bill Boddy fills in some further detail in a learned postscript to Edward Eves's recent history / MG TF Exposed — The second in our exclusive James Allington cutaways this
time of the last of the Abingdon «square riggers» / Nearly Great Marque authority — Ian Dussek tells the story of HRG one of the great British might - have - beens / Economy Class — The
Editor is charmed in spite of himself by a late - vintage Rover saloon / The Gamy Mystery — The golden years of automobile art described by Jonathon Wood.
From its witty, trenchant opening by
Times executive
editor Bill Keller to the final front - page weigh - in on the Eliot Spitzer sex scandal, much of the news «that's fit to print» is here, along with a magnifying glass (thankfully) and a three - DVD set of all the
Times front pages, with indexing and online links to complete articles.
I would rather they take the
time to actually select and approve books before
billing (to at least give the impression that they have
editors selecting content), but their method isn't out of the ordinary... it is similar to many subpar promotional networks.
He has accomplished this by assembling a staff of talented new and long -
time editors, publicists and marketing specialists; by fostering a team - oriented and inclusive work environment in which initiative and creativity are valued; and by publishing with verve and to bestsellerd books by Jonah Berger,
Bill Browder, Rinker Buck, Lisa Halliday, Chip and Dan Heath, Siri Hustvedt, Naomi Klein, Jessica Knoll, Samin Nosrat, Susan Orlean, Vaddey Ratner, Matthew Thomas and Rebecca Traister.
At the
time I was walking the floor with our
editor in chief
Bill Murphy, he was equally perplexed and interested so we decided to do what any poor - to - decent video game journalists would do... we asked someone what the hell it was.
Bill Keller, the
Times» former executive
editor, created the environmental desk in 2009 and hired Erica Goode, now a national desk reporter covering criminal justice, as its
editor.