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more about #nicholaskristof more comments → iplaudius: In the States he’s known as Simon Chip. Sorry. more » Linda Nuanlaoong: ? more » Sproing: If Ashton's neighbor is following him, the hammering will now commence at 5. more » Smitros: Reed's gonna be okay. Kristof already is. more » leonleonleon: Good God I am reading blog posts about Twitter posts about media lives I am so failing at my New Year's resolutions more » DavidQuintero: This farce is rapidly barreling toward TwitterTwatter, a site which enables you to post random thoughts about Twitter posts. more » kjack: Umm, call me a suburban gringa, but doesn't how "deep" someone "rolls" reflect the number of "homies" in one's "posse?" Mr. Brown, I believe you shoul... more » contradicto: Today I had a diet greek salad for lunch. The "diet" part confused me because it was basically a gyro rearranged as a salad. more » Private Hangnail: I just ate an almond off the floor. That's how deep I roll. more » FaceMelter: OK, we get it. There is this website called Twitter, that allows people to publicly share tidbits of information. Owen, I'm a fan, but this column i... more » -
#twitterati
The Twitterati Hold Hands with George Clooney's Hose
On Twitter, no brush with celebrity can go unremarked. Guess which member of the Twitterati slept with George Clooney and which one held hands at Ryan Seacrest's workplace! More » -
#twitterati
Self-Improvement, 140 Characters at a Time
Today's tweets: Ashton Kutcher tried to be more tolerant, the New Yorker's Sasha Frere-Jones tried to be more zen, and a guy who dropped out of journalism school tried to be more drunk. More » -
#twitterati
Life Is Good for the Twitterati
The media live deeply ordinary lives. Okay, deeply ordinary lives in which their bosses buy them caviar. The Twitterati report in with a feast for the senses: More » -
#journalismism
"No Graphic In Human History Has Saved So Many Lives"
Design blog Signal vs. Noise today reminded everyone of the 1997 Times infographic reproduced above. Nicholas Kristof, whose article on world disease featured the chart, declared in an old-but-recently-surfaced email that "no graphic in human history has saved so many lives in Africa and Asia." Apparently it persuaded billionaire Bill Gates to start donating his money to disease prevention instead of global internet access. Kristof said the Microsoft founder was too lazy to read the full, 3,500-world article: More » -

