The October 2024 issue of @TheAtlantic examines “#DonaldTrump’s antidemocratic tendencies”

For the cover, “illustrator Justin Metz borrowed the visual language of old Ray Bradbury and Stephen King paperbacks to portray a circus wagon on its ominous approach to a defiled Capitol…

“We believe this to be the first cover bearing no headline or typography in The Atlantic’s 167-year history.”

#USPolitics
#Election2024
#society
#dystopia
#illustration
#StakesNotOdds

https://www.theatlantic.com/press-releases/archive/2024/09/atlantic-october-issue-trumps-antidemocratic-actions/679752/

Atlantic October issue: Trump’s antidemocratic actions

Reporting by Anne Applebaum, Tim Alberta, Elaina Plott Calabro, Mark Leibovich, Helen Lewis, Hanna Rosin, and Sarah Zhang<br /> <br /> The cover illustration may be the first in <em>The Atlantic</em>’s 167-year history with no headline or typography.

The Atlantic

@Nonya_Bidniss They won’t. Context is not their thing.

Here I discuss the “publicly traded” presidential candidate. Part of my #StakesNotOdds campaign series.

https://wiredpen.com/2024/03/25/voters-should-be-wary-of-a-monetized-president-which-describes-trump-the-candidate/

Voters should be wary of “a monetized president," which describes Trump the candidate - WiredPen

Trump Hotels and Casino Resorts lost money every year. Truth Social lost $49 million during the first nine months of 2023. Why buy his stock?

WiredPen
Nine reasons you should ignore political polls – The Moderate Voice

Nine reasons you should ignore political polls – The Moderate Voice

@Lacci @mcc Mainstream journalism, especially video and audio (can we still say "television and radio" unironically?) are especially concerned with narrative and of fitting news events into narratives.

(Edward Jay Epstein's News From Nowhere (1973) is a dated but excellent detailing of this: https://archive.org/details/newsfromnowheret0000epst)

In the current case, a problem is that the story doesn't fit established or acceptable (though whether to the audience or editors isn't clear) narratives, AND that narrative-busting is becoming its own narrative. That is, "unprecedented" isn't just hand-wringing over "we don't know how to tell this story" but it's a major framing of the story.

That said ...

... it still strikes me as a cheap out, distraction, and ultimately fluff. I've been taking @jayrosen_nyu's advice to focus on #StakesNotOdds, and to dig into why this matters and what potential outcomes or consequences might be.

I'm ... more than slightly tired of hearing on-the-street interviews with brainwashed zombies, and partisan shouting matches. Then again, I'm also ducking most news though I'll catch headlines (either reading or listening via podcasts) a few times a week. News burnout is real, and mine dates at least to the 2012 US election cycle, if not before.

#uspol

News from nowhere: television and the news : Epstein, Edward Jay, 1935- : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive

xix, 321 p. 22 cm

Internet Archive

@jayrosen_nyu I just caught that episode last night. I know you've been on before, but didn't recognise your voice. It was the concepts you mentioned, specifically "not the odds, but the stakes", which I recognised from your posts here (https://mastodon.social/@jayrosen_nyu/110429999743689756).

Matter o'fact I think I'll give it a second listen.

Brooke's still good, but I do miss Bob.

#OnTheMedia #StakesNotOdds