Critiquing the business press right now... is a bit like critiquing the London fire department during the Blitz: All the major institutions are on fire. The press is scrambling to cover them. What are they supposed to do?...
And now it seems to me that a significant line has been crossed with a headline on the front page of this morning’s Wall Street Journal:
Worst Crisis Since ’30s, With No End Yet in Sight
The story is good, with explanations and analysis of what’s happening and why, but it’s the headline that’s important.
They say on Wall Street that no bottom can be reached without what they call “capitulation”—basically when investors give up hope that the market will recover and just sell.
For me, the flat, declarative headline on top of a news story, as opposed to opinion or analysis, on page one of the Journal is a sign that the flagship of the financial press has capitulated.
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Thursday, September 18, 2008
You Begin Where You Are
Dean Starkman at CJR on the financial market crash and the business press coverage of it:
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