including copy editors worldwide trying to read his tweets. i presume he went into office calling the cia nazis. this is a pretty weird thing to go to the intelligence committee to begin with. the drip of leaks is originating from the intelligence community more than elected officials or anything like that. this i believe is in advance of whatever shoe drops next from the intelligence committee. that s where the most damning of leaks have been and they ve all been there along the russian connection. i thing he s trying to preemptively discredit whatever information comes out next through intelligence leaks as laundered through the fake media. talking about the quote/unquote fake media. talking about shoes dropping. we have the reveal, at least in the last hour, of a change in the schedule for president trump, and president trump will now be having a meal with more people, most notably here was the attorney general joining him. we re just getting another note just this moment here
was the greatest newspaper in the world. it s remarkable. there s messages like that, and the fact is that some on the floor the best times reporter are the best reporters in the country. the underline i is that as a time reporter is that copy editors never change and never leave. now, you have the idea that president trump does not need to allow some major news organization to have seats in the white house press room and does not need to deal with the media all that much. i know that he has his own meg phone, but isn t that giving up the giant one? well. i wonder if you need to have the first two rows and i think that it s unhealthy and my
been with the new yorker for a decade and caught a mistake in a book beginning to excerpt and this is unusual because the book had been through the editing and a note came back and said who is this woman and will she come live with me. and mary says i m still available. and it is a joy to welcome mary norris author of a book about language and life at the new yorker entitled between you and me confessions of a comma queen. welcome, mary. thank you. it is so nice to be here. and so a lot of times, writers dislike the process that happens with the copy editors. tell the writers out there, why they should embrace that process? well we are only trying to make you look your best. i prefer to think of us as gad flies, not gnats.
intensity. it was a damp and chilly afternoon so i decided to put on my sweatshirt. you put an exclamation point after sweatshirt. that is correct. i felt that the character doesn t like to be chilly. i see. i pulled the lever on the machine but the clark bar didn t come out. again exclamation point. and it can be frustrating how you put quarters and quarters into a machine. get rid of the exclamation points, i hate exclamation points. grammar, and too often the copy editors considered the nat of the publishing and they help the writers become the best they can be and there is no copy editors than those at the new yorker and mary norris that has
looking for isaiah spencer, but there was no mention about any change in protocol or further detail about exactly how he was let go. so let s talk about this with criminal defense attorney, holly hughes. my first thought, knowing this was a clerical error, i m thinking, okay, well, we have copy editors here at cnn, right, just so we have another set of eyes. listen, we all make mistakes. absolutely. i m wondering with clerks, do they not have someone looking over their shoulder saying that needed an extra 3 in 33 months. no, what you need to picture is, i don t know how many pleas they took this day, but on any given day when a plea and arraignment calendar happens, brooke, you can take maybe 15 to 30 pleas. so everyone there is just cranking it out. going very very fast. and a clerk will fill in that information, pass up an order for the judge to sign. and the judge is just going to sign it and keep moving. they re not going to stop and pause and read every single detail. so l