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Lý ở hai bên dãy Pyrénées
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làm nhưng có bán Bastos xanh. Hớp ngụm cà phê từ dĩa (đĩa) mà thiếu Bastos xanh
cứ như đi câu mà chẳng có cần (câu). Ở đời, 9 người 10 ý, vậy xin mời dô:
Introducing
Galley: A new forum to talk about journalism
By Kyle Pope, CJR
NOVEMBER 29, 2018
WELCOME TO GALLEY. Or,
for some of you, welcome back.
For
years now, we’ve been looking for a way to open up CJR, to invite people in to
talk, to debate, to think things through.
It is
one of the biggest frustrations of the media moment in which we live: precisely
when there is so much in journalism to discuss, the places we can have those
conversations seem inadequate. Reader comments sections grew toxic; many
outlets did away with them. Email to a generic address seems too impersonal.
Facebook is too generic and politically fraught. And Twitter, where most of the
journalistic conversation still happens, is a useful but chaotic place, mined
with booby traps, jabbing, and outrage—not a forum for nuanced, thoughtful exchange.
And yet that is what we all so desperately need.
People
talk about social platforms as town squares, but Galley is
really more of a neighborhood for journalism. You decide the experience you
want, largely based on whom you trust. If you want a public square, where maybe
someone’s standing on a milk crate railing about injustice while a crowd
watches on, you can do that, by following along in a conversation open to
everyone. But there’s also the option of a more quiet, one-on-one conversation
just with people you trust. Designating those people is as simple as clicking
the trust button on their profile. Different conversations and topics can be
open to different groups of people, depending on your mood, on the subject
matter, on who else is involved. It’s all entirely up to you.
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