I read "The Hindu". In Bangalore, at least, it's the only newspaper with any serious journalism (IMO). I find it's political stance mildly leftist, but not so much that it annoys me.
-- b On 09/11/06, Keith Adam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I like to read print in India.. especially as my windoze laptop takes 30~45 mins to initialise with my work network on VPN over internet. I have ToI delivered to my apartment but can someone suggest an alternative? I'm afraid it needs to be in English as my I have no reading skills in Hindi (or Marathi or Kennada - apart from asking for a beer and counting to ten). Cheers, Keith > -----Original Message----- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Behalf Of Vinayak Hegde > Sent: 04 October 2006 14:11 > To: [email protected] > Subject: Re: [silk] ToI on "Bloggers' Rubbish" > > > On 10/4/06, sastry <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Barring a few exceptions journalists are morons who grow up to be > > self-opinionated morons who thrive on the power that publishing > allows them. > > There is zero accounatbility and even less connection with reality. > > I have no axe to grind against "Times of India" but they have been known > to write sponsored articles. There were caught in a "sting operation" > sometime back taking money for publishing favourable articles. To > me this is no different than spam websites which exist on the web > (and figure prominently in searches) just to attaract surfers into > clicking (mostly) google ads. > > BTW I have liked content on the BBC, Wired and The Economist. > So good journalism is not dead :-) > > -- Vinayak > > >
