Rod Stewart and Donald Trump should not be uttered in the same breath or written in the same sentence, says Boy George and other Stewart fans.
08.06.2020 - 00:15 / deadline.com
Bruce Haring pmc-editorial-managerUPDATE, JUNE 7: James Bennet, the editorial page editor of the New York Times, has resigned in the wake of a controversy over an op-ed by Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas.The op-ed by Cotton was titled “Send In The Troops.” Times staffers immediately bashed running it, and although Publisher A.G.
Sulzberger initially defended it, he backed down hours later. Sulzberger blamed it on “a significant breakdown in our editing processes.”As a result, “James and I agreed
.Rod Stewart and Donald Trump should not be uttered in the same breath or written in the same sentence, says Boy George and other Stewart fans.
resignation of the New York Times opinion editor who didn’t even read it before publishing, branded interim editor Katie Kingsbury as a “far-left radical” on Monday.Appearing on “Fox & Friends,” Cotton described Kingsbury is “a far-left radical who will throw in with, not stand up to, the woke mob of children at the New York Times who get triggered any time they hear a conservative opinion.”In contrast, Times publisher A.G.
James Bennet, who was considered a top candidate to succeed Dean Baquet as executive editor of The New York Times, has resigned from his position as editorial page editor amid an intense backlash to a column his section published on Wednesday. The column, written by a conservative Republican U.S.
NEW YORK -- The New York Times’ editorial page editor has resigned amid outrage over an op-ed by a Republican senator who advocated using federal troops to quell protests — outrage that only grew when it was revealed the editor had not read the piece before publication. The paper announced Sunday that James Bennet, who had overseen the Times' opinion pages since 2016, had stepped down effective immediately.
Brent Lang Executive Editor of Film and MediaJames Bennet has resigned as editorial page editor at the New York Times in the wake of fierce criticism by the paper’s readers and staff over the decision to publish a controversial opinion piece by U.S. Senator Tom Cotton.
writing, “From New York Times town hall: op-ed team pitched the piece TO Tom Cotton.
By Bruce Haring
The New York Times newsroom is in open rebellion over an op-ed the newspaper's opinion section published Wednesday that called for the army to be deployed into American cities to crush nationwide protests over police brutality and systemic racism. In reaction to the op-ed, written by Arkansas Senator Tom Cotton and titled "Send in the Troops," dozens of Timesstaffers began tweeting out the same message on Twitter Wednesday evening in an open show of anger and solidarity.
By Variety Staff
Multiple New York Times staff members are protesting an op-ed published in the Times by GOP Sen. Tom Cotton, writing on social media, “Running this puts Black @nytimes staff in danger” alongside a screenshot of the piece.
Food writer Alison Roman is stepping down from her weekly gig as a New York Times columnist after attacking Chrissy Teigen in a controversial interview. The blogger sparked a public spat with model and cookbook author Teigen earlier this month after criticizing her kitchenware line at U.S.
Alison Roman’s New York Times Cooking column will return despite the writer taking a temporary leave following controversial comments she made about Chrissy Teigen and Marie Kondo. A spokesperson for the New York Times told Fox News Wednesday, “It was always the plan for Alison’s leave to be temporary.
Food writer Alison Roman is stepping down from her weekly gig as a New York Times columnist after attacking Chrissy Teigen in a controversial interview.
Alison Roman is speaking out for the first time since the New York Times put her recipe column on hold on May 19, after her drama with Chrissy Teigen.
The New York Times honored the lives lost to the novel coronavirus through a powerful tribute spread on its Sunday front page. The newspaper paid tribute to the thousands of lives lost by filling their front page with the names of the victims and parts of their obituaries.
By Jordan Moreau
Chrissy Teigen isn't holding a grudge against Alison Roman and doesn't want the New York Times to either. The newspaper recently put the cooking columnist on temporary leave after Roman made some disparaging comments about Teigen's food brand, Cravings, and Netflix organizational star Marie Kondo.