Hey, there! Log in / Register

Storm vs. Herald: Herald loses

A power outage at wherever it is the Herald gets printed these days (Chicopee?) means no Heralds for sale around here. The Dedham Square newsstand even has a "NO HERALDS" sign above the shelf where they'd normally be.

Neighborhoods: 
Topics: 
Free tagging: 


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

Comments

A: Illegals
B: Unions
C: Communists
D: Socialists
E: Hippies
F: Dirty Hippies
G: "Obummer"

H: All of the Above

up
Voting closed 0

because they hate everybody.

up
Voting closed 0

We were heading west on the pike to W. Springfield this morning and saw the occasional tree that fell next to the road. Then, at around Palmer, there was a lot more carnage, lots of trees down. W. Springfield had no power.

Wierd thing, the rest areas were nuts with people trying to get gas. Huge lines all the way out to the road, all for gas.

up
Voting closed 0

... The Manchester, NH-based paper placed a notice on its website, and offered anyone a free subscription to its E-Reader, since the paper doesn't put all its stories on its website.

up
Voting closed 0

Everyone else wins.

up
Voting closed 0

Does anybody actually buy the Sunday Herald?

up
Voting closed 0

My print edition Sunday Herald was delivered intact, right on time. I paticularly enjoyed Howie Carr's column.

up
Voting closed 0

opinion from our own turd bottom. Love how he accuses Warren of being fake when ole Fat Boy has been lipoed, botoxed and hair transplanted in some vainglorious effort to get someone on network TV to notice him.

Sorry, Howie, that call from Imus to become the new member of that morning zoo isn't coming any time soon. Boy how it must burn Carr to see Barnicle each morning on MSNBC, I mean he's a plagiarist for Chrissake, Carr's only crime is being boring.

And while Carr is trying to accuse Warren of being an out of touch moonbat, it's a little hard to take from a guy who went to upscale private schools that Ms. Warren could not have afforded and lives in a town only the 1% can afford to live in.

up
Voting closed 0

Is Whitey Bulger still "keeping the drugs out" of Southie? Are fictional black kids and white kids still making peace while battling childhood cancer? Ha! Not sure if Carr (or anyone else) is losing any sleep over Barnicle. That MSNBC and Imus still keep him around is telling of how meaningless they are.

As for being a "guy who went to upscale private schools that Ms. Warren could not have afforded and lives in a town only the 1% can afford to live in", I believe Carr's parents worked at the prep school he attended thereby allowing him access and although admitted, he couldn't afford the Ivy's. Lastly, having a couple of best sellers and a top rated column / radio show allows for a wide choice in living arrangements. A few more years at Hahvud at nearly $400,000 for a couple of classes and Ms. Warren might be able to move out of the university owned mansion. I hear Dewey Square has some "cool" vacancies.

up
Voting closed 0

Why is he still composing columns from templates that wouldn't even fill a book of madlibs? If he's not careful, old Rupert will simply have an intern program a computer to add candidate's names to the blanks between "moonbat" and "liberal" and POOF! - Howie's out of a job.

up
Voting closed 0

Love it! Howie-Libs! Start printing those things up and you'll make a god-damned fortune, I tellsya! You can sell 'em here on UHub next to the T-map showuh curtains!

up
Voting closed 0

Fish, I don't think anyone can question my Barnicle-bashing credentials. In fact, the idea that he was a defender of Whitey Bulger is a bit of urban legend not backed up by what he actually wrote. See this:

http://www.dankennedy.net/2011/06/25/salon-gets-it...

Barnicle was a shameless apologist for Bill Bulger and James Connolly, but that's hardly in the same category.

up
Voting closed 0

Dan, nice to hear from you. Your defense of Barnicle's handling of Whitey Bulger relies on readers joining you in interpreting Barnicle's fawning 1991 column as bad "satire". Seems that many of your own commenters at Media Nation disagree. As do I.

Even if that particular piece was satire as you insist, your commenter L.K. Collins makes the very cogent point that the careers of both Bulgers were so closely intertwined, it makes "Barnicle’s fawning that much more unacceptable." I would add Connolly (John, not James) to the same intertwined mess. Then there is this from your very own 1998 Phoenix column:

And when it comes to the other Bulger, Whitey, Barnicle crosses the line from irresponsibility into journalistic corruption. Barnicle has consistently, and against all reason, defended the deal FBI agent John Connolly made with Whitey Bulger and Stephen Flemmi, letting them sell drugs, terrorize their enemies, and even kill in return for intelligence on La Cosa Nostra.

Barnicle's August 4 effort -- coming just two days after the Carlin column -- was quintessential Barnicle. He went after John Martorano, a killer who's decided to cooperate with the FBI in its quest to track down the elusive Bulger. Barnicle quoted Eddie Walsh, "an honest cop," as saying Martorano "killed an awful lot of black people," including three women at a Roxbury club in the 1960s. "If he gets immunity," Walsh, who's now retired, told Barnicle, "they ought to put the judge in jail."

The column caused an immediate uproar, because sources inside the Globe -- not to mention Herald columnist Peter Gelzinis -- questioned how there could have been an unsolved triple murder that no one could remember. As it turned out, the murder had occurred, though Barnicle had some of the genders wrong (it was two men and one woman). But as Gelzinis reported in a devastating column on August 6, Barnicle failed to mention that "honest cop" Walsh is one of Connolly's closest friends. And that Connolly had shared with Walsh information that could have saved the life of a bookie who was prepared to rat out Bulger, had Walsh chosen to do anything with said information. Leaving out such facts is not just bias on Barnicle's part; it's gross malpractice, and it's inexplicable that the same Globe that could produce a Pulitzer-caliber Spotlight series on the FBI's Bulger connection could at the same time tolerate such sleaze."

Dan, it's hard to square that with your current claim that Barnicle wasn't a "defender of Whitey Bulger." As for Howie Carr's material, it's among the best in the city right now, which, granted isn't saying much. It's nice to learn of things like the probation scandal and the OUI jury waived trial scandal, days, sometimes weeks before the Globe gets to them. Unfortunately, Carr's Friday column on the OUI stuff was apparently cut by skittish Herald lawyers, but he had it on his radio show days before it "broke".

up
Voting closed 0

Nothing wrong with being an apologist for James Connolly!

(John Connolly is a different story, though.)

up
Voting closed 0

Carr isn't looking to become part of Imus' crew; they hate each other. Carr won a lawsuit against Imus for defaming Carr's wife; he wrote a column years ago thanking Imus for their new summer home.

up
Voting closed 0

Trust me, Carr's a bloated old nobody at this point. If Imus offered him a full time gig on Fox, believe me, he'd find a way to bury the hatchet.If Morning Joe offered him a slot on Barnicle's day off Howie would take it. Howie would kill to be on TV.

up
Voting closed 0

Because the power is still out. Marty Baron, editor of that other paper, tweeted this morning:

The world off its axis? Today, the Boston Globe printed the Boston Herald. (Power outage where they're usually printed.)

up
Voting closed 0

Why, Fish? Did Howie get someone who actually cares to write it for him?

up
Voting closed 0