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by _tfbj
4329 days ago
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Sorry, my language is harsh because I was addressing the nature of this writeup, which I labeled as "pure speculation." I work in the news industry, so I both experience and see this side of the news industry, and I don't like it. It's the un-informed PR rewrite story. Way it happens is a general-assignment person (who writes well but has no specific topic knowledge) gets an assignment to write a story. The story originates from a press release. The press release is political: (culture ministry is an office, tasked with promotion amongst things). Politician bypasses actual archeologists and scientists and then peppers the story with speculation designed to boost their office priorities and awareness. "By the way, this is probably Alexander's tomb. Very exciting." The person writing the story has no training in history, archeology or is generally aware of trends, claims and excavations. No clue what an in-situ find is. They look at the PR, look-up a few background factoids, rewrite the piece and publish it. As you walk by and ask how their morning is, they casually proclaim "did you know pp, they discovered Alexander's tomb this morning???" I cringe and walk on. |
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It is also very much worth noting that the greek prime minister himself, Samaras, said "Please be patient for a few days - for a very important archeological discovery to be made". Alexander's tomb? "I told you so". Someone else's tomb? "This is still an important discovery, blah blah blah".