Vanity Fair
Fastly: Is the Internet Breaking a Sign of Things to Come? (Vanity Fair)
Submitted by benton on Wed, 06/09/2021 - 12:42Mark Meadows Is More Like Trump’s Personal Assistant than Chief of Staff, West Wingers Claim (Vanity Fair)
Submitted by benton on Wed, 10/28/2020 - 10:01How CNN's Raw, Unfolding Reagan Coverage Heralded the Nonstop News Cycle (Vanity Fair)
Submitted by benton on Sun, 05/03/2020 - 14:21The Week the Cameras Stopped: TV in the COVID-19 Era (Vanity Fair)
Submitted by benton on Wed, 04/29/2020 - 12:53Social media celebrities come under fire for bad pandemic behavior (Vanity Fair)
Submitted by benton on Tue, 04/07/2020 - 09:39“People Are Dying”: The Front Lines of the COVID-19 War Are in the World’s Media Capital (Vanity Fair)
Submitted by benton on Fri, 03/27/2020 - 10:29How Mark Zuckerberg Became the Most Reviled Man in Tech (Vanity Fair)
Submitted by benton on Thu, 11/07/2019 - 12:36Can Democrats Win Back the Internet in the Age of Trump?
As the curtain rises on the 2020 election, some Democrats worry their party is not doing enough to adapt their campaigns to modern habits, clinging instead to a naive hope that internet discourse will somehow fix itself, or that the tactics from the previous campaigns will somehow overcome the baser human instincts that gave rise to Donald Trump. A decade after Barack Obama’s campaign was heralded for its digital savvy around data and email marketing, Trump-era conservatives are now the ascendant political force of the networked internet.