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All aTwitter: 26 February 2021
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Sources clarify Alex Smith s GQ comments: No animosity toward organization https://t.co/Ln8iuI9Is1 NBC Sports Washington Football (@NBCSWASFootball) February 25, 2021
Tell that to @RealMikeWilbon he played his used to live in Washington greatest hits on PTI yesterday to go off based on.. really nothing Big Deal Jay (@JBisAlwaysRight) February 25, 2021
From our story on former Washington Football Team employees urging the NFL to release the findings of Beth Wilkinson s investigation: The league has not yet received Wilkinson s report, according to the NFL s Brian McCarthy (@NFLprguy). MarkMaske (@MarkMaske) February 26, 2021
drudge plunges into the crypt in search of patterns, particularly a pattern for some nice gloves.
Michael McDonald
None of the small team of
Echo drudges back then would have expected the paper to last so long and in fact be the last of the old paper newspapers left standing on the north coast.
My association with
The Echo began in its first year in 1986. I was the Tasmanian correspondent, filing whimsical stories of farm life, dubious doggerel and philosophical ramblings of an equally dubious nature, along with a cartoon series called ‘Swami Cootamundra says’, a single panel repeated each time with different tag lines purporting to be esoteric wisdom; some of which enraged readers.
L. Todd Spencer
The Washington Post seems to have a really odd sense of propriety, or more importantly, a terrible sense of who the bad guys are vs. who the good guys are.
According to Fox News, NFL coach Marty Schottenheimer was given an obituary in the Washington Post when he died during his battle with Alzheimer’s at 77. He was one of the coaches who had racked up more wins than most others
Yet, the Washington Post’s headline that reported the death read “Marty Schottenheimer, NFL coach whose teams wilted in the postseason, dies at 77,” sparking outrage and blowback:
Washington Post Changes Marty Schottenheimer Obit Headline After Backlash for ‘Cheap Shots’
Amid an outcry, the newspaper edits “wilted in the postseason” referenceLindsey Ellefson | February 9, 2021 @ 11:40 AM Last Updated: February 9, 2021 @ 11:51 AM
Getty Images
The Washington Post changed the headline on its obituary for NFL coaching legend Marty Schottenheimer after an outcry Tuesday. Its first paragraph, however, remains unchanged.
Sports fans and journalists blasted the original headline, which said, “Marty Schottenheimer, NFL coach whose teams wilted in the postseason, dies at 77.” The new headline reads, “Marty Schottenheimer, one of the NFL’s winningest coaches, dies at 77.”
The opening paragraph still says, “Marty Schottenheimer, one of the winningest coaches in the National Football League whose teams found regular-season success yet often struggled in the playoffs and failed to reach the Super Bowl, died Feb. 8 at a hospice center