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	<title>Observer &#187; Doug Simmons</title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; Doug Simmons</title>
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		<title>The Liars&#8217; Club: An Incomplete History of Untruths and Consequences</title>

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		<pubDate>Mon, 06 Mar 2006 18:06:07 -0400</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>Last week, <em>Village Voice</em> senior associate editor Nick Sylvester became the latest poster boy for journalistic malfeasance when it was revealed that he had fabricated part of a cover story for <i>The Voice</i>. The paper acted swiftly, suspending Sylvester, printing a <a href="http://villagevoice.com/news/0610,news,72372,2.html">letter of apology</a>, and removing the offending story from its website. (A widely linked cached version of the story seems to no longer be available.)  <i>Voice</i> managing editor Doug Simmons has <a href="http://www.thenation.com/blogs/notion?bid=15">professed</a> his affection for Sylvester and his willingness to cut the writer some slack since "The thought of firing him is a painful one for me." (Full disclosure: I worked at the <i>Voice</i> before Sylvester arrived and was fired by Simmons.)</p>
<p>Has Sylvester ruined his career? What follows is a survey of other writers who couldn't resist going for a little something extra. Some of them fabricated, some plagiarized, some composited where they had no business doing so. Nick Sylvester's future is far from written (early retirement? a novel? a career in Hollywood? law school?), but if these writers are any guide, he'll probably be just fine. He's young, white, and Ivy League-educated, so he probably won't wind up selling shoes in Michigan like Janet Cooke. &mdash;<i>Matt Haber</i></p>
<p><b>Update: </b> <i>The Black Table</i> got there a few scandals ago. It can be found <a href="http://www.blacktable.com/gillin030520.htm">here</a>.</p>
<p><big><b>The Accused</b> Mike Barnicle</big></p>
<p><b>Crime Against Journalism</b> Fabrication; plagiarism</p>
<p><b>Rap Sheet</b> Barnicle, a columnist for <i>The Boston Globe</i>, faced accusations of plagiarism and fabrication for years before a 1995 story about two kids dying of cancer was determined to be a fraud. (See: <a href="http://www.salon.com/media/1998/08/20media.html"><b>Repeat Offender</b></a>, by Tom Mashberg, <i>Salon</i>, August 20, 1998.) Dan Kennedy of <i>The Boston Phoenix</i> unearthed <a href="http://www.bostonphoenix.com/archive/features/98/08/20/BARNICLE_VS_LIEBLING.html">similarities</a> between Barnicle's writing and A.J. Liebling's from 1986. He was also accused of borrowing <a href="http://www.boston-online.com/barnicle/">observations</a> from comedian George Carlin.</p>
<p><b>Plea</b> Sloppiness; Laziness.</p>
<p><b>Sentence</b> Resignation from <i>The Boston Globe</i> in 1998.</p>
<p><b>Afterlife</b> After a brief period, Barnicle returned to writing, first for <i>The New York Daily News</i> and then for <i>The Boston Herald</i>.</p>
<p><b>Hollywood Ending</b> None.</p>
<p><big><b>The Accused</b> Jayson Blair</big></p>
<p><b>Crime Against Journalism</b> Fabrication; Plagiarism</p>
<p><b>Rap Sheet</b> Starting in April 2003, several stories written by Blair, a <i>New York Times</i> reporter, were called into question after a reporter for <i>The San Antonio Express-News</i> noticed similarities between a piece by Blair and one of her own. After a <i>Times</i> investigation, it was revealed that Blair had fabricated details and quotes in several stories. (See: <i>Hard News: The Scandals at</i> The New York Times<i> and Their Meaning for America</i>, by Seth Mnookin.)</p>
<p><b>Plea</b> Mental health problems; exhaustion; bad diet.</p>
<p><b>Sentence</b> Fired.</p>
<p><b>Afterlife</b> Blair went on to write <i>Buring Down My Masters' House</i> and currently runs <a href="http://www.jayson-blair.com/about.htm">Azure Entertainment Corporation</a>.</p>
<p><b>Hollywood Ending</b> In 2003, Mnookin's <i>Newsweek</i> stories about Blair were optioned by Showtime for "a black comedy" to be written and produced by Jon Maas.</p>
<p><big><b>The Accused</b> Nik Cohn</big></p>
<p><b>Crime Against Journalism</b> Fabrication</p>
<p><b>Rap Sheet</b> In 1976, Cohn wrote "The Tribal Rites of the New Saturday Night" for <i>New York</i> magazine, a story about outer-borough discos and a working class young man who frequents them. In 1997, Cohn admitted he'd invented much of the story.</p>
<p><b>Plea</b> As a Brit living in America, Cohn claimed he couldn't find his story in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, "So I faked it. I conjured up the story of the figure in the doorway, and named him Vincent... I wrote it all up. And presented it as fact." (See: <a href="http://www.eonline.com/News/Items/Pf/0,1527,2190,00.html"><b>Writer Admits Faking "Saturday Night Fever" Story</b></a>, by Marcus Errico, E! Online)</p>
<p><b>Sentence</b> None.</p>
<p><b>Afterlife</b> Cohn was caught up in a drug sting in 1983, but continued to write. His most recent book, <i>Triksta: Life and Death and New Orleans Rap</i>, came out in 2005.</p>
<p><b>Hollywood Ending</b> "The Tribal Rites of the New Saturday Night" was turned into the film <i>Saturday Night Fever</i> in 1977 and went on to <a href="http://boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=saturdaynightfever.htm">gross</a>  $237,113,184 worldwide.</p>
<p><big><b>The Accused</b> Janet Cooke</big></p>
<p><b>Crime Against Journalism</b> Fabrication</p>
<p><b>Rap Sheet</b> Cooke won a Pulitzer Prize in 1981 for "Jimmy's World," a <i>Washington Post</i> article about an 8-year-old junkie. The article caused a sensation despite the fact that Jimmy did not exist. (See: <b>Janet's World</b>, by Mike Sager, <i>GQ</i>, June 1996.)</p>
<p><b>Plea</b> Pressure</p>
<p><b>Sentence</b> Cooke resigned; <i>The Post</i> returned the Pulitzer.</p>
<p><b>Afterlife</b> Cooke left journalism and became a saleswoman in Michigan.</p>
<p><b>Hollywood Ending</b> Sager sold the film rights for his article to Columbia Tri-Star for $1.6 million.</p>
<p><big><b>The Accused</b> Michael Finkel</big></p>
<p><b>Crime Against Journalism</b> Compositing</p>
<p><b>Rap Sheet</b> Finkel, a writer for <i>The New York Times Magazine</i>, created a composite character in his November 18, 2002 story "Is Yousouf Mal&eacute; A Slave?" Some also questioned the veracity of other stories he'd written for the magazine. (See: <a href="http://www.newyorkmetro.com/nymetro/news/media/features/5740/"><b>The Great Pretender</b></a>, by Robert Kolker, <i>New York</i>, March 4, 2002.)</p>
<p><b>Plea</b> Overreaching; Literary ambition.</p>
<p><b>Sentence</b> Fired. <i>The Times</i> was forced to run an extensive correction.</p>
<p><b>Afterlife</b> Finkel went on to write <i>True Story: Murder, Memoir, Mea Culpa</i>, an autobiographical story of his career and a murderer who borrowed his identity. The book was excerpted in <i>Vanity Fair</i> in June 2005.</p>
<p><b>Hollywood Ending</b> Plan B, Brad Pitt's production company, optioned <i>True Story</i> in 2005.</p>
<p><big><b>The Accused</b> Stephen Glass</big></p>
<p><b>Crime Against Journalism</b> Fabrication</p>
<p><b>Rap Sheet</b> Starting in 1996, Glass fabricated numerous subjects, situations, and details in pieces he wrote for <i>The New Republic</i> (where he was an associate editor), <i>Harper's</i>, <i>Rolling Stone</i>, <i>George</i>, and <i>Policy Review</i>. When a <i>TNR</i> story he wrote called "Hack Heaven" was called into question by an editor at <i>Forbes Digital Tool</i>, Glass went so far as to create a fake website for a company he made up and had his brother leave voice mails for his editor as one of his subjects. (See <b>Shattered Glass</b>, by Buzz Bissinger, <i>Vanity Fair</i>, September 1998.)</p>
<p><b>Plea</b> Youth. Desire to be liked.</p>
<p><b>Sentence</b> Two year suspension from <i>TNR</i> that became a de-facto firing by then editor Charles Lane.</p>
<p><b>Afterlife</b> Went to law school, wrote a novel based on his experience called <i>The Fabulist</i> in 2003.</p>
<p><b>Hollywood Ending</b> Hayden Christensen starred in <i>Shattered Glass</i> in 2003.</p>
<p><big><b>The Accused</b> Rodney Rothman</big></p>
<p><b>Crime Against Journalism</b> Fabrication.</p>
<p><b>Rap Sheet</b> In the November 27, 2000 issue of <i>The New Yorker</i>, Rothman, a former head writer for <i>Late Show with David Letterman</i>, fudged details of his experience infiltrating a dotcom in "My Fake Job." Rothman neglected to mention in the article that the company he walked into and pretended to work for employed his mother and invented details. (See: <a href="http://archives.cnn.com/2000/US/12/05/newyorker.apology.ap/"><b>Magazine apologizes for article with made-up details</b></a>, AP, December 5, 2000.)</p>
<p><b>Plea</b> The article was intended as a humor piece. </p>
<p><b>Sentence</b> <i>The New Yorker</i> was forced to issue an apology.</p>
<p><b>Afterlife</b> "My Fake Job" was included in <i>The Best American Nonrequired Reading 2002</i> (edited by Dave Eggers). Rothman went on to produce <i>Undeclared</i> and the short-lived sitcom <i>Committed</i>. He also wrote the well-received memoir <i>Early Bird</i> in 2005.</p>
<p><b>Hollywood Ending</b> UTA shopped "My Fake Job" to studios in 2000.</p>
<p><big><b>The Accused</b> Ruth Shalit</big></p>
<p><b>Crime Against Journalism</b> Plagiarism </p>
<p><b>Rap Sheet</b> Shalit, also an associate editor at <i>The New Republic</i>, used several passages of other writers' works in articles about the Justice Department.  (See: <a href="http://archives.cjr.org/year/95/4/plagiarize.asp"><b>Plagiarize, Plagiarize, Plagiarize... Only Be Sure to Call It Research</b></a>, by Trudy Lieberman, <i>CJR</i>, July/August 1995.) <i>The Washington Post</i> also accused her of playing fast and loose with facts in a story she wrote about the paper's affirmative action policies. She also may have borrowed another writer's phrasing for a <i>New York Times Magazine</i> profile of Bob Dole in 1995. (See: <b><a href="http://www.motherjones.com/news/outfront/1996/01/outfront_dole.html">Repeat Offender</a></b>, <i>Mother Jones</i>, January/February 1996.)</p>
<p><b>Plea</b> Computer malfunction, mixing up her "research" with her own writing.</p>
<p><b>Sentence</b> Fired by <i>TNR</i>.</p>
<p><b>Afterlife</b> Shalit left journalism to work in advertising for a time but returned, writing occasionally for <a href="http://dir.salon.com/topics/ruth_shalit/index.html"><i>Salon</i></a>, <i>Details</i>, and <i>Elle</i>, where according to her <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2004/09/05/fashion/weddings/05SHAL.html?ex=1141707600&amp;en=2b790b4a2448f329&amp;ei=5070">wedding announcement</a> in <i>The New York Times</i>, she is a contributing writer.</p>
<p><b>Hollywood Ending</b> None, but according to <a href="http://www.laobserved.com/archive/002366.html">LA Observed</a>, she is married to Robertson Barrett, a producer for a company called Reality Pictures in Los Angeles.</p>
<p><big><b>The Accused</b> Patricia Smith</big></p>
<p><b>Crime Against Journalism</b> Fabrication</p>
<p><b>Rap Sheet</b> Smith, a columnist for <i>The Boston Globe</i>, invented quotes and subjects in four columns in 1998. (See: <a href="http://www.cnn.com/US/9806/19/globe.columnist.resigns/"><b>Boston Globe columnist resigns, accused of fabrications</b></a>, CNN, June 19, 1998.)</p>
<p><b>Plea</b> Inability to create humans from whole cloth: "I attributed quotes to people who didn't exist," Smith wrote in her final column. "I could give them names, even occupations, but I couldn't give them what they needed most&mdash;a heartbeat."</p>
<p><b>Sentence</b> Resigned.</p>
<p><b>Afterlife</b> Smith continues to write poetry, publishing several books.</p>
<p><b>Hollywood Ending</b> None.</p>
<p><big><b>The Accused</b> Elizabeth Wurtzel</big></p>
<p><b>Crime Against Journalism</b> Plagiarism</p>
<p><b>Rap Sheet</b> In 1988, Wurtzel was accused of lifting passages from another writer's work in her work in <i>The Dallas Morning News</i>. (See: <a href="http://www.salon.com/weekly/plagiarism960722.html"><b>Beg, Borrow, Or...</b></a>, by Dwight Garner, <i>Salon</i>, July 22, 1996.)</p>
<p><b>Plea</b> None.</p>
<p><b>Sentence</b> Fired from <i>The Dallas Morning News</i>.</p>
<p><b>Afterlife</b> After her firing, Wurtzel managed to become the music critic for <i>New York</i>, <i>The New Yorker</i>, and publish the memoir <i>Prozac Nation</i> in 1997. (That book also faced accusations of fabrications). In 2004, Wurtzel was accepted by Yale Law School.</p>
<p><b>Hollywood Ending</b> The film version of Wurtzel's <i>Prozac Nation</i> was made in 2001 but didn't appear in the U.S. until 2005 when it went direct to cable.</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Last week, <em>Village Voice</em> senior associate editor Nick Sylvester became the latest poster boy for journalistic malfeasance when it was revealed that he had fabricated part of a cover story for <i>The Voice</i>. The paper acted swiftly, suspending Sylvester, printing a <a href="http://villagevoice.com/news/0610,news,72372,2.html">letter of apology</a>, and removing the offending story from its website. (A widely linked cached version of the story seems to no longer be available.)  <i>Voice</i> managing editor Doug Simmons has <a href="http://www.thenation.com/blogs/notion?bid=15">professed</a> his affection for Sylvester and his willingness to cut the writer some slack since "The thought of firing him is a painful one for me." (Full disclosure: I worked at the <i>Voice</i> before Sylvester arrived and was fired by Simmons.)</p>
<p>Has Sylvester ruined his career? What follows is a survey of other writers who couldn't resist going for a little something extra. Some of them fabricated, some plagiarized, some composited where they had no business doing so. Nick Sylvester's future is far from written (early retirement? a novel? a career in Hollywood? law school?), but if these writers are any guide, he'll probably be just fine. He's young, white, and Ivy League-educated, so he probably won't wind up selling shoes in Michigan like Janet Cooke. &mdash;<i>Matt Haber</i></p>
<p><b>Update: </b> <i>The Black Table</i> got there a few scandals ago. It can be found <a href="http://www.blacktable.com/gillin030520.htm">here</a>.</p>
<p><big><b>The Accused</b> Mike Barnicle</big></p>
<p><b>Crime Against Journalism</b> Fabrication; plagiarism</p>
<p><b>Rap Sheet</b> Barnicle, a columnist for <i>The Boston Globe</i>, faced accusations of plagiarism and fabrication for years before a 1995 story about two kids dying of cancer was determined to be a fraud. (See: <a href="http://www.salon.com/media/1998/08/20media.html"><b>Repeat Offender</b></a>, by Tom Mashberg, <i>Salon</i>, August 20, 1998.) Dan Kennedy of <i>The Boston Phoenix</i> unearthed <a href="http://www.bostonphoenix.com/archive/features/98/08/20/BARNICLE_VS_LIEBLING.html">similarities</a> between Barnicle's writing and A.J. Liebling's from 1986. He was also accused of borrowing <a href="http://www.boston-online.com/barnicle/">observations</a> from comedian George Carlin.</p>
<p><b>Plea</b> Sloppiness; Laziness.</p>
<p><b>Sentence</b> Resignation from <i>The Boston Globe</i> in 1998.</p>
<p><b>Afterlife</b> After a brief period, Barnicle returned to writing, first for <i>The New York Daily News</i> and then for <i>The Boston Herald</i>.</p>
<p><b>Hollywood Ending</b> None.</p>
<p><big><b>The Accused</b> Jayson Blair</big></p>
<p><b>Crime Against Journalism</b> Fabrication; Plagiarism</p>
<p><b>Rap Sheet</b> Starting in April 2003, several stories written by Blair, a <i>New York Times</i> reporter, were called into question after a reporter for <i>The San Antonio Express-News</i> noticed similarities between a piece by Blair and one of her own. After a <i>Times</i> investigation, it was revealed that Blair had fabricated details and quotes in several stories. (See: <i>Hard News: The Scandals at</i> The New York Times<i> and Their Meaning for America</i>, by Seth Mnookin.)</p>
<p><b>Plea</b> Mental health problems; exhaustion; bad diet.</p>
<p><b>Sentence</b> Fired.</p>
<p><b>Afterlife</b> Blair went on to write <i>Buring Down My Masters' House</i> and currently runs <a href="http://www.jayson-blair.com/about.htm">Azure Entertainment Corporation</a>.</p>
<p><b>Hollywood Ending</b> In 2003, Mnookin's <i>Newsweek</i> stories about Blair were optioned by Showtime for "a black comedy" to be written and produced by Jon Maas.</p>
<p><big><b>The Accused</b> Nik Cohn</big></p>
<p><b>Crime Against Journalism</b> Fabrication</p>
<p><b>Rap Sheet</b> In 1976, Cohn wrote "The Tribal Rites of the New Saturday Night" for <i>New York</i> magazine, a story about outer-borough discos and a working class young man who frequents them. In 1997, Cohn admitted he'd invented much of the story.</p>
<p><b>Plea</b> As a Brit living in America, Cohn claimed he couldn't find his story in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, "So I faked it. I conjured up the story of the figure in the doorway, and named him Vincent... I wrote it all up. And presented it as fact." (See: <a href="http://www.eonline.com/News/Items/Pf/0,1527,2190,00.html"><b>Writer Admits Faking "Saturday Night Fever" Story</b></a>, by Marcus Errico, E! Online)</p>
<p><b>Sentence</b> None.</p>
<p><b>Afterlife</b> Cohn was caught up in a drug sting in 1983, but continued to write. His most recent book, <i>Triksta: Life and Death and New Orleans Rap</i>, came out in 2005.</p>
<p><b>Hollywood Ending</b> "The Tribal Rites of the New Saturday Night" was turned into the film <i>Saturday Night Fever</i> in 1977 and went on to <a href="http://boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=saturdaynightfever.htm">gross</a>  $237,113,184 worldwide.</p>
<p><big><b>The Accused</b> Janet Cooke</big></p>
<p><b>Crime Against Journalism</b> Fabrication</p>
<p><b>Rap Sheet</b> Cooke won a Pulitzer Prize in 1981 for "Jimmy's World," a <i>Washington Post</i> article about an 8-year-old junkie. The article caused a sensation despite the fact that Jimmy did not exist. (See: <b>Janet's World</b>, by Mike Sager, <i>GQ</i>, June 1996.)</p>
<p><b>Plea</b> Pressure</p>
<p><b>Sentence</b> Cooke resigned; <i>The Post</i> returned the Pulitzer.</p>
<p><b>Afterlife</b> Cooke left journalism and became a saleswoman in Michigan.</p>
<p><b>Hollywood Ending</b> Sager sold the film rights for his article to Columbia Tri-Star for $1.6 million.</p>
<p><big><b>The Accused</b> Michael Finkel</big></p>
<p><b>Crime Against Journalism</b> Compositing</p>
<p><b>Rap Sheet</b> Finkel, a writer for <i>The New York Times Magazine</i>, created a composite character in his November 18, 2002 story "Is Yousouf Mal&eacute; A Slave?" Some also questioned the veracity of other stories he'd written for the magazine. (See: <a href="http://www.newyorkmetro.com/nymetro/news/media/features/5740/"><b>The Great Pretender</b></a>, by Robert Kolker, <i>New York</i>, March 4, 2002.)</p>
<p><b>Plea</b> Overreaching; Literary ambition.</p>
<p><b>Sentence</b> Fired. <i>The Times</i> was forced to run an extensive correction.</p>
<p><b>Afterlife</b> Finkel went on to write <i>True Story: Murder, Memoir, Mea Culpa</i>, an autobiographical story of his career and a murderer who borrowed his identity. The book was excerpted in <i>Vanity Fair</i> in June 2005.</p>
<p><b>Hollywood Ending</b> Plan B, Brad Pitt's production company, optioned <i>True Story</i> in 2005.</p>
<p><big><b>The Accused</b> Stephen Glass</big></p>
<p><b>Crime Against Journalism</b> Fabrication</p>
<p><b>Rap Sheet</b> Starting in 1996, Glass fabricated numerous subjects, situations, and details in pieces he wrote for <i>The New Republic</i> (where he was an associate editor), <i>Harper's</i>, <i>Rolling Stone</i>, <i>George</i>, and <i>Policy Review</i>. When a <i>TNR</i> story he wrote called "Hack Heaven" was called into question by an editor at <i>Forbes Digital Tool</i>, Glass went so far as to create a fake website for a company he made up and had his brother leave voice mails for his editor as one of his subjects. (See <b>Shattered Glass</b>, by Buzz Bissinger, <i>Vanity Fair</i>, September 1998.)</p>
<p><b>Plea</b> Youth. Desire to be liked.</p>
<p><b>Sentence</b> Two year suspension from <i>TNR</i> that became a de-facto firing by then editor Charles Lane.</p>
<p><b>Afterlife</b> Went to law school, wrote a novel based on his experience called <i>The Fabulist</i> in 2003.</p>
<p><b>Hollywood Ending</b> Hayden Christensen starred in <i>Shattered Glass</i> in 2003.</p>
<p><big><b>The Accused</b> Rodney Rothman</big></p>
<p><b>Crime Against Journalism</b> Fabrication.</p>
<p><b>Rap Sheet</b> In the November 27, 2000 issue of <i>The New Yorker</i>, Rothman, a former head writer for <i>Late Show with David Letterman</i>, fudged details of his experience infiltrating a dotcom in "My Fake Job." Rothman neglected to mention in the article that the company he walked into and pretended to work for employed his mother and invented details. (See: <a href="http://archives.cnn.com/2000/US/12/05/newyorker.apology.ap/"><b>Magazine apologizes for article with made-up details</b></a>, AP, December 5, 2000.)</p>
<p><b>Plea</b> The article was intended as a humor piece. </p>
<p><b>Sentence</b> <i>The New Yorker</i> was forced to issue an apology.</p>
<p><b>Afterlife</b> "My Fake Job" was included in <i>The Best American Nonrequired Reading 2002</i> (edited by Dave Eggers). Rothman went on to produce <i>Undeclared</i> and the short-lived sitcom <i>Committed</i>. He also wrote the well-received memoir <i>Early Bird</i> in 2005.</p>
<p><b>Hollywood Ending</b> UTA shopped "My Fake Job" to studios in 2000.</p>
<p><big><b>The Accused</b> Ruth Shalit</big></p>
<p><b>Crime Against Journalism</b> Plagiarism </p>
<p><b>Rap Sheet</b> Shalit, also an associate editor at <i>The New Republic</i>, used several passages of other writers' works in articles about the Justice Department.  (See: <a href="http://archives.cjr.org/year/95/4/plagiarize.asp"><b>Plagiarize, Plagiarize, Plagiarize... Only Be Sure to Call It Research</b></a>, by Trudy Lieberman, <i>CJR</i>, July/August 1995.) <i>The Washington Post</i> also accused her of playing fast and loose with facts in a story she wrote about the paper's affirmative action policies. She also may have borrowed another writer's phrasing for a <i>New York Times Magazine</i> profile of Bob Dole in 1995. (See: <b><a href="http://www.motherjones.com/news/outfront/1996/01/outfront_dole.html">Repeat Offender</a></b>, <i>Mother Jones</i>, January/February 1996.)</p>
<p><b>Plea</b> Computer malfunction, mixing up her "research" with her own writing.</p>
<p><b>Sentence</b> Fired by <i>TNR</i>.</p>
<p><b>Afterlife</b> Shalit left journalism to work in advertising for a time but returned, writing occasionally for <a href="http://dir.salon.com/topics/ruth_shalit/index.html"><i>Salon</i></a>, <i>Details</i>, and <i>Elle</i>, where according to her <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2004/09/05/fashion/weddings/05SHAL.html?ex=1141707600&amp;en=2b790b4a2448f329&amp;ei=5070">wedding announcement</a> in <i>The New York Times</i>, she is a contributing writer.</p>
<p><b>Hollywood Ending</b> None, but according to <a href="http://www.laobserved.com/archive/002366.html">LA Observed</a>, she is married to Robertson Barrett, a producer for a company called Reality Pictures in Los Angeles.</p>
<p><big><b>The Accused</b> Patricia Smith</big></p>
<p><b>Crime Against Journalism</b> Fabrication</p>
<p><b>Rap Sheet</b> Smith, a columnist for <i>The Boston Globe</i>, invented quotes and subjects in four columns in 1998. (See: <a href="http://www.cnn.com/US/9806/19/globe.columnist.resigns/"><b>Boston Globe columnist resigns, accused of fabrications</b></a>, CNN, June 19, 1998.)</p>
<p><b>Plea</b> Inability to create humans from whole cloth: "I attributed quotes to people who didn't exist," Smith wrote in her final column. "I could give them names, even occupations, but I couldn't give them what they needed most&mdash;a heartbeat."</p>
<p><b>Sentence</b> Resigned.</p>
<p><b>Afterlife</b> Smith continues to write poetry, publishing several books.</p>
<p><b>Hollywood Ending</b> None.</p>
<p><big><b>The Accused</b> Elizabeth Wurtzel</big></p>
<p><b>Crime Against Journalism</b> Plagiarism</p>
<p><b>Rap Sheet</b> In 1988, Wurtzel was accused of lifting passages from another writer's work in her work in <i>The Dallas Morning News</i>. (See: <a href="http://www.salon.com/weekly/plagiarism960722.html"><b>Beg, Borrow, Or...</b></a>, by Dwight Garner, <i>Salon</i>, July 22, 1996.)</p>
<p><b>Plea</b> None.</p>
<p><b>Sentence</b> Fired from <i>The Dallas Morning News</i>.</p>
<p><b>Afterlife</b> After her firing, Wurtzel managed to become the music critic for <i>New York</i>, <i>The New Yorker</i>, and publish the memoir <i>Prozac Nation</i> in 1997. (That book also faced accusations of fabrications). In 2004, Wurtzel was accepted by Yale Law School.</p>
<p><b>Hollywood Ending</b> The film version of Wurtzel's <i>Prozac Nation</i> was made in 2001 but didn't appear in the U.S. until 2005 when it went direct to cable.</p>
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		<title>Girl with the Pistol Earring</title>

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		<pubDate>Fri, 24 Feb 2006 13:04:36 -0400</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>Gotham Gazette has a comprehensive piece about New York's tradition of controversial art, and focuses on...<a href="http://www.gothamgazette.com/article/arts/20060223/1/1768">the cartoon crisis</a>  (something I <a href="http://thepoliticker.observer.com/2006/02/ny-press-kills-cartoons-staff-walks-out.html">briefly</a> got involved with). </p>
<p>The article mentions a rumor about the <a href="http://www.villagevoice.com">Village Voice</a> scrapping its editorial cartoons ("That's news to me," VV spokesman Doug Simmons told me) and notes that it took black New Yorkers 170 years before they were even depicted in the media.</p>
<p>Also, check out the girl with the pistol <a href="http://www.gothamgazette.com/graphics/muslim.jpg">earring</a>.</p>
<p><strong>Update</strong>: <em>Doug Simmons called to say "There is no political litmus test for our cartoons" and the rumor "is one of those half-baked items." In fact, a cartoon of <a href="http://villagevoice.com/news/0608,hentoff,72237,6.html">Muhammad appears</a> in a column this week.</em></p>
<p>--<em>Azi Paybarah</em></p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Gotham Gazette has a comprehensive piece about New York's tradition of controversial art, and focuses on...<a href="http://www.gothamgazette.com/article/arts/20060223/1/1768">the cartoon crisis</a>  (something I <a href="http://thepoliticker.observer.com/2006/02/ny-press-kills-cartoons-staff-walks-out.html">briefly</a> got involved with). </p>
<p>The article mentions a rumor about the <a href="http://www.villagevoice.com">Village Voice</a> scrapping its editorial cartoons ("That's news to me," VV spokesman Doug Simmons told me) and notes that it took black New Yorkers 170 years before they were even depicted in the media.</p>
<p>Also, check out the girl with the pistol <a href="http://www.gothamgazette.com/graphics/muslim.jpg">earring</a>.</p>
<p><strong>Update</strong>: <em>Doug Simmons called to say "There is no political litmus test for our cartoons" and the rumor "is one of those half-baked items." In fact, a cartoon of <a href="http://villagevoice.com/news/0608,hentoff,72237,6.html">Muhammad appears</a> in a column this week.</em></p>
<p>--<em>Azi Paybarah</em></p>
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		<title>Donald Forst Resigns from Village Voice</title>

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		<pubDate>Mon, 05 Dec 2005 16:23:00 -0400</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p><em>Village Voice </em>editor Donald Forst told staff he was leaving the <em>Voice </em>this afternoon. Memos from Forst and Publisher Judy Miszner follow:</p>
<p>I have submitted my resignation today as editor-in-chief to Judy Miszner,<br />
effective December 31, 2005. A number of prospects have presented themselves<br />
and I think this is an opportune time to explore them.</p>
<p>These nine years have been exciting for me because of what this paper does<br />
and what it represents to the city; and that's because of all of you. I am<br />
proud of what we have accomplished together.</p>
<p>I thank you for sharing your talent with me and wish you and the Voice good<br />
times and great fortune.</p>
<p><strong>Judy Miszner's Memo:</strong></p>
<p>This morning I received, with great sadness, Don Forst's letter of resignation from the Voice. </p>
<p>During my six years as Publisher of the Voice, I have had the great fortune to work with Don, who is an incredible colleague and friend. As Editor-in-Chief, Don has held the Voice to the highest levels of professionalism and journalistic integrity. It is no coincidence that during Don's tenure the Voice has maintained a national reputation of excellence and received numerous awards, including NY Press Club, Deadline Club, Livingston, Mike Berger, Front Page, IRE and a Pulitzer for International Reporting. Don has also hired and developed an outstanding team of writers and editors. And these are just a few of Don's legacies. </p>
<p>I wish Don much happiness and success in his future endeavors. He will be greatly missed. </p>
<p>Effective immediately, Doug Simmons will oversee the editorial department on an interim basis. Don will remain through December 31 to assist in the transition.</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Village Voice </em>editor Donald Forst told staff he was leaving the <em>Voice </em>this afternoon. Memos from Forst and Publisher Judy Miszner follow:</p>
<p>I have submitted my resignation today as editor-in-chief to Judy Miszner,<br />
effective December 31, 2005. A number of prospects have presented themselves<br />
and I think this is an opportune time to explore them.</p>
<p>These nine years have been exciting for me because of what this paper does<br />
and what it represents to the city; and that's because of all of you. I am<br />
proud of what we have accomplished together.</p>
<p>I thank you for sharing your talent with me and wish you and the Voice good<br />
times and great fortune.</p>
<p><strong>Judy Miszner's Memo:</strong></p>
<p>This morning I received, with great sadness, Don Forst's letter of resignation from the Voice. </p>
<p>During my six years as Publisher of the Voice, I have had the great fortune to work with Don, who is an incredible colleague and friend. As Editor-in-Chief, Don has held the Voice to the highest levels of professionalism and journalistic integrity. It is no coincidence that during Don's tenure the Voice has maintained a national reputation of excellence and received numerous awards, including NY Press Club, Deadline Club, Livingston, Mike Berger, Front Page, IRE and a Pulitzer for International Reporting. Don has also hired and developed an outstanding team of writers and editors. And these are just a few of Don's legacies. </p>
<p>I wish Don much happiness and success in his future endeavors. He will be greatly missed. </p>
<p>Effective immediately, Doug Simmons will oversee the editorial department on an interim basis. Don will remain through December 31 to assist in the transition.</p>
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		<title>Thomas von Essen Shops Around Book on His Climatic Term as Fire Chief</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2001/11/thomas-von-essen-shops-around-book-on-his-climatic-term-as-fire-chief/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 26 Nov 2001 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2001/11/thomas-von-essen-shops-around-book-on-his-climatic-term-as-fire-chief/</link>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>New York City Fire Commissioner Thomas Von Essen is shopping his memoirs. In a nine-page proposal submitted to book publishers on Nov. 16, the soon-to-be-former fire commissioner describes a book that will cover his career as a firefighter as well as his experience on Sept. 11. </p>
<p>"I propose to share for the first time my life story, including the minute-by-minute account of the events of September 11, the rescue effort that followed and the recovery that continues today," Mr. Von Essen writes. "I have maintained detailed notes, calendars and diaries of my career, particularly during the last few months, trying to sort out the horror and bravery, the awful depths and incredible heights."</p>
<p> But Mr. Von Essen's proposal comes at an awkward moment, submitted in the same week that soon-to-be-former New York City Police Commissioner Bernard Kerik did a blitzkrieg bop of the press to promote his own memoir, The Lost Son: A Life in Pursuit of Justice . Though praised for its heart-wrenching personal revelations, Mr. Kerik's book has faced criticism that it exploited Sept. 11 by rushing in a late chapter about the attacks and publishing 16 pages of police photographs taken at ground zero. (Said Mr. Kerik's publisher, Judith Regan: "The photos are available to the public, and he would have been remiss not to address one of the more important moments of his life. And anyone who criticizes his writing about that is an idiot.")</p>
<p> Mr. Von Essen himself is not unfamiliar with scorn from his own firefighters, especially during the past few weeks, after he supported Mayor Rudolph Giuliani's move to scale back firefighting personnel at ground zero. That conflict ended with the contingent of firefighters being restored to past numbers, but not before Mr. Von Essen briefly left the news conference weeping when a retired firefighter whose son is still buried at the site pleaded for more firefighters to aid the search.</p>
<p> Mr. Von Essen's agent, Rebecca Kurson–wife of writer Ken Kurson, the co-writer of Rudy Giuliani's upcoming books–said it was too early to comment on the memoir, and no closing date for the proposal has been set.</p>
<p> How big could Mr. Von Essen's book become? One editor who has seen the proposal thinks that despite Mr. Von Essen's heightened profile, finding an audience might be challenging. "He is a very sympathetic figure," says the editor. "But I don't see this as being a big book at all."</p>
<p> Mr. Kerik's book, meanwhile, is ranked No. 32 on Nov. 20 on the always fluctuating, mostly random and sometimes meaningless Amazon sales chart; it was No. 3,994 on BarnesandNoble.com.</p>
<p> Like Mr. Kerik's book, Mr. Von Essen's as-yet-unwritten memoir will span the length of his civil-service career. According to the proposal, Mr. Von Essen will write about his time at Ladder 42, as delegate and later president of the firefighter's union; about his battles against budget cuts; and about his appointment to the fire commissioner's job in 1996, which prompted substantial grumbling from rank-and-file colleagues.</p>
<p> "Some firefighters still see my switching sides from labor to management as a betrayal," Mr. Von Essen writes. "That's ridiculous. I would never go against my conscience, I'd never betray my men …. I've taken a lot of criticism from the union, and while it hurts, I don't back down."</p>
<p> The commissioner's memoir would join a legion of recently acquired titles that address the September events in some way: Gail Sheehy is following a group of bereaved families affected by the attacks for a future Random House book, for instance, while a photography book, In the Line of Duty: A Tribute to New York's Finest and Bravest (featuring forwards by Mr. Kerik and Mr. Von Essen), was just published by HarperCollins. Basic Books recently signed Observer city editor Terry Golway to write a history of the NYFD to be published late next year, and Dennis Smith, a former firefighter turned author, is writing Report from Ground Zero for Viking. Mr. Smith's book is due next month.</p>
<p> –P.J. Mark</p>
<p> Rod Dreher, the film critic turned conservative columnist at the New York Post , has taken his Ray Kerrison act across town. Picked to replace Mr. Kerrison after he retired in 1999, Mr. Dreher is joining National Review , where he'll write his column three times a week for National Review 's Web site as well as pieces for the magazine.</p>
<p> Reached for comment, Mr. Dreher told us he was making the move partly out of concern for the safety of his 2-year-old son. "One thing that affected this decision was the anthrax attacks at the Post ," said Mr. Dreher, who was on Cipro for a few days after a co-worker was found to be a victim of an anthrax attack. "What would I do if I got this stuff and my wife was left alone with our son?"</p>
<p> Mr. Dreher, whose last day was Nov. 16, plans to stay in Park Slope for now, but he said he was considering getting away and moving to the suburbs of Washington, D.C., some time next year.</p>
<p> But a Post source said that Mr. Dreher wasn't exactly a perfect fit with new editor Col Allan's depoliticized Post . His column was appearing less frequently; it ran on just 10 days this October, compared to 17 times in October last year. A spokesperson for the Post would not say whether Mr. Dreher's column would be replaced.</p>
<p> Speaking of National Review , William Buckley Jr. managed to work himself into a tizzy in the Nov. 19 issue about how pervasive porn is in modern life. Exhibit A in his case: the February issue of Esquire . Ticking off all the references to sex he found in its pages–the crotch-level photo of Bill Clinton on the cover, a mention of "backseat action" in a car review, a discussion of morning erections and the like–a titillated Mr. Buckley concluded, "Is the Esquire given over to erotomania unique? Of course not, but it isn't just one more girlie magazine. It is a sign of the times, the day of pervasive presence. Eros is crowding at us on all sides, as the erotic and pornographic merger."</p>
<p> So what does Esquire editor David Granger think of the charge he's putting out a porn mag?</p>
<p> "Oh, hell," Mr. Granger said. "Does this mean that I have to open up National Review –two copies of which arrive unbidden at my office every month–for the first time in my life?"</p>
<p> –Gabriel Snyder</p>
<p> Since 1999, Robert Lanham, a 30-year-old Web-site designer, has run a site called Free Williamsburg devoted to the très cool Brooklyn neighborhood. Last September, Mr. Lanham assigned a story to his friend Grant Moser about the music scene there, and Mr. Moser, in turn, wrote about a recently released compilation of Brooklyn bands– This Is Next Year –and profiled clubs in the hipster hamlet: Northsix, Galapagos, Warsaw and Luxx. The latter club, Mr. Moser said, "reminded me of a Coney Island bumper car ring. Reflective wallpaper, clear plastic tubing, lights and a smash of colors came from all directions."</p>
<p> The piece ran with the headline "A Scene Grows in Brooklyn," and Mr. Lanham forgot about it until two weeks ago, when he saw The Village Voice .</p>
<p> What Mr. Lanham found in the Nov. 13 edition of The Voice was a piece by writer Chris Parker. Mr. Parker wrote about the This Is Next Year compilation and described the edgy new atmosphere for bands in Williamsburg, focusing on Northsix and Warsaw and Luxx, which, Mr. Parker wrote, "has–with its crush of colors, reflective wallpaper, lights and tubing–been compared to a Coney Island bumper car ring." The headline for the piece? "A Scene Grows in Brooklyn."</p>
<p> Did The Voice rip off Free Williamsburg? "The framework for the article is pretty much the same," Mr. Lanham said. "It even had the same headline."</p>
<p> The following day, Mr. Lanham wrote a letter complaining about the matter and received a voice-mail message from a Voice staffer. Then Mr. Lanham sent another letter, charging them with copyright infringement and asking them to pull the piece from their Web site. After Mr. Lanham's first letter (which also appeared in the New York Press ) ran in the Nov. 20 edition of The Voice, Mr. Lanham spoke with Voice managing editor Doug Simmons. Mr. Lanham said that when they talked, Mr. Simmons cursed at him and was "unprofessional and rude."</p>
<p> For his part, Mr. Simmons, while admitting he grew curt with Mr. Lanham, considers the issue over. The Voice ran the letter and added a link to Free Williamsburg on its Web site. He also said that after conferring with the paper's legal counsel, any legal claim against the paper was "absolute bullshit."</p>
<p> "How did we damage him?" Mr. Simmons said. "By giving him a plug? Usually when we reply to a letter, it's a silly-sarcastic reply. No reply is good."</p>
<p> Mr. Simmons considers it this way: If you're going to talk about new music in Williamsburg, you have to write about these clubs and this CD. The Voice also had a longer piece with different sources.</p>
<p> "If I feel bad about anything, it's the bumper-car line," Mr. Simmons said. "We should have given him credit for that line. If the writer had just done that, none of this would have happened. It's a matter of simple attribution. But I see one line and a terrible headline from a tired editor. I bet 'A (Blank) Grows in Brooklyn' has appeared in The Village Voice a dozen times. It's clichéd and never should have run."</p>
<p> The tired editor responsible for that terrible headline is music editor Chuck Eddy. "It was a shitty headline," Mr. Eddy said. "It sucked when Free Williamsburg did it, and it sucked when we did it, too. "</p>
<p> Mr. Parker, for his part, said he came up with the story idea after attending a show at Northsix. It was only two weeks into his reporting, he said, that he saw the Free Williamsburg piece. "There's no copyright on trend stories," Mr. Parker said.</p>
<p> –Sridhar Pappu</p>
<p> If it's six months after a new editor in chief took over, it must be time for shake-ups. Wired editor Chris Anderson has announced a raft of changes for the tech-fetishist's magazine. Some veterans have been trimmed from the masthead, and a redesign is in the works.</p>
<p> Early on, the fluorescent-and-metallic-hued magazine built its reputation largely on its visual style–but nine years later, the title has become a bit more subdued, and the shock factor has also diminished as other magazines borrowed from its aesthetic devices.</p>
<p> "I don't think Wired 's visuals have the impact they had in the beginning," Mr. Anderson said. So he's bringing in Darrin Perry as creative director. Mr. Perry did much to shape the busy look of ESPN magazine. The redesign is targeted for the May issue.</p>
<p> "We love our logo, we love the stripes on our spine, and fluorescent will always be part of our palette," Mr. Anderson said, adding, "It was time for a new aesthetic."</p>
<p> Mr. Anderson is also planning to revamp the "editorial architecture" of the magazine. As of Nov. 16, he let go of several editors and writers: Senior editor Paul Boutin, section editor Paul Spinrad and senior writer Chip Bayers, who had been at the magazine since nearly its founding, were all pink-slipped. Also, senior editor Tom McNichol will give up his title, but will go on contract as a writer. Mr. Anderson is bringing on Mark Robinson, who was most recently at Industry Standard as senior editor.</p>
<p> –G.S.</p>
<p> It's bad enough that lovelorn reporters have to compete with lawyers and doctors. But competing with firefighters in today's New York? Forget it!	</p>
<p>The other night, at an after-party following the Financial Follies–the annual song-dance-and-booze festival thrown by the New York Financial Writers' Association at the Marriott Marquis–a posse of firefighters arrived and quickly stole the thunder of the tuxedoed journalists on the prowl. "They're so hot," said one female business writer. Said a male colleague: "How do we have a chance with those guys around? It's unfair."</p>
<p> –S.P.</p>
<p> Last week, this column noted that Warner Bros. was unlikely to use a blurb from Time film critic and AOL Time Warner employee Richard Corliss in its ads for Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone after Mr. Corliss pasted the film as "stodgy, humorless." But it was interesting to see that AOL T.W. did dig up some Harry Potter superlatives from a previous Time feature by Jess Cagle, who gushed that the movie had "eye-popping grandeur, dazzling special effects and sumptuous production values." And unlike Time , which whenever it writes about a corporate sibling dutifully notes that they are both owned by AOL Time Warner, the ads don't mention that Mr. Cagle and young Harry are on the same payroll.</p>
<p> –G.S. </p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>New York City Fire Commissioner Thomas Von Essen is shopping his memoirs. In a nine-page proposal submitted to book publishers on Nov. 16, the soon-to-be-former fire commissioner describes a book that will cover his career as a firefighter as well as his experience on Sept. 11. </p>
<p>"I propose to share for the first time my life story, including the minute-by-minute account of the events of September 11, the rescue effort that followed and the recovery that continues today," Mr. Von Essen writes. "I have maintained detailed notes, calendars and diaries of my career, particularly during the last few months, trying to sort out the horror and bravery, the awful depths and incredible heights."</p>
<p> But Mr. Von Essen's proposal comes at an awkward moment, submitted in the same week that soon-to-be-former New York City Police Commissioner Bernard Kerik did a blitzkrieg bop of the press to promote his own memoir, The Lost Son: A Life in Pursuit of Justice . Though praised for its heart-wrenching personal revelations, Mr. Kerik's book has faced criticism that it exploited Sept. 11 by rushing in a late chapter about the attacks and publishing 16 pages of police photographs taken at ground zero. (Said Mr. Kerik's publisher, Judith Regan: "The photos are available to the public, and he would have been remiss not to address one of the more important moments of his life. And anyone who criticizes his writing about that is an idiot.")</p>
<p> Mr. Von Essen himself is not unfamiliar with scorn from his own firefighters, especially during the past few weeks, after he supported Mayor Rudolph Giuliani's move to scale back firefighting personnel at ground zero. That conflict ended with the contingent of firefighters being restored to past numbers, but not before Mr. Von Essen briefly left the news conference weeping when a retired firefighter whose son is still buried at the site pleaded for more firefighters to aid the search.</p>
<p> Mr. Von Essen's agent, Rebecca Kurson–wife of writer Ken Kurson, the co-writer of Rudy Giuliani's upcoming books–said it was too early to comment on the memoir, and no closing date for the proposal has been set.</p>
<p> How big could Mr. Von Essen's book become? One editor who has seen the proposal thinks that despite Mr. Von Essen's heightened profile, finding an audience might be challenging. "He is a very sympathetic figure," says the editor. "But I don't see this as being a big book at all."</p>
<p> Mr. Kerik's book, meanwhile, is ranked No. 32 on Nov. 20 on the always fluctuating, mostly random and sometimes meaningless Amazon sales chart; it was No. 3,994 on BarnesandNoble.com.</p>
<p> Like Mr. Kerik's book, Mr. Von Essen's as-yet-unwritten memoir will span the length of his civil-service career. According to the proposal, Mr. Von Essen will write about his time at Ladder 42, as delegate and later president of the firefighter's union; about his battles against budget cuts; and about his appointment to the fire commissioner's job in 1996, which prompted substantial grumbling from rank-and-file colleagues.</p>
<p> "Some firefighters still see my switching sides from labor to management as a betrayal," Mr. Von Essen writes. "That's ridiculous. I would never go against my conscience, I'd never betray my men …. I've taken a lot of criticism from the union, and while it hurts, I don't back down."</p>
<p> The commissioner's memoir would join a legion of recently acquired titles that address the September events in some way: Gail Sheehy is following a group of bereaved families affected by the attacks for a future Random House book, for instance, while a photography book, In the Line of Duty: A Tribute to New York's Finest and Bravest (featuring forwards by Mr. Kerik and Mr. Von Essen), was just published by HarperCollins. Basic Books recently signed Observer city editor Terry Golway to write a history of the NYFD to be published late next year, and Dennis Smith, a former firefighter turned author, is writing Report from Ground Zero for Viking. Mr. Smith's book is due next month.</p>
<p> –P.J. Mark</p>
<p> Rod Dreher, the film critic turned conservative columnist at the New York Post , has taken his Ray Kerrison act across town. Picked to replace Mr. Kerrison after he retired in 1999, Mr. Dreher is joining National Review , where he'll write his column three times a week for National Review 's Web site as well as pieces for the magazine.</p>
<p> Reached for comment, Mr. Dreher told us he was making the move partly out of concern for the safety of his 2-year-old son. "One thing that affected this decision was the anthrax attacks at the Post ," said Mr. Dreher, who was on Cipro for a few days after a co-worker was found to be a victim of an anthrax attack. "What would I do if I got this stuff and my wife was left alone with our son?"</p>
<p> Mr. Dreher, whose last day was Nov. 16, plans to stay in Park Slope for now, but he said he was considering getting away and moving to the suburbs of Washington, D.C., some time next year.</p>
<p> But a Post source said that Mr. Dreher wasn't exactly a perfect fit with new editor Col Allan's depoliticized Post . His column was appearing less frequently; it ran on just 10 days this October, compared to 17 times in October last year. A spokesperson for the Post would not say whether Mr. Dreher's column would be replaced.</p>
<p> Speaking of National Review , William Buckley Jr. managed to work himself into a tizzy in the Nov. 19 issue about how pervasive porn is in modern life. Exhibit A in his case: the February issue of Esquire . Ticking off all the references to sex he found in its pages–the crotch-level photo of Bill Clinton on the cover, a mention of "backseat action" in a car review, a discussion of morning erections and the like–a titillated Mr. Buckley concluded, "Is the Esquire given over to erotomania unique? Of course not, but it isn't just one more girlie magazine. It is a sign of the times, the day of pervasive presence. Eros is crowding at us on all sides, as the erotic and pornographic merger."</p>
<p> So what does Esquire editor David Granger think of the charge he's putting out a porn mag?</p>
<p> "Oh, hell," Mr. Granger said. "Does this mean that I have to open up National Review –two copies of which arrive unbidden at my office every month–for the first time in my life?"</p>
<p> –Gabriel Snyder</p>
<p> Since 1999, Robert Lanham, a 30-year-old Web-site designer, has run a site called Free Williamsburg devoted to the très cool Brooklyn neighborhood. Last September, Mr. Lanham assigned a story to his friend Grant Moser about the music scene there, and Mr. Moser, in turn, wrote about a recently released compilation of Brooklyn bands– This Is Next Year –and profiled clubs in the hipster hamlet: Northsix, Galapagos, Warsaw and Luxx. The latter club, Mr. Moser said, "reminded me of a Coney Island bumper car ring. Reflective wallpaper, clear plastic tubing, lights and a smash of colors came from all directions."</p>
<p> The piece ran with the headline "A Scene Grows in Brooklyn," and Mr. Lanham forgot about it until two weeks ago, when he saw The Village Voice .</p>
<p> What Mr. Lanham found in the Nov. 13 edition of The Voice was a piece by writer Chris Parker. Mr. Parker wrote about the This Is Next Year compilation and described the edgy new atmosphere for bands in Williamsburg, focusing on Northsix and Warsaw and Luxx, which, Mr. Parker wrote, "has–with its crush of colors, reflective wallpaper, lights and tubing–been compared to a Coney Island bumper car ring." The headline for the piece? "A Scene Grows in Brooklyn."</p>
<p> Did The Voice rip off Free Williamsburg? "The framework for the article is pretty much the same," Mr. Lanham said. "It even had the same headline."</p>
<p> The following day, Mr. Lanham wrote a letter complaining about the matter and received a voice-mail message from a Voice staffer. Then Mr. Lanham sent another letter, charging them with copyright infringement and asking them to pull the piece from their Web site. After Mr. Lanham's first letter (which also appeared in the New York Press ) ran in the Nov. 20 edition of The Voice, Mr. Lanham spoke with Voice managing editor Doug Simmons. Mr. Lanham said that when they talked, Mr. Simmons cursed at him and was "unprofessional and rude."</p>
<p> For his part, Mr. Simmons, while admitting he grew curt with Mr. Lanham, considers the issue over. The Voice ran the letter and added a link to Free Williamsburg on its Web site. He also said that after conferring with the paper's legal counsel, any legal claim against the paper was "absolute bullshit."</p>
<p> "How did we damage him?" Mr. Simmons said. "By giving him a plug? Usually when we reply to a letter, it's a silly-sarcastic reply. No reply is good."</p>
<p> Mr. Simmons considers it this way: If you're going to talk about new music in Williamsburg, you have to write about these clubs and this CD. The Voice also had a longer piece with different sources.</p>
<p> "If I feel bad about anything, it's the bumper-car line," Mr. Simmons said. "We should have given him credit for that line. If the writer had just done that, none of this would have happened. It's a matter of simple attribution. But I see one line and a terrible headline from a tired editor. I bet 'A (Blank) Grows in Brooklyn' has appeared in The Village Voice a dozen times. It's clichéd and never should have run."</p>
<p> The tired editor responsible for that terrible headline is music editor Chuck Eddy. "It was a shitty headline," Mr. Eddy said. "It sucked when Free Williamsburg did it, and it sucked when we did it, too. "</p>
<p> Mr. Parker, for his part, said he came up with the story idea after attending a show at Northsix. It was only two weeks into his reporting, he said, that he saw the Free Williamsburg piece. "There's no copyright on trend stories," Mr. Parker said.</p>
<p> –Sridhar Pappu</p>
<p> If it's six months after a new editor in chief took over, it must be time for shake-ups. Wired editor Chris Anderson has announced a raft of changes for the tech-fetishist's magazine. Some veterans have been trimmed from the masthead, and a redesign is in the works.</p>
<p> Early on, the fluorescent-and-metallic-hued magazine built its reputation largely on its visual style–but nine years later, the title has become a bit more subdued, and the shock factor has also diminished as other magazines borrowed from its aesthetic devices.</p>
<p> "I don't think Wired 's visuals have the impact they had in the beginning," Mr. Anderson said. So he's bringing in Darrin Perry as creative director. Mr. Perry did much to shape the busy look of ESPN magazine. The redesign is targeted for the May issue.</p>
<p> "We love our logo, we love the stripes on our spine, and fluorescent will always be part of our palette," Mr. Anderson said, adding, "It was time for a new aesthetic."</p>
<p> Mr. Anderson is also planning to revamp the "editorial architecture" of the magazine. As of Nov. 16, he let go of several editors and writers: Senior editor Paul Boutin, section editor Paul Spinrad and senior writer Chip Bayers, who had been at the magazine since nearly its founding, were all pink-slipped. Also, senior editor Tom McNichol will give up his title, but will go on contract as a writer. Mr. Anderson is bringing on Mark Robinson, who was most recently at Industry Standard as senior editor.</p>
<p> –G.S.</p>
<p> It's bad enough that lovelorn reporters have to compete with lawyers and doctors. But competing with firefighters in today's New York? Forget it!	</p>
<p>The other night, at an after-party following the Financial Follies–the annual song-dance-and-booze festival thrown by the New York Financial Writers' Association at the Marriott Marquis–a posse of firefighters arrived and quickly stole the thunder of the tuxedoed journalists on the prowl. "They're so hot," said one female business writer. Said a male colleague: "How do we have a chance with those guys around? It's unfair."</p>
<p> –S.P.</p>
<p> Last week, this column noted that Warner Bros. was unlikely to use a blurb from Time film critic and AOL Time Warner employee Richard Corliss in its ads for Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone after Mr. Corliss pasted the film as "stodgy, humorless." But it was interesting to see that AOL T.W. did dig up some Harry Potter superlatives from a previous Time feature by Jess Cagle, who gushed that the movie had "eye-popping grandeur, dazzling special effects and sumptuous production values." And unlike Time , which whenever it writes about a corporate sibling dutifully notes that they are both owned by AOL Time Warner, the ads don't mention that Mr. Cagle and young Harry are on the same payroll.</p>
<p> –G.S. </p>
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