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Ben Tarnoff.
Stimulating the US economy is one thing, reforming it is something else. President Biden has been bold on the first, with record re-start borrowing. But he’s sounding still bolder this month with an executive order really to redesign an unregulated, digital playing field that took its own ungainly and mismatching shape over the last two or three decades. The missing pieces are competition and regulation, Mr. Biden says. Monopoly power, pricing, and profits are the real monsters in a mess that could kill the country. That’s shorthand. But Biden’s people say there’s an “intellectual revolution” behind his remedies. It’s that revolution we mean to tease out and test this radio hour. How bad is bigness itself? Do the damages in dollars and cents have to be spelled out? Do the Biden remedies meet the Ralph Nader test?
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High-Growth Swedish Newspaper Company, Bulletin, Lands Former New York Times Executive Editor, Andrew Rosenthal, as Editor-in-Chief
April 8, 2021 GMT
High-Growth Swedish Newspaper Company, Bulletin, Lands Former New York Times Executive Editor, Andrew Rosenthal, as Editor-in-Chief
High-Growth Swedish Newspaper Company, Bulletin, Lands Former New York Times Executive Editor, Andrew Rosenthal, as Editor-in-Chief
STOCKHOLM - April 8, 2021 - ( Newswire.com )
In the three months since it debuted, Bulletin.nu - a digital newspaper based in Stockholm - has gained 9,000 subscribers and a half-million monthly readers, and has become one of the most publicized media startups in Scandinavia.
Andrew Rosenthal isnât Swedish, nor does he speak Swedish. The former editorial page editor of the
New York Times says his initial knowledge of the country was informed by shopping trips he took in the â80s, while serving as Moscow bureau chief for the APâand of the Swedish press, by what he learned from watching the
Girl With The Dragon Tattoo. But in an unlikely move, Rosenthal, who is semiretired after decades of rising through the newsroom ranks, has taken a job as the interim editor in chief of a vexed Swedish media start-up called Bulletin. âThe thing that makes it possible is that itâs not my job to figure out Swedish politics, and itâs not my job to influence the Opinion pages,â Rosenthal told me. âThe purpose here is to stand up a functioning news organization.âÂ