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In some sort of cosmic convergence today, my favorite nerdy show (Heroes) actress, Brea Grant, pointed me at my other favorite nerdy movie (Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy) actress’s band, She & Him. That actress is Zooey Deschanel. The track above is their VMA nominated video for Why Do You Let Me Stay Here?.

I like I Thought I Saw Your Face Today better, so here’s a live recording of them performing this track:

Good stuff. Today has been a music bonanza. The album is Volume One. Click through to buy the album.

3:02 am | leave a comment
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Excerpt:

Finally a few more people understand the press wars are on. Kristof:

With President Bush leading a charge against this “disgraceful” newspaper, and a conservative talk show host, Melanie Morgan, suggesting that maybe The Times’s executive editor should be executed for treason, we face a fundamental dispute about the role of the news media in America.

At stake is the administration’s campaign to recast the relationship between government and press.

More broadly, the one thing worse than a press that is “out of control” is one that is under control. Anybody who has lived in a Communist country knows that. Just consider what would happen if the news media as a whole were as docile to the administration as Fox News or The Wall Street Journal editorial page.

When I was covering the war in Iraq, we reporters would sometimes tune to Fox News and watch, mystified, as it purported to describe how Iraqis loved Americans. Such coverage (backed by delusional Journal editorials baffling to anyone who was actually in Iraq) misled conservatives about Iraq from the beginning. In retrospect, the real victims of Fox News weren’t the liberals it attacked but the conservatives who believed it.

Historically, we in the press have done more damage to our nation by withholding secret information than by publishing it. One example was this newspaper’s withholding details of the plans for the Bay of Pigs invasion. President Kennedy himself suggested that the U.S. would have been better served if The Times had published the full story and derailed the invasion.

Then there were the C.I.A. abuses that journalists kept mum about until they spilled over and prompted the Church Committee investigation in the 1970’s. And there are secrets we should have found, but didn’t: in the run-up to the Iraq war, the press — particularly this newspaper — was too credulous about claims that Iraq possessed large amounts of W.M.D.

9:28 pm | leave a comment

Jay Rosen has a good rundown of why McClellan was the best possible Press Secretary for this President. Rosen’s commentary about Rollback is, I think, the most intelligent analysis of the relationship between the press and this White House. In a fairly objective way, it describes pretty accurately the full range of this Administrations relationship with the media, with truth, and with oversight.

12:11 am | leave a comment

Via Eschaton, I see that our estemed President is holding a prime time press conference tomorrow night to discuss his plans for Social Security and oil prices. Bush’s press conferences are like the proverbial train wreck. You want to turn away but you end up watching just to see what gruesome thing will come up next. The good thing for the President is that he’s gotten much more comfortable since he was reelected. The bad thing is that he still sucks at them.

I’m also interested, as always, in seeing what kind of questions he will get this time around, and which questions the plants in the press pool will ask. The trick is, of course, whether there are any differences between the general questions and the questions from those plants… the press has been extraordinarily deferential to Bush in these things, more so than they ever were under Clinton or G.H.W. Bush.

1:14 am | leave a comment