Improbable Research makes people laugh first and think afterwards. The Improbable Research group publishes a magazine is called the Annals of Improbable Research, and administers the Ig Nobel Prizes – honouring achievements that first make people laugh, and then make them think. mini-AIR – their free monthly e-mail newsletter, is thought provoking and hysterically funny. [...]
Posts Tagged ‘The Observer’
Facts vs. Rage
Posted: by Rudy Nadler-Nir in Anthrodigital, Archetypes, Learning from others, Narratives, TheoriesTags: a tale Told by an idiot, Blackhawk helicopter, Cybersecurity Chief, EBM, Evidence-based Management, F/R ratio, Facts-to-Rage ratio, Half-Truths, Hard Facts, Henry McDonald, Ig Nobel Prize, Improbable Research, Jeffrey Pfeffer, Jim Spellman, Josh Marshall, Lidija Davis, Macbeth, metafilter.com, mini-AIR, Predator drones, readwriteweb.com, Robert I. Sutton, Rod Beckstrom, Rome Hartman, Siobhan Gorman, Talking Points Memo, The Observer, The Wall Street Journal, TMP, Truman Capote, William Shakespeare, ‘feeling’ words
0
postscript: Print media: dead as a parrot
Posted: by Rudy Nadler-Nir in Anthrodigital, Archetypes, Narratives, So satisfyingTags: Alan Rusbridge, content and context, content-neutral editors, Guardian.co.uk, guerrilla journalism, newsdesk, Press Gazette, subject-specific pods, The Guardian, The Observer
After this piece was published, I read what Alan Rusbridge, the editor-in-chief of The Guardian, The Observer and Guardian.co.uk had to say about the new structure his team plans to implement across the three publications. Speaking to Press Gazette, Rusbridge explained how the three publications’ news, business and sport staff will form a single team and [...]