The Washington Post

The Washington Post, depending on who you ask, is either commie trash, a neoconservative rag desparately trying to outflank the rival (and paleoconservative) Washington Times from the right, the epitome of the worst excesses of the liberal media, Jeff Bezos's mouthpiece with its weird fact checks[1][2] and billionaire apologia,[3] or America's Newspaper of Record.TM[note 1] Since February 2017, a month after the inauguration of Donald Trump, the Post's new slogan is "Democracy Dies in Darkness" (although they claim it has nothing to do with Trump as much as it is for their paywalls)[4]

You gotta spin it to win it
Media
Stop the presses!
We want pictures
of Spider-Man!
  • Journalism
  • Newspapers
  • All articles
Extra! Extra!
  • WIGO World
v - t - e

It is most famous for the role played by two of its reporters, Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward (made famous in the film All the President's Men), in slowly exposing the Watergate scandal that led to President Richard M. Nixon's resignation. At the time, the Post was but one of three competing Washington, D.C. daily newspapers along with the Washington Star and the Washington Daily News. Their coverage of the Watergate scandal solidified the Post's dominance in the D.C. newspaper market and gained the paper national stature. They were bought by Jeff Bezos, the asshole founder of Amazon, in 2013.[5] Consequently, they also can't afford you looking at the newspaper for free so they helpfully imposed an article limit before hitting the ever-obnoxious paywall as well as bitching about your adblocker and proclaiming they will use your cookies. But, hey, at least the 2020 COVID-19 coverage is free!

Subsidiaries

From 1961 to 2010 the Post published Newsweek, America's second-largest weekly newsmagazine. Newsweek then collapsed after WaPo sold it off (admittedly, it was going downhill before then).

In 2004 the Post purchased Slate Magazine from Microsoft.

In 1984, the Post's parent company purchased Kaplan, Inc., a tutoring and educational testing service. In 2000, the Post bought an online college and renamed it Kaplan College (now Kaplan University). Like most for-profit institutions of higher education, Kaplan U. has become known more for its quest for profit than for its quest for knowledge.[6]

Columnists

An incomplete list;[7] some notable Post opinion columnists include:

Liberal columnists

  • Elizabeth Bruenig
  • E.J. Dionne, Jr.[8]
  • David Ignatius[9]
  • Ezra Klein
  • Ruth Marcus[10]
  • Dana Milbank (author of Tears of a Clown, an anti-Glenn Beck book)[11]
  • Steven Pearlstein (business columnist)
  • Eugene Robinson[12]
  • Tom Toles — political cartoonist[13]
  • Katrina vanden Heuvel
  • Paul Waldman

Conservative columnists

Since 2016, you could be forgiven for thinking that at least some of these columnists are actually liberal because of their relentless attacks on the criminality and corruption of the Trump administration.

gollark: It does look fancy, at least.
gollark: No, these are not reinterpretations, these are different rules.
gollark: Silly ones!
gollark: I mean, having studied it in some detail, I guess I understand at a high level the CraftOS architecture, but `/rom/startup`, `shell`, etc are still a mystery to me.
gollark: ```Harassing other players or staff regarding the reasoning for a mute or ban, or arguing with the terms of the mute or ban, can result in extension of the mute or ban, even permanently.```also seems ridiculous, given that amazingly enough people are not always right due to being moderators.

See also

Notes

  1. The New York Times has also been given the label, something they've vehemently disliked.

References

This article is issued from Rationalwiki. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.