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by Mz 3348 days ago
My guess:

"If it bleeds, it leads." True life drama and gossip (for lack of a better word) has always sold papers.

1 comments

I think integrity is important and I don't like the idea of attacking journalists for printing stories critical of Silicon Valley.

Overvaluation effects us all, these hundreds of millions drive up my rent, your rent and could be better allocated to other startup ventures.

I basically agree with you, but I will state that I was not attacking any journalists.

Sensationalism sells. There are both good and bad reasons behind that truism. At the moment, the publishing industry is in crisis. I see no reason to look any further than a dire need to increase sales as "motive" for a particular publication apparently revisiting this particular on-going drama repeatedly.

My sister was a journalism major in college. She was significantly involved in the school paper in high school and was awarded a journalism scholarship that helped pay for her college education. She went on to do other things and is not a journalist, though an early job of hers did involve working on a publication. I also had a class in journalism in high school (where I was disliked by the teacher for failing to be enough like my older sister, whom he had adored as a student and contributor to the school paper) and I was State Alternate for the Governor's Honors Program in Georgia in the subject of Journalism when I was 15. So, I got my toes ever so slightly wet in journalism in my teens, then, I also went down some other path instead of becoming a journalist.

I assure you, my remarks are in no way intended to be an attack on journalists.