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karatestereo May 14 2010, 21:12:25 UTC
These days with an American studies degree you get more "credibility" (especially in most modern print journalism) in being able to complain about mainstream American society.

So that might come in useful.

;)

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merry_rogue May 14 2010, 23:47:52 UTC
Hahahaha! Good point.

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bla_girl May 14 2010, 23:53:49 UTC
Print journalism was so promising until the Internet came along.

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merry_rogue May 18 2010, 15:36:45 UTC
I figure so long as we write them fast enough, our stories are still translatable to the Web.

I hear our jobs are also getting outsourced to India. I can't, for the life of me, figure out how. Outsourcing is a bigger problem than illegal immigrants (they're ACTUALLY taking jobs people here are training for and not getting), but you know, we need India as an ally and all that. -_-

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bla_girl May 18 2010, 16:53:00 UTC
That's absolutely baffling! What would someone in India know about local issues? That's like telling an infertile woman to write about the joys of childbirth.

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merry_rogue May 18 2010, 16:58:50 UTC
Yeah, I thought I remembered hearing about it somehwere: http://freakonomics.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/05/14/outsourcing-journalism/

But I'm pretty sure I remember hearing about there being more cases than just the hiring of two reporters.

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hanzo187 May 16 2010, 03:21:31 UTC
Wait, a politician who's actually AGAINST raises? Hmm...I like this guy.

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merry_rogue May 18 2010, 15:33:33 UTC
I know right? And the man passed all sorts of legislation to protect student journalists and their advisers from the administration of their schools.

I wish he wasn't in San Francisco, because I'd totally give him a hug.

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