Slate (magazine)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
URL | http://slate.com/ |
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Commercial? | Yes |
Type of site | Online Magazine |
Registration | Optional for The Fray |
Owner | The Washington Post Company |
Created by | Microsoft Corporation |
Slate is an online news and culture magazine created in 1996 by former New Republic editor Michael Kinsley and owned by Microsoft (as part of MSN). On December 21, 2004, it was purchased by the Washington Post Company. Former political correspondent Jacob Weisberg is the current editor and the Washington Post Company's Cliff Sloan is Slate's publisher.[1]
Like Salon.com, it is updated every day, and covers politics, arts and culture, sports, and news. Unlike Salon, it is entirely free as of 2006.
Contents |
[edit] Background
Slate features regular and semi-regular columns such as Explainer, Chatterbox, and Dear Prudence. Many of the articles tend to be short and relatively lighthearted pieces. There are also many meta-columns: collection and analysis of major newspapers, magazines, blogs, and the like. It has a number of associated blogs, including some of the most notable on the Internet, such as the Kausfiles. It also features frequent week-long diary series from interesting people and a link to each day's Doonesbury, whose website Slate hosts. Slate also features podcasts of several of its columns available for daily download.
Slate contributes to the National Public Radio show Day to Day.
Commentator Mickey Kaus's column "Kausfiles" is seen as one of the earliest blogs.
Slate features a set of online forum boards called "The Fray," the editing and moderator duties of which are left up to a "Fray Editor."
In March 1998, Slate attracted considerable notice by charging a $19.95 annual subscription fee, becoming one of the first non-pornographic sites to attempt a subscription-based business model. The scheme didn't work; less than a year later, in February 1999, Slate dropped the charge and returned to free content, citing both sluggish subscription sales and increased advertising revenue.
On July 15, 2005, Slate began offering a podcast, featuring selected stories from the site read by Slate editor Andy Bowers. Another podcast, featuring the Explainer column, was later added, read by Slate foreign editor June Thomas. A third, called Slate's Spoiler Special, reviews movies for people who have already seen them.
In September 2005, Michael Kinsley returned to Slate, writing a weekly column to be published simultaneously in Slate and the Washington Post.
On November 30, 2005, Slate started their daily feature ”Today's Pictures,” featuring fifteen to twenty photographs from the archive at Magnum Photos that share a common theme. The column also features two flash animated ”Interactive Essays” a month.
In June 2006, on its 10th anniversary, Slate unveiled a redesigned website.
[edit] Editorial stance
Slate's focus and editorial slant is politically liberal, as seen in choice of columnists, choice of and position on topics, and featured cartoon: Doonesbury. During the 2004 U.S. presidential campaign, a significant majority of staff and contributors supported Democratic challenger John Kerry.
A more fine-grained analysis puts Slate slightly to the left of The New Republic, but still to the right of Salon.com or The Nation. It includes many voices of the Clintonian / Democratic Leadership Council / neoliberal point of view. These include two of its bloggers: Mickey Kaus, whose favorite subjects include welfare reform and the potential for a future candidate from either party to reap major political gains by taking a law-and-order stance on immigration issues; and Bruce Reed, who was President Clinton's domestic policy adviser, and is current president of the Democratic Leadership Council. Jack Shafer, one of its top editors, has stated that he has voted for the Libertarian Party candidate for President in every election since he became eligible to vote. (One unusual feature of the magazine is that it explicitly states its staff's biases, going so far as to publish the presidential votes of individual staff members and writers.) Slate frequently publishes columns that advocate a neoclassical view of economics, for example articles by professors Paul Krugman, Steven Landsburg, and Tim Harford, who although perhaps classifiable as liberal, are still part of the economic establishment and have each done significant research work.
On the occupation of Iraq, Slate has taken a "liberal hawk" perspective. This viewpoint is embodied in the frequent contributions of Christopher Hitchens, William Saletan, Michael Kinsley and others. Timothy Noah is the only Slate staffer who initially opposed the U.S. invasion, and even he was persuaded to abandon his relatively dovish position by Colin Powell, as he documented in Chatterbox Goes to War. Since the war began, however, the magazine has been increasingly critical of the war's handling, most strongly in Fred Kaplan's "War Stories" column.
[edit] Contributors/Departments
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[edit] Other recurring features
- The Book Club
- Culturebox
- Foreigners
- Dispatches
- Books
- Fashion
- Shopping
- Gaming
- The Movie Club
- Science
Summary Columns:
- Today's Blogs
- In Other Magazines
- Today's Papers
- Summary Judgement
[edit] Other notable contributors
- Anne Applebaum
- Kevin Arnovitz
- Ian Bremmer
- Phillip Carter
- David Edelstien
- Cyrus Farivar
- Franklin Foer
- Robert Lane Greene
- David Helvarg
- Dan Kois
- Meghan O'Rourke
- Daniel Radosh
- Witold Rybczynski
- Judith Shulevitz
- Rodney A. Smolla
- James Surowiecki
- Chris Suellentrop
- Rob Walker
- Robert Wright
- Tim Wu
- Fareed Zakaria
- David Edelstein
[edit] References
- Slate website
- Galaxy Quest - Wikipedia is a real-life Hitchhiker's Guide: huge, nerdy, and imprecise. By Paul Boutin Posted Tuesday, May 3, 2005, at 2:37 p.m. PT on Slate Magazine. Paul Boutin compares Wikipedia to the Encyclopedia Galactica and The Hitchhiker's Guide mentioned in Douglas Adams' The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, and briefly talks about Wikipedia's Slate Magazine article. Readers can comment on the article in Slate's The Fray.
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