irrelevant. i think it is time for lunch, you are describing a different channel than i watch. carley: he had ann applebaum on his show and didn t asks about this forum, why is that? joe: if teaching a class on media peace, put this under the section of sin of omission, the media correspondent whose initials are bs continue to embarrass himself on a scale. his question to bs one by one, he said traditional media, cnn, abc, washington post other thanning new york times, they push russia collusion. that is correct. he said they push the jussie smollett hoax, true. cleared brett kavanaugh as
Writing this column there is one complaint I get more frequently than any other.
It s that people don t know about stuff that s happening. It s not a complaint directed specifically at me - well, sometimes it is - more a general cry of existential angst at missing out on something because you didn t even know it existed.
The irony of course is that in this modern Too Much Information Age we seem to be missing more things, more than ever.
This ultimately comes down to decentralisation of information. It s similar to what has taken place in film culture, another area dear to my heart. Once there were video stores, central hubs where you could find details about new and upcoming films; now there are a dozen streaming channels where films might, or might not, appear.