Charles Foster Johnson

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Charles Foster "Icarus" Johnson (born April 13, 1953) is an American Jazz guitarist who has played on 29 albums. He also runs the weblog Little Green Footballs which is in the top 50 most popular blogs on the Internet.[1]

Contents

[edit] Biography

Charles Johnson was born in New York and raised in Hawaii. He launched his first career (as a jazz guitarist) in the mid-1970s. Extensive recording credits include at least three albums that went gold: Reach For It by George Duke, School Days by Stanley Clarke, and Live in London by Al Jarreau.

He later co-founded CodeHead Technologies,[2] which marketed productivity and desktop publishing software (mostly hand-coded in assembly language) for the Atari ST computer. In 2001, Charles Johnson founded a web design firm called "Little Green Footballs" with his brother Michael. The Little Green Footballs weblog began as a testbed on the company's website.

Israel National News has referred to Johnson as a "Righteous Gentile" because of his support for Israel.[3]

Johnson created this animated GIF image
Johnson created this animated GIF image

Johnson is a co-founder of Pajamas Media.

He gained increased public attention for debunking Dan Rather’s forged National Guard letter about George W Bush during the 2004 US presidential campaign. (See Killian documents and Killian documents authenticity issues.) He tried typing the contents of the letter dated "18 August 1973" into Microsoft Word with the default settings and found that the result closely matched the document which CBS claimed had been written with a typewriter in 1973.[4] He then created an animated GIF image alternating between a photocopy of the forged memo and his newly-created version,[5] demonstrating that the two match exactly except for distortions and blots introduced when the forgery was photocopied and faxed.

[edit] Political views

Charles Johnson says he is a former liberal who was deeply affected by the September 11, 2001 attacks and now describes himself (per neoconservative writer Irving Kristol) as "a liberal who got mugged by reality".[citation needed]

According to Johnson, "political correctness has kept a lot of the hard truth from being spread by the mainstream media."[6]

Charles Johnson coined the term "idiotarian"[7], popularized the epithet "moonbat"[8] and promoted the sarcastic use of the phrase "Religion of Peace" to describe Islam.[9][10][11]

He also coined the term "fauxtography"[12] to describe the publishing of manipulated photographs of the 2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict by news services such as Reuters and the Associated Press. (See 2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict photographs controversies and Adnan Hajj photographs controversy.)

[edit] Religious views

Charles Johnson was raised Roman Catholic but now considers himself an agnostic.[citation needed]

[edit] Discography


[edit] References

  1. ^ Popular Blogs. Technorati. Retrieved on 2006-10-15.
  2. ^ John Eidsvoog (1991-06-06). The Story of CodeHead Software. Retrieved on 2006-10-15.
  3. ^ Gil Ronen. "At Israel's Right", Arutz Sheva Israel National News, 2004-04-29. Retrieved on 2006-10-15.
  4. ^ Charles Johnson (2004-09-09). Bush Guard Documents: Forged. Little Green Footballs. Retrieved on 2006-10-15.
  5. ^ Charles Johnson (2004-09-11). One More CBS Document Example. Little Green Footballs. Retrieved on 2006-10-15.
  6. ^ Paul Farhi. "Blogger Takes Aim At News Media and Makes a Direct Hit", Washington Post, 2006-08-09. Retrieved on 2006-10-15.
  7. ^ Charles Johnson (2002-01-05). Anti-idiotarian bloggers. Little Green Footballs. Retrieved on 2006-10-15.
  8. ^ A search for posts on Little Green Footballs containing the word "moonbat", conducted 2006-10-15, found 686 matches dating back to 2002-08-04
  9. ^ Charles Johnson (2002-04-16). Scenes from a Peaceful Religion. Little Green Footballs. Retrieved on 2006-10-15.
  10. ^ Charles Johnson (2002-06-11). Peaceful Religion Sweepstakes. Little Green Footballs. Retrieved on 2006-10-15.
  11. ^ Charles Johnson (2002-08-22). Religion of Peace. Little Green Footballs. Retrieved on 2006-10-15.
  12. ^ Charles Johnson (2006-08-08). MSM Fauxtography Watch. Little Green Footballs. Retrieved on 2006-10-15.

[edit] External links