Tag Archives: new-york-times

Turn Your iPad Into a Futuristic News Portal [Ipad]

Magazines that spring to life with video. Gorgeous, instantly-updated newspapers. Custom-tailored broadcasts. The iPad could revolutionize news along these lines, which helps explain why it makes people so giddy. The new era begins with these nine news apps. More

W’s New Editor Stefano Tonchi Stood Trial Today [Crime]

Stefano Tonchi landed one of the most coveted jobs in fashion when he was named editor of W ten days ago. Good thing he doesn’t start until April 12. He went on trial today in Beverly Hills for a DUI. More

The Spy Who Wronged Me: The New York Times’ Messy Entanglement With an Ex-Spook [Spooks]

The New York Times reported this morning that an off-the-books intelligence operation may be assassinating people in Pakistan with the help of a sketchy former spook—the same guy that the Times hired to save reporter David Rohde ‘s life. Dexter Filkins and Mark Mazzetti’s Page One story on a secret contractor-run intelligence program in Afghanistan and Pakistan offers a weird view into the intersection of the media business and the world of spycraft, not to mention the hazards of a newspaper like the Times hiring a private army led by an arguably crazy ex-spy. The story recounts the development of a “network of private contractors in Afghanistan and Pakistan to help track and kill suspected militants” that operated under the cover of “a benign government information-gathering program,” and Mazzetti and Filkins refer darkly to the involvement a legendary former CIA operative named Duane “Dewey” Clarridge as evidence that something was fishy about the whole thing. They describe Clarridge as “a former top C.I.A. official who has been linked to a generation of C.I.A. adventures, including the Iran-Contra scandal,” which is a nicer way of saying Clarridge was involved in the illegal mining of Nicaraguan harbors and indicted in 1991 for lying to Congress about arms shipments to Iran (he was pardoned by President George H.W. Bush in 1992 ). Clarridge is a legendary old spook in intelligence circles, and the Times says the Defense Department official who ran the program “would occasionally brag to his superiors about having Mr. Clarridge’s services at his disposal.” As the story discloses, the Times once also had Clarridge’s services at its disposal. He was hired, through his employer American International Security Corporation, in 2008 to secure the release of kidnapped Times reporter David Rohde from his Taliban captors in Pakistan. When Rohde was first kidnapped, the Times and its insurer AIG sought out a security firm called Clayton Consultants to handle the case. Clayton’s strategy, and expertise from prior cases it had worked on, was to negotiate a ransom. But after negotiations stalled, Rohde’s family became anxious and insisted that the Times pursue a dual-track approach: Clayton would continue the ransom route, but the Times also hired AISC and Clarridge to prepare a paramilitary snatch-and-grab operation. A team assembled by Clarridge was at one point suited up and ready to assault a location where they believed Rohde was being held, according to New York magazine , but the operation was called off at the last minute. Rohde and his translator Tahir Ludin eventually escaped on their own in June of last year. But Clarridge soon began causing headaches for the Times . He freely talked to reporters off the record—ABC News’ Brian Ross is said to be in regular contact with him—and began spreading rumors that the story of Rohde’s escape was a sham. Ross and New York both reported that contractors hired by the Times had paid bribes to Rohde’s guards , contradicting the Times ‘ claims that it had paid no ransom and suggesting that Rohde’s escape was a planned operation. According to one contractor who worked on Rohde’s case, Clarridge was inflating his role in facilitating Rohde’s escape in an effort to justify AISC’s enormous fees. The contractor says Clarridge routinely supplied inaccurate intelligence about Rohde’s whereabouts—on the day Rohde escaped from a safehouse in Miram Shah, Waziristan, the source said, Clarridge was claiming that he was being held in an entirely different location. The rumor campaign against the Times culminated in a series of Twitter posts by independent warblogger Michael Yon, who caused a stir in November by writing that “ex-CIA officers helped pay off release for Rohde” to the tune of “millions” of dollars. Yon’s claims attracted a flurry of attention, and Rohde responded that he would “never have written a five-part series [detailing his captivity and escape] based on a lie.” In December, in response to inquiries from Gawker, Rohde wrote that “money was paid to individuals who claimed to know our whereabouts, but I do not believe that the guards who lived with us were bribed. As I have repeatedly said, our guards did not help us during our escape. In addition, no one has been able to name the guards who lived with us.” According to one Times insider, the paper suspected Clarridge was behind the rumors and confronted him, but took him at his word when he denied it. “There’s no ill will toward Clarridge,” the insider says. “Getting accurate information out of the tribal areas is extraordinarily difficult.” But another source familiar with Clarridge’s involvement in the Rohde episode says the Times was furious, and threatened in December to withhold payment from AISC, claiming that the leaks and rumors constituted a violation of the contract. AISC, the source says, was considering legal action against the paper. The tension seems to have defused, however. Reached at his home in California, Clarridge told Gawker that the Times and AISC “came to some sort of a negotiated settlement,” before declining to answer further questions for the record. A Times spokesman says “We have no billing dispute with AISC, and AISC has no billing dispute with us.” And the Times insider insists that the dispute was “about money and hours,” not any involvement Clarridge may have had with the bribery rumors. Clarridge, who is in his late 70s, is a strange man, and has a reputation among reporters who have spoken to him of making outrageous and contradictory statements. In September 2009, he sent a political screed via e-mail, obtained by Gawker, to a wide contact list under the subject heading “Senator McCarthy Was Right.” In it, he complained of the influence of “far left vermin (FLV) as they are known in the bug business” and hailed the imminent right-wing insurrection: “We won the Cold War; now we will win The War of the Authoritarians, which will be a civil war in the USA and such catastrophes are always exquisitely nasty.” The prospect of the Department of Defense hiring an indicted perjurer who advocates “civil war in the USA” to run an off-the-books intelligence operation is strange enough without adding in his prior ugly entanglement with the New York Times . The fact that it was the Times itself who blew the lid off his involvement makes the whole thing unbelievably incestuous. (The Times insider, for what it’s worth, says the story was not motivated by a vendetta against Clarridge: “He came up very late in the reporting, and once he did, we had to put him in there with a disclosure of his previous involvement with the Times.”) The program started with an idea from, of all people, former CNN executive and Sharon Stone-dater Eason Jordan . He proposed a DOD-funded web site, similar to his post-CNN project Iraq Slogger, that would cover Afghanistan and Pakistan. The DOD loved the idea and funded it to the tune of $22 million, but the money was diverted, the Times says, to the secret intelligence network by Michael Furlong, a DOD official and former Air Force officer with “extensive experience in psychological operations.” Jordan’s web site, Afpax, did get off the ground, but he says he only received two slight payments from the DOD funding the work. The rest of the money allocated for the project went somewhere else—presumably to the secret network. It wasn’t Jordan’s first run-in with psy-ops. While he was in charge of newsgathering for CNN, he invited active duty psy-ops operatives with the Army to intern in CNN’s Atlanta headquarters . “Psyops personnel, soldiers, and officers, have been working in CNN’s headquarters in Atlanta through our program ‘Training With Industry,'” an Army spokesperson admitted in 2000. The program was immediately discontinued once people figured out that it’s not such a good idea to invite professional liars to help deliver cable news and study how to better lie to news organizations. So he probably should have known better.

Link:
The Spy Who Wronged Me: The New York Times’ Messy Entanglement With an Ex-Spook [Spooks]

The Spy Who Wronged Me: The New York Times’ Messy Entanglement With an Ex-CIA Operative [Spooks]

The New York Times reported this morning that an off-the-books intelligence operation may be assassinating people in Pakistan with the help of a sketchy former spook—the same guy that the Times hired to save reporter David Rohde ‘s life. Dexter Filkins and Mark Mazzetti’s Page One story on a secret contractor-run intelligence program in Afghanistan and Pakistan offers a weird view into the intersection of the media business and the world of spycraft, not to mention the hazards of a newspaper like the Times hiring a private army led by an arguably crazy ex-spy. The story recounts the development of a “network of private contractors in Afghanistan and Pakistan to help track and kill suspected militants” that operated under the cover of “a benign government information-gathering program,” and Mazzetti and Filkins refer darkly to the involvement a legendary former CIA operative named Duane “Dewey” Clarridge as evidence that something was fishy about the whole thing. They describe Clarridge as “a former top C.I.A. official who has been linked to a generation of C.I.A. adventures, including the Iran-Contra scandal,” which is a nicer way of saying Clarridge was involved in the illegal mining of Nicaraguan harbors and indicted in 1991 for lying to Congress about arms shipments to Iran (he was pardoned by President George H.W. Bush in 1992 ). Clarridge is a legendary old spook in intelligence circles, and the Times says the Defense Department official who ran the program “would occasionally brag to his superiors about having Mr. Clarridge’s services at his disposal.” As the story discloses, the Times once also had Clarridge’s services at its disposal. He was hired, through his employer American International Security Corporation, in 2008 to secure the release of kidnapped Times reporter David Rohde from his Taliban captors in Pakistan. When Rohde was first kidnapped, the Times and its insurer AIG sought out a security firm called Clayton Consultants to handle the case. Clayton’s strategy, and expertise from prior cases it had worked on, was to negotiate a ransom. But after negotiations stalled, Rohde’s family became anxious and insisted that the Times pursue a dual-track approach: Clayton would continue the ransom route, but the Times also hired AISC and Clarridge to prepare a paramilitary snatch-and-grab operation. A team assembled by Clarridge was at one point suited up and ready to assault a location where they believed Rohde was being held, according to New York magazine , but the operation was called off at the last minute. Rohde and his translator Tahir Ludin eventually escaped on their own in June of last year. But Clarridge soon began causing headaches for the Times . He freely talked to reporters off the record—ABC News’ Brian Ross is said to be in regular contact with him—and began spreading rumors that the story of Rohde’s escape was a sham. Ross and New York both reported that contractors hired by the Times had paid bribes to Rohde’s guards , contradicting the Times ‘ claims that it had paid no ransom and suggesting that Rohde’s escape was a planned operation. According to one contractor who worked on Rohde’s case, Clarridge was inflating his role in facilitating Rohde’s escape in an effort to justify AISC’s enormous fees. The contractor says Clarridge routinely supplied inaccurate intelligence about Rohde’s whereabouts—on the day Rohde escaped from a safehouse in Miram Shah, Waziristan, the source said, Clarridge was claiming that he was being held in an entirely different location. The rumor campaign against the Times culminated in a series of Twitter posts by independent warblogger Michael Yon, who caused a stir in November by writing that “ex-CIA officers helped pay off release for Rohde” to the tune of “millions” of dollars. Yon’s claims attracted a flurry of attention, and Rohde responded that he would “never have written a five-part series [detailing his captivity and escape] based on a lie.” In December, in response to inquiries from Gawker, Rohde wrote that “money was paid to individuals who claimed to know our whereabouts, but I do not believe that the guards who lived with us were bribed. As I have repeatedly said, our guards did not help us during our escape. In addition, no one has been able to name the guards who lived with us.” According to one Times insider, the paper suspected Clarridge was behind the rumors and confronted him, but took him at his word when he denied it. “There’s no ill will toward Clarridge,” the insider says. “Getting accurate information out of the tribal areas is extraordinarily difficult.” But another source familiar with Clarridge’s involvement in the Rohde episode says the Times was furious, and threatened in December to withhold payment from AISC, claiming that the leaks and rumors constituted a violation of the contract. AISC, the source says, was considering legal action against the paper. The tension seems to have defused, however. Reached at his home in California, Clarridge told Gawker that the Times and AISC “came to some sort of a negotiated settlement,” before declining to answer further questions for the record. A Times spokesman says “We have no billing dispute with AISC, and AISC has no billing dispute with us.” And the Times insider insists that the dispute was “about money and hours,” not any involvement Clarridge may have had with the bribery rumors. Clarridge, who is in his late 70s, is a strange man, and has a reputation among reporters who have spoken to him of making outrageous and contradictory statements. In September 2009, he sent a political screed via e-mail to a wide contact list under the subject heading “Senator McCarthy Was Right.” In it, he complained of the influence of “far left vermin (FLV) as they are known in the bug business” and hailed the imminent right-wing insurrection: “We won the Cold War; now we will win The War of the Authoritarians, which will be a civil war in the USA and such catastrophes are always exquisitely nasty.” The prospect of the Department of Defense hiring an indicted perjurer who advocates “civil war in the USA” to run an off-the-books intelligence operation is strange enough without adding in his prior ugly entanglement with the New York Times . The fact that it was the Times itself who blew the lid off his involvement makes the whole thing unbelievably incestuous. (The Times insider, for what it’s worth, says the story was not motivated by a vendetta against Clarridge: “He came up very late in the reporting, and once he did, we had to put him in there with a disclosure of his previous involvement with the Times.”) The program started with an idea from, of all people, former CNN executive and Sharon Stone-dater Eason Jordan . He proposed a DOD-funded web site, similar to his post-CNN project Iraq Slogger, that would cover Afghanistan and Pakistan. The DOD loved the idea and funded it to the tune of $22 million, but the money was diverted, the Times says, to the secret intelligence network by Michael Furlong, a DOD official and former Air Force officer with “extensive experience in psychological operations.” Jordan’s web site, Afpax, did get off the ground, but he says he only received two slight payments from the DOD funding the work. The rest of the money allocated for the project went somewhere else—presumably to the secret network. It wasn’t Jordan’s first run-in with psy-ops. While he was in charge of newsgathering for CNN, he invited active duty psy-ops operatives with the Army to intern in CNN’s Atlanta headquarters . “Psyops personnel, soldiers, and officers, have been working in CNN’s headquarters in Atlanta through our program ‘Training With Industry,'” an Army spokesperson admitted in 2000. The program was immediately discontinued once people figured out that it’s not such a good idea to invite professional liars to help deliver cable news and study how to better lie to news organizations. So he probably should have known better.

Read the rest here:
The Spy Who Wronged Me: The New York Times’ Messy Entanglement With an Ex-CIA Operative [Spooks]

Columnist Frank Rich writes that we ignore the Teabaggers "at our peril".

The distinction between the Tea Party movement and the official G.O.P. is real, and we ignore it at our peril. While Washington is fixated on the natterings of Mitch McConnell, John Boehner, Michael Steele and the presumed 2012 Republican presidential front-runner, Mitt Romney, these and the other leaders of the Party of No are anathema or irrelevant to most Tea Partiers. Indeed, McConnell, Romney and company may prove largely irrelevant to the overall political dynamic taking hold in America right now. The old G.O.P. guard has no discernible national constituency beyond the scattered, often impotent remnants of aging country club Republicanism. The passion on the right has migrated almost entirely to the Tea Party’s counterconservatism. The leaders embraced by the new grass roots right are a different slate entirely: Glenn Beck, Ron Paul and Sarah Palin. Simple math dictates that none of this trio can be elected president. As George F. Will recently pointed out, Palin will not even be the G.O.P. nominee “unless the party wants to lose at least 44 states” (as it did in Barry Goldwater’s 1964 Waterloo). But these leaders do have a consistent ideology, and that ideology plays to the lock-and-load nutcases out there, not just to the peaceable (if riled up) populist conservatives also attracted to Tea Partyism. This ideology is far more troubling than the boilerplate corporate conservatism and knee-jerk obstructionism of the anti-Obama G.O.P. Congressional minority. (I highly recommend that you read the entire article by clicking the title of this post.) I actually covered some of what Frank Rich writes about the Teabagger movement in my post from January 29th . However he now has the added information provided by the goings on at the Nashville convention and CPAC to flesh out his contention that the group may resort to domestic terrorism to get their voices heard and failing that might even be preparing for an all out civil war. Personally I don’t fear a civil war from these people, but domestic terrorism does not seem a bridge too far for some of these incredibly angry individuals. And if that happens I expect the government to throw Glen Beck, Sean Hannity, and Sarah Palin into prison for inciting violence against their country.

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Columnist Frank Rich writes that we ignore the Teabaggers "at our peril".

Third Time’s The Charm: Latest NYT Patterson Bombshell Really Explodes [Bombshells]

Well! New York Times exposes on Gov. David Paterson are like Godfather movies: They come in threes. But unlike Copolla, The New York Times saved the best for last. Hypocrisy? violence against women? Abuse of power? It’s all here. Damn. Where to begin? How about with the brutal Halloween beating David W. Johnson , Paterson’s 6-foot-7 driver and closest confidant , allegedly gave an ex-girlfriend last year. From the Times article : According to the woman’s account, Mr. Johnson confronted her in their bedroom, choked her, tore her Halloween costume off, pushed her into the dresser and then continued to choke her with one hand. In her account, she screamed for Mr. Johnson to stop and then screamed for the help of a friend who was visiting. The woman said Mr. Johnson first took one telephone from her to prevent her from calling the police, and then chased her into another room when she went to find a second phone. Mr. Johnson then turned to the woman’s friend and told her to leave, “if you know what’s good for you,” according to the woman’s account. After this altercation, the woman says she was pressured by the State Police into not pressing charges. The State Police confirm contacting her. Oh, and not just any State Police: A member of the special detail which protects the governor—and David W. Johnson. The head of the state police told the Times “We never pressured her… we just gave her options.” Still, according to the Times the woman pressed forward with her charges against her high-profile ex. Until this February, when she got a call from Paterson himself. (Paterson claims the woman initiated the call.) She didn’t show up for her next hearing, and the case was dropped. What to make of this episode? The Times will not tell you, since they are a serious newspaper and print “just the facts.” But the article leaves exactly the right blanks to fill in with a clear case of Paterson using the State Police as his own private Statsi to make a violent problem go away for his sketchy best friend. For example, the Times notes the fact that the timing of Paterson’s call puts it right as the paper was preparing their earlier, less incriminating profile of Johnson and his past trouble with women and drugs. Hmmm… And the article repeatedly mentions that the State Police—Paterson’s police—visited the woman despite the assault being under NYPD’s jurisdiction. Hmmmmm…. Oh, and after the Times visited the woman’s house, Paterson got upset about it during a meeting with the editorial board. Uh huh… Whether it was intentional or not, we have to admire the way the three Times Paterson scoops build on each other to create the perfect Portrait of the Governor as a Real Asshole: In the first installment , we learn of Paterson’s girlfriend-beating trouble magnet aide, David W. Johnson. Maybe Paterson doesn’t have the best character judgment, we think with a shrug. The second article reveals that Paterson pays for his vacations with campaign cash and gives his friend’s ex-girlfriend a job. OK, so he has a little thing with using the power of his office to make things happen for himself and his buddies—paying for vacations with campaign cash and giving his friend’s ex-girlfriend a job in his administration. Small things, but still… Uh oh… Then: Boom. Three articles full of interesting facts. Three is also the number of sides of a triangle. Let’s triangulate.

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Third Time’s The Charm: Latest NYT Patterson Bombshell Really Explodes [Bombshells]

UPDATED: The New York Times David Paterson Story Is Out… Or is it?

So, this is it ? This is THE New York Times David Paterson ‘bombshell’? The whole thing? There’s not a second part that’s good? Jesus, New York Times , why didn’t you say it was going to be so boring. Wed. Update: : Let’s do the time warp again! A knowledgeable source tells us this is not in fact the Paterson bombshell, and that the real story is substantially more… substantial. Our tipster says: I don’t believe this is the Paterson story. The reporters actually did uncover some dirt on him, though nothing of the sexual sort. Mostly stuff about his heavy drinking and loveless marriage. So: Still no drug-fueled orgies… but perhaps fodder for a more substantial scandal than the fact that Paterson has a sketchy confidant? Our tipster says that “there’s an actual profile of Paterson that could run as soon as tomorrow.” We await with bated breath… As for today’s Times article: If you were hoping for the big Paterson-annihilating bombshell that we, in part, led you to expect , prepare to be sorely disappointed. The Times story isn’t even about Paterson, per se: It’s about his driver and closest confidant, David W. Johnson. Granted, Johnson, who started as Paterson’s intern in 1999, has a sketchy past: The Times reports that as a teenager he was twice arrested for felony drug charges. Also, he beats women—Which the Times points out is sort of a paradox, given Paterson’s crusade against domestic violence. The article details a slew of “incidents” including: In 2001, when Mr. Paterson was a state senator, Mr. Johnson, according to a person who was present, punched a girlfriend outside the senator’s Harlem office. But there were no sexy Paterson revelations. No drug-fueled orgies spilling into the halls of the Governor’s mansion. Tell all your friends: Paterson’s closest adviser is sort of a thug. The great phantom David Paterson scandal of 2010 ends with a whimper. (Until we read a tweet about another one.)

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UPDATED: The New York Times David Paterson Story Is Out… Or is it?

Turf War at the New York Times: Who Will Control the iPad?

There’s a heated turf war going on inside the New York Times over the iPad, pitting print die-hards against people focused on the Times ‘ digital future. The outcome will determine pricing for some marquee content on Apple’s tablet. The internal fight might also determine how relevant — and profitable — the nation’s most prominent newspaper can remain in the digital future. Which is probably why there’s reportedly so much sniping over who gets to control the iPad edition internally. On one side, a Times source explains, you have print circulation, which thinks it should control the iPad since it’s just another way to distribute the paper. They’d like to charge $20 to $30 per month for the Times ‘ forthcoming iPad app, basically the product already demonstrated on stage with Steve Jobs , the source said. Why so much? Because they’re said to be afraid people will cancel the print paper if they can get the same thing on their iPad. Nevermind that iPad distribution comes with none of the paper or delivery costs associated with print, or that there’s already a free electronic edition available to subscribers who cancel. On the other side, you have the Times ‘ digital operation, which is pushing to charge $10 per month for the iPad edition and is said to be up in arms over print circulation’s pricing. The digital side will provide interactive content for the iPad no matter what happens, but does not want print circulation to have control of pricing, marketing and other facets of the product. It’s something of an uphill battle since print circ has had control of other e-editions, for example for the Kindle, which are also seen on the digital side as overpriced. The dispute has apparently escalated all the way to the top of the Times Building, and top executives — presumably the same ones who secretly dined with Apple CEO Steve Jobs — are now debating which way to go. Among those supporting the $20-30 per month print circulation side is, we’re told, New York Times Media Group president Scott Heekin-Canedy . Even by the standards of the old-fashioned Times , it would be shockingly retrograde to charge such a huge sum for internet content to protect the fading print edition. It would also be self defeating, exploding the paper’s best chance yet to charge readers for its digital product. (Even at $10 per month, the iPad Times will have to compete with the free-through-2011 Web edition.) But it’s almost as shocking that the Times Company is having a discussion over this question at all. Really? You’re going to ruin this little gift from Steve Jobs? You’re still not sure if you’re ready to commit to this internet thing? Sigh. If you know more about this debate, or similar debates at other publishers, we’d love to hear from you .

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Turf War at the New York Times: Who Will Control the iPad?

Luke Russert Disproving Those Nepotism Charges One Story at a Time

In your blizzardy Wednesday media column: Luke Russert does it the Luke Russert way, the NYT has no iPad comment, a new journalism moneymaking scheme, and David Remnick acts so haughty you’d think he runs America’s best magazine or something. Professional journalist Luke Russert says about the above Twitpic: “It’s not that bad, in fact being a correspondent in this weather is a day at the beach!” Hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha. Whew. Even though the New York Times managed to make some money last year, they didn’t say a dadgum thing about the iPad during their earnings call ! The iPad is all that humans care about now NYT, get with the “program,” okay? The latest thing that a journalist is doing to try to make money and thereby not starve : a former religion reporter and a former con man are forming a business reporting venture in which they do investigative reporting on companies, then short the stock. Clearly, the money here will be made when they sell the odd-couple screwball comedy screenplay. David Remnick on whether the National Enquirer should win a Pulitzer: “I’m not a ridiculous prude about it, but: is that a great achievement of journalism?” Hello, pretentious. Who the fuck are you, Seymour Hersh’s editor?

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Luke Russert Disproving Those Nepotism Charges One Story at a Time

How to Get on The New York Times’ Most-Emailed List

In the years since Andrew Wiles solved Fermat’s Last Theorem, the greatest intellectual puzzle facing humankind has been: How does the New York Times “Most-emailed” list work? Social science has finally given us the answer! A team of sociologists at the University of Pennsylvania undertook an exhaustive study of the New York Times most-emailed list. They first assembled a data set based on the contents of the list over more than six months. Then they dug in to see why stories ended up there. Thus they unlocked the secret of journalism’s holy grail— and perhaps even of virality itself! Their findings, as reported by the Times’ John Tierney are a mix of the totally obvious and the Slate -y counter-intuitive. The obvious: A prominently-featured article is more likely to make the list, as is one written by a famous person. Slightly more surprising was the fact that longer articles were more e-mail worthy. (Because they were more interesting?). But the most interesting findings are also the most useful for anyone hoping to make it on the only list that matters: The researchers identified four key qualities of an article’s content which resonates on some psychic level with school-teachers, your grandmother and procrastinating college sophomores alike. The most-emailed articles are: Awe-inspiring: The quality which most helped an article reach the list was inspiring awe in the reader. That is, they blow their mind by making them contemplate something physically or intellectually enormous—a natural wonder, a work of art, a big idea, the indomitable human spirit, etc. People like to share with others their feelings of awe. (Example articles: “Fury of Girl’s Fists Lifts Up North Korean Refugee” and “The Promise and Power of RNA.” Emotional: If you want to be emailed, try tugging on a reader’s heart-strings with a weepy tale of struggle, or of redemption. They will be all “You HAVE to read this. OMG SO SAD/INSPIRING.” (Example: “Redefining Depression as Mere Sadness.”) Positive: The old newspaperman’s cliche of “if it bleeds it leads” did not hold up under our researcher’s critical eye. People like to share happy things, apparently. Surprising: Things that make you go “woah.” (i.e. a story about chickens in Harlem, or a marathon-running restaurateur.) With this science-approved information in hand, we have visually dissected the top five most e-mailed Times articles as of 11pm, Feb. 9th, 2010. Study them, for they hold the secret of “going viral”:

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How to Get on The New York Times’ Most-Emailed List