Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigExact(1)
CNN's Don Lemon is notorious for not being interested in "politically correct" journalism.
Similar(59)
When Flowers first contacted me, in the summer of 2014, he said he wanted to correct the "sloppy journalism" that implied one of the reasons he left the Co-op was his drug use.
The College Board thought the sentence was correct, but a journalism teacher in Maryland told the officials that the word "her" did not refer back to Toni Morrison but to "Toni Morrison's" -- an error in grammar.
When it came to heterosexual public figures and their affairs, divorces and other romantic interests, Smith and other celebrity and political chroniclers not only had to get their details correct ― per proper journalism ― but they knew the public saw this as glamorous and exciting.
(Writing in The Financial Times, he also observed that "most modern American journalism is impeccably sober and politically correct but at the price of also becoming monumentally dull").
It says it is "a nonprofit watchdog group committed to exposing those who engage in improper journalism-award-giving," and seeks to correct what it calls a grave injustice.
I think it's part of the way in which that balance is corrected, part of it is through news and journalism and gossip.
When the rest of the journalism world gets something wrong, they generally correct themselves.
As Eric Newton, managing editor of Gannett's Newseum, a journalism museum in Arlington, Va., says, newscasters correct "the next broadcast, not past broadcasts".
With due respect, I have to wonder if Jill Abramson's comment that women don't bring a different sensibility to journalism was a disingenuous attempt to be politically correct.
Yes, that is the correct spelling for this highly interactive high-tech museum devoted to journalism.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com