WHEN I FIRST BECAME A NEWPAPERMAN, THERE WAS A CITY<br >room cliche. The reporter would come back to the office after<br >a day of chasing a story. He would sit down, go over his<br >notes, and craft his piece on deadline. A copyboy would take<br >it to the city editor, who would pass it on to the copy desk,<br >who would send it downstairs to be set in type.<br > And then the reporter would head for the bar closest to the<br >newspaper building, and his colleagues would begin to come<br >in at the end of their shifts, and they would say to him: "What<br >really happened?" And he would tell them. The story he would<br >relate in the bar often would bear little resemblance to the<br >story he had just written for the newspaper; in almost every<br >case it would be better, truer, livelier.<br > When I started writing a column, I made one resolution: I<br >would try to tell the same story in the newspaper that I would<br >want to tell my friends later on in the bar. My rule of thumb<br >was that if I succeeded in doing that, I was succeeding as a<br >reporter. That rule still seems to hold up pretty well.<br > I think of the prototypical national columnist, and I envision<br >six hundred Washington pundits sitting back in six hundred<br >easy chairs, sucking on six hundred pipes and spewing out six<br >hundred great thoughts about the MX missile debate in Con-<br >gress or the latest Supreme Court decision. It often seems that<br >if a story didn t first appear on the front page of the New York<br >Times or the Washington Post, then it just doesn t qualify as<br >news.<br ><br ><br >
發表於2024-11-19
Cheeseburgers 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載
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Cheeseburgers 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載