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'What a pity it is you're not a writer of stories!' he said, putting his hand on the Time Traveller's shoulder.
"The Time Machine" - H. G. Wells
The Editor filled a glass of champagne, and pushed it towards him.
"The Time Machine" - H. G. Wells
The music editor of the New York Times was quite surprised to get Mr. Smedley's letter, but he believed in the freedom of the press and had it printed on the theatrical and musical page of the paper.
"The Cricket in Times Square" - George Selden
JK Simmons played the Publisher of The Daily Bugle (and one of Marvel’s most popular supporting characters) in the first few Spider-Man movies. A few other actors who’ve played newspaper magnates:
Cary Grant in His Girl Friday. D: Howard Hawks (1940). His best performance and one of the funniest ever as a man who will use any underhanded scheme to keep his ex-wife and star reporter (Rosalind Russell) from marrying an insurance salesman and worse, leaving the paper. When he tricks her into covering one last story, he tears up the front page for it – “Take Hitler and stick him on the funny pages!....No, no, leave the rooster story. That’s human interest!”
Orson Welles in Citizen Kane. D: Orson Welles (1941). As a young millionaire who becomes a press baron (“I think it would be fun to run a newspaper”) and becomes even richer by pushing sensationalism (“Mr. Carter, if the headline is big enough it makes the news big enough.”) Welles played a Great Man (based on William Randolph Hearst) in a great movie that was also a lot of fun.
Jason Robards in All the President’s Men. D: Alan J. Pakula (1976). Robards plays Ben Bradlee, Executive Editor of the Washington Post, when the Watergate story breaks who tells Bob Woodward (Robert Redford) and Carl Bernstein (Dustin Hoffman) “Nothing’s riding on this except the first amendment to the Constitution, freedom of the press, and maybe the future of the country. Not that any of that matters, but if you guys f--- up again, I’m going to get mad. Goodnight.”
Peter Sarsgaard in Shattered Glass. D: Billy Ray (2003). Sarsgaard plays Charles Lane, a reporter for the prestigious magazine The New Republic promoted to editor just in time to confront a journalistic nightmare – one of his star reporters Stephen Glass (Hayden Christensen) has falsified at least one story. As he investigates with Glass at his side (“I didn’t do anything wrong Chuck.” “I really wish you’d stop saying that.”) it’s a stomach-churning story of bad news progressively getting worse.
Michael Keaton in Spotlight. D: Tom McCarthy (2015). The editor of the Boston Globe’s Spotlight investigative team takes on a story of a pedophile priest who was moved to several parishes by Catholic Church officials and the story grows exponentially as they dig deeper. This salute to journalism’s ability to make a difference is also an examination of the many difficult decisions that need to be made to break an important story. And while it’s not Keaton’s showiest performance, it might be his best.
This Horace Greeley Issue stamp features a portrait of Horace Greeley, newspaper editor and politician.
(via 4c Horace Greeley single | National Postal Museum)
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शुजात बुखारी हत्याकांड: एक संदिग्ध को पुलिस ने किया गिरफ्तार, पिस्टल हुई बरामद
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CAIRO | Egypt editor suggests more presidential terms for el-Sissi
New Post has been published on https://is.gd/BzDujZ
CAIRO | Egypt editor suggests more presidential terms for el-Sissi
CAIRO (AP) — A top newspaper editor known to be close to President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi is hinting in a column published on Sunday that the Egyptian leader should be allowed to rule beyond the maximum two, four-year terms set by the country’s 2014 constitution.
Yasser Rizq, chairman of the state-owned al-Akhbar daily, did not explicitly call for amending the constitutional clause limiting the number of terms a president can serve, but argued that time is running short for the emergence of another leader who “can shoulder the responsibilities of a head of state in a country of Egypt’s weight and prestige.”
El-Sissi led the military’s 2013 ouster of Mohammed Morsi, an Islamist president whose one-year rule proved divisive. He was elected to office a year later and, running virtually unopposed, won a second term in an election in March with 97 percent of the vote.
His rise to power in 2013 was greeted with popular adulation and hope, but he is believed to have lost much of that support by introducing far-reaching reforms to overhaul the economy that sent prices soaring beyond the reach of many Egyptians.
The latest hike in prices came last week when the government raised by up to 250 percent fares on the Cairo subway. On Saturday, there were scattered protests by commuters at several stations. At least 21 people were arrested after commuters chanted anti-government slogans, jumped over electronic ticket gates to avoid paying and scuffled with police to avoid arrest. They were the first known acts of protest against el-Sissi’s economic policies.
A general-turned-president, el-Sissi has repeatedly said he would not stay in office any longer than Egyptians wanted him to and that he was not in favor of amending the constitutional limit on the number of terms a president can serve.
El-Sissi has also said that being a president was not something he sought, but that he was rather “summoned” by Egyptians to lead the nation at a time of an existential threat; political parlance for the upheavals that followed a 2011 uprising, the rule of Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood and the civil strife el-Sissi’s supporters contend would have engulfed the country had Morsi stayed in power.
Suggestions that el-Sissi be allowed to stay in office beyond eight years are not new — they were made last year by loyal lawmakers and media figures before they abruptly ended — but Rizq’s renewal of the topic carries additional weight because of his closeness to the president.
Rizq lamented in Sunday’s carefully worded column the absence of qualified individuals emerging from political forces that Egyptians could rally around, and who would also enjoy the support of the military and other state institutions.
“The political field in the near-term future looks barren and arid at a time when the constitution limits a presidential term to four years,” he wrote. “It’s my belief that President el-Sissi, as well as public opinion, are worried about the future of leadership after the end of the second term.”
“No one wants to constitutionalize absolute rule but, at the same time, no one is ready to accept that its clauses be the guillotine of the popular will,” Rizq wrote. He said the concern over Egypt’s political future is compounded by calls for reconciliation with the now-outlawed Brotherhood and attempts by supporters of Gamal Mubarak, son and one-time heir apparent of ousted autocrat Hosni Mubarak, to return to the political scene.
Since 2013, el-Sissi has overseen the biggest crackdown on critics in living memory, jailing thousands of Morsi supporters as well as some of the iconic activists behind the 2011 uprising that toppled Mubarak. He has rolled back many of the freedoms won by the uprising, silenced most dissenting voices in the media and placed severe restrictions on civil society groups.
Authorities have intimidated or jailed potentially serious challengers in the March presidential election, leaving el-Sissi to run against an obscure politician who stepped into the race in the last minute to save the government the embarrassment of a one-candidate election.
By HAMZA HENDAWI , By Associated Press – published on STL.News by St. Louis Media, LLC(R.A)