翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ The Bull's Head, Barnes
・ The Bull's Hour
・ The Bull-Dogger
・ The Bulldaggers
・ The Bulldog
・ The Bulldog Breed
・ The Bullet (UMW)
・ The Bullet is Not for Firing
・ The Bullet is Still in My Pocket
・ The Bullet Project
・ The Bullet That Saved the World
・ The Bullet Train
・ The Bullet Vanishes
・ The Bulleteers
・ The Bulletin
The Bulletin (alternative weekly)
・ The Bulletin (Bend)
・ The Bulletin (Brussels weekly)
・ The Bulletin (newspaper)
・ The Bulletin (Norwich)
・ The Bulletin (Pittsburgh)
・ The Bulletin of International Legal Developments
・ The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
・ The Bulletmonks
・ The Bullfighter Checks Her Makeup
・ The Bullfighter Dies
・ The Bullfighter's Suit
・ The Bullfighters
・ The Bullies Have All Gone to Rest
・ The Bullion Boys


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

The Bulletin (alternative weekly) : ウィキペディア英語版
The Bulletin (alternative weekly)

''The Montgomery County Bulletin'' or simply ''The Bulletin'' was a free alternative weekly newspaper distributed in Montgomery County, Texas; a suburban county north of Houston. It claimed a circulation of 20,000 copies before being forced out of business in 2008 due to evidence of massive plagiarism.
==History==
The paper was founded in 1969 as a shopper. In 1998, Mike Ladyman, former publisher of ''Wheels'' magazine (no relation to the Australian publication) bought the paper and turned it into an alternative weekly. He largely ran it as a mom-and-pop business, delivering the paper himself. He largely left the writing to Mark Williams, a freelance writer who was listed as a staff reporter and music editor.〔
In Ladyman's first year of ownership, the ''Bulletin'' received the "Most Improved Newspaper" award from the Texas Community Newspaper Association.〔
==Plagiarism scandal==
In late July 2008, ''Slate'' music critic Jody Rosen got word that a Williams piece about Jimmy Buffett that appeared in the March 2008 ''Bulletin'' was almost a verbatim copy of a 2007 piece Rosen had written for ''Slate''. Rosen did a search on Google, and discovered that all of Williams' articles dating back to at least 2005 had been copied wholesale from numerous sources. Williams appeared to have stolen work from diverse publications such as ''The Guardian'', ''salon.com'', ''NME'', ''Rolling Stone'' and the ''Boston Globe''. The Buffett article that triggered his initial inquiry, for instance, had been lifted from Rosen's 2007 piece and two other articles. He also found at that Williams had stolen at least one of his other articles for ''Slate.''〔〔(Free Copy ). NPR and WNYC, 2008-08-08.〕
Later, Rosen obtained a copy of the ''Bulletin's'' latest issue, and found that nearly every article in it appeared to have been plagiarized. Rosen suggested that "in purely statistical terms, () the articles in the Montgomery County Bulletin () amount to the greatest plagiarism scandal in the annals of American journalism".

After Rosen published his article on August 6, 2008; some observers suggested that Mark Williams was simply a ''nom de plume'' of Mike Ladyman, but in a ''Houston Press'' interview Ladyman denied the charge and called ''Slate's'' piece “an attack, an attention-grabbing hatchet job”. He also complained of Rosen's attitude in the affair and claimed that he was not given sufficient time and details to react appropriately and diligently. “The mistake I made was not working fast enough for Jody Rosen and apparently I needed to be punished for it.”〔 Ladyman announced he was shutting down ''The Bulletin, and blamed Williams for the plagiarism. Williams himself published a bitter and sarcastic open letter to Rosen in which he wrote, describing himself as the victim of the critic's quest for blogosphere fame: "Of course, you are certainly owed an apology, but one has to ponder for a moment just why that is; after all, you have most definitely garnered the attention of the bloggers that you evidently crave in abundance with this manufactured scandal." Williams claimed that he had not intentionally plagiarized articles but had simply used press kit material without realizing that they included work of other journalists: "I did so thinking it was cleared for such use; but, as () so subtly pointed out, I was mistaken."〔〔 In turn, Rosen contested the timeline presented by Ladyman, and blamed him for shunning his responsibilities as the newspaper's editor.
The scandal also spawned discussion on the thin line which separates plagiarism from very commonplace news aggregation. In the conclusion of his piece, Rosen quipped "Mike Ladyman and company may simply be bringing guerrilla-style 21st-century content aggregation to 20th-century print media: publishing the Napster of newspapers." 〔 Craig Silverman of Regret the Error described the ''Bulletin'' as "perhaps the first newspaper to pursue plagiarism as a standard operating procedure."〔Silverman, Craig. (Crunks 2008: The Year in Media Errors and Corrections ). Regret The Error, 2008-12-16.〕
Rosen was a guest on NPR's ''On the Media'' on August 8, 2008. He suggested that the ''Bulletin'' really didn't need a Website because it was a free paper supported by advertising in the print edition. He thought that Williams' plagiarism probably would have gone unnoticed had not the paper's Website opened it up to being searched on Google.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「The Bulletin (alternative weekly)」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.