The Dealbreaker site has begun a survey of the business press. It’s first survey asks readers to vote for the business publication that covered the Amaranth hedge fund meltdown the best.
The site stated, “Like obituaries, the business pages used to be the sort of place you stored reporters who were hitting the bottle a little too hard. They couldn’t cause too much trouble there, the job was mostly just reporting from press releases, and nobody read anything from the business section besides the stock quotes anyway.
These days, however, the financial press takes itself a bit more seriously. The various financial news organizations compete for stories, pride themselves on scoops, and practice habits they picked up from other journalists—like fact checking. (Sometimes. Every now and then we feel like we’re back in the days of the gin soaked business hack calling his story in from the payphone Costello’s.)
“But what’s the point of competing if you don’t have a winner? So today initiates our first ever DealBreaker Business Press Reader Poll. Here’s how it works. Every week we’ll take the biggest business story and ask which news organization covered it the best. Sometimes we’ll focus on the wires, sometimes on television, sometimes on the glossies. And sometimes we’ll mix it up.”
Click here to vote for your favorite. But please, no stuffing the ballot box for your employer.
CNBC senior vice president Dan Colarusso sent out the following on Monday: Before this year comes to…
Business Insider editor in chief Jamie Heller sent out the following on Monday: I'm excited to share…
Former CoinDesk editorial staffer Michael McSweeney writes about the recent happenings at the cryptocurrency news site, where…
Manas Pratap Singh, finance editor for LinkedIn News Europe, has left for a new opportunity…
Washington Post executive editor Matt Murray sent out the following on Friday: Dear All, Over the last…
The Financial Times has hired Barbara Moens to cover competition and tech in Brussels. She will start…