Matt Drudge: Difference between revisions
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'''Matt Drudge''' (born [[October 27]], [[1966]]) is an [[Internet]] [[journalist]] and [[muckraker]]. |
'''Matt Drudge''' (born [[October 27]], [[1966]]) is an [[Internet]] [[journalist]] and [[muckraker]]. |
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See also: [[yellow journalism]]. |
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Drudge's web site is '''Drudge Report''', which the ''[[London News Review]]'' has called "notoriously unreliable." [http://www.lnreview.co.uk/media/journal/001922.php] Founded in [[1994]], it consists primarily of links to stories about politics, entertainment, and various current events, and to many popular columnists, although Drudge occasionally authors a story of his own. Drudge started his website on a [[Intel 80486|486]] computer from an apartment in [[Hollywood, California]]. Today, Drudge maintains the website from his condominium in [[Miami, Florida]] along with his longtime friend and associate Andrew Breitbart based in [[Los Angeles, California|Los Angeles]]. Drudge utilizes connections with industry and media insiders to break stories sometimes before they hit the mainstream media. Probably, Drudge got the attention in one such case, when he beat the mainstream media to the announcement of [[Diana, Princess of Wales]]'s death. |
Drudge's web site is '''Drudge Report''', which the ''[[London News Review]]'' has called "notoriously unreliable." [http://www.lnreview.co.uk/media/journal/001922.php] Founded in [[1994]], it consists primarily of links to stories about politics, entertainment, and various current events, and to many popular columnists, although Drudge occasionally authors a story of his own. Drudge started his website on a [[Intel 80486|486]] computer from an apartment in [[Hollywood, California]]. Today, Drudge maintains the website from his condominium in [[Miami, Florida]] along with his longtime friend and associate Andrew Breitbart based in [[Los Angeles, California|Los Angeles]]. Drudge utilizes connections with industry and media insiders to break stories sometimes before they hit the mainstream media. Probably, Drudge got the attention in one such case, when he beat the mainstream media to the announcement of [[Diana, Princess of Wales]]'s death. |
Revision as of 16:35, 24 July 2004
Matt Drudge (born October 27, 1966) is an Internet journalist and muckraker.
See also: yellow journalism.
Drudge's web site is Drudge Report, which the London News Review has called "notoriously unreliable." [1] Founded in 1994, it consists primarily of links to stories about politics, entertainment, and various current events, and to many popular columnists, although Drudge occasionally authors a story of his own. Drudge started his website on a 486 computer from an apartment in Hollywood, California. Today, Drudge maintains the website from his condominium in Miami, Florida along with his longtime friend and associate Andrew Breitbart based in Los Angeles. Drudge utilizes connections with industry and media insiders to break stories sometimes before they hit the mainstream media. Probably, Drudge got the attention in one such case, when he beat the mainstream media to the announcement of Diana, Princess of Wales's death.
Drudge first received national attention in 1996 when he broke the news that Jack Kemp would be Republican Bob Dole's running mate in the 1996 presidential election. In 1998, Drudge again made national waves when he broke the news that Newsweek magazine had information on an inappropriate relationship between "a White House intern" and President Bill Clinton (the Monica Lewinsky scandal), but was withholding publication. After Drudge's report, Newsweek published the story.
Some critics note that Drudge's contribution to journalism is questionable, saying that the only stories he actually breaks are completely conceived, researched, funded, and written by other reporters. A federal judge noted in a judgment on a slander lawsuit, which ended in Drudge's favor, that Drudge is not a "reporter, news gatherer or journalist". Drudge's most famous achievement, the breaking of the Monica Lewinsky story, offended editors because by publishing details of the story, Drudge essentially made an editorial decision that overrode Newsweek's. Drudge's politics are unabashedly conservative, and he often selects as the lead story of his website articles that promote the anti-abortion stance, praise prominent conservatives, or criticize prominent liberals; this has led some critics to call him a mouthpiece of the conservative establishment in the United States. However, Drudge has repeatedly attempted to distance himself from establishment conservatives, arguing that his politics more accurately reflect libertarianism.
In addition to links to articles researched and written by journalists, the Report often includes stories authored by Drudge himself. Usually two to three paragraphs in length, these stories generally break a rumor concering a story that is about to break in a major magazine or newspaper. In 1998, he correctly reported that Newsweek was considering a report on Bill Clinton's affair with Monica Lewinski.
The Report has not always been so prescient, however. Shortly before the announcement that John Kerry had selected John Edwards as his running mate in July 2004, the Report claimed that former first lady Hillary Clinton had been selected. Whereas the New York Post was castigated for incorrectly reporting that Kerry chose as his running mate U. S. Representative Richard Gephardt, the Report escaped criticism. The Report was also a source of more sensational rumors about the presidential candidate, alleging, in February 2004, that John Kerry had an affair with a young intern named Alexandra Polier. The woman, who in fact was never an intern for Kerry, denied the claim, and the rumor has now been thoroughly repudiated. It was this latter story that led the London News Review to call the Drudge Report "notoriously unreliable."
Despite its record of unreliability, the Drudge Report profits from the nature of its electronic medium. Because the Drudge Report is published electronically, and not in print, such inaccuracies and errors are often forgotten.
Drudge also hosts a weekly Sunday night talk radio show—"The only time anyone will let me on the air," he claims. Drudge hosted a short-lived television show on the Fox News Channel starting in June 1998. He also wrote a book in 2000 titled Drudge Manifesto (Hardcover ISBN 0451201507, Paperback ISBN 0451204913).
An investigation by Business 2.0 magazine estimated that Drudge's website pulled in $3,500 a day in advertising revenues. Combined with his radio show and subtracting his minor server costs, the magazine estimated that Drudge pulls in $800,000 a year with his simple website. During a 04/30/2004 c-span appearance, Drudge confirmed that he actually has broken the seven-figure mark.
An article in The Miami Herald said Drudge estimates he pulls in $1.2 million a year from his website and radio show. Before founding his website, Drudge worked in the gift shop of CBS television, where he was apparently privy to some inside gossip, part of the inspiration for founding the Drudge Report.
External links
- Drudge Report
- The Secrets of Drudge, Inc., by Geoff Keighley, Business 2.0, April 2003
- Linking news sites, Matt Drudge creates an Internet success, by Richard Pachter, The Miami Herald, September 1, 2003