Hi--I'm the managing editor, and just wanted to weigh in on the image. My fault--I was thinking of more of a kitschy, tongue-in-cheek hula-girl image when I suggested the illustration idea, and didn't take the time to double check it before it went up. Apologies to everyone it offended, and I hope you'll still read the article, which I think has lots of interesting points to make.
Jessica Clark
Jessica Clark has a varied history with In These Times, having served as the magazine’s executive editor, managing editor, associate publisher and assistant publisher. She is currently at work on a book about the rise of the progressive media sector with Tracy Van Slyke, and is the director of the Future of Public Media project at American University’s Center for Social Media
Most Recent Articles view all 108
-
iPower to the People
The perils and promise of point-and-click politics
vol. 31, iss. 12 politics, technology
-
Blogs Up, Hacks Down
The appearance of seven Democratic presidential contenders at the YearlyKos convention demonstrated that the Kossacks and fellow A-listers--along with what the Liberal Blog Advertising Network calls their 3 million daily readers--are now ensconced as political players
vol. 31, iss. 09 media reform, technology
-
Chasing the Green Pound in London
Forget "I am not a plastic bag" campaign, Spitalfield's Market is where to find London's genuine eco-friendly fashion
vol. 31, iss. 06 art culture, europe
-
Boomsday: Bankrupt Satire
Libertarians are a strange lot. Their targets often seem reasonable; their solutions myopic and partial. So it goes… more
vol. 31, iss. 04 books
-
Bisexual Healing
Cringing is often a sign of unfinished political business," according to feminist author Jennifer Baumgardner. She should know.… more
vol. 31, iss. 03 books, lgbt
Latest Comments view all 12
-
-
Addendum: From an American Apparel press release JUDGE DISMISSES SEXUAL HARASSMENT LAWSUIT AGAINST AMERICAN APPAREL No Further Legal Action in the Case Will be Allowed; Plaintiff Receives No Money November 7, 2005 Los Angeles (CA)-American Apparel, the Los Angeles based apparel company and largest T-shirt manufacturer in the U.S., today announced the dismissal of a sexual harassment lawsuit that had been recently filed against the company. A United States Federal District Court Judge entered the order in favor of American Apparel on November 3, 2005, dismissing with prejudice the case brought by a former employee. This ruling marks the end of …
Posted to Wolf in Sheep's Clothing
-
What the hell??
Posted to Drawing the Line
-
Just so you know--our Webmaster has been alerted to this name-stealing problem and is looking into solutions. Please stay put, and thanks for reading and commenting!
Posted to Drawing the Line
-
Richard: We ran an adapted version of Bill Moyers' speech in the same issue of the magazine as this article, so I figured there was no need to mention it in this short account.
Posted to Free Speech in Action
- Joined January 3, 2003
- Last Visit November 24, 2008
- URL
- Location Chicago
- Occupation Editor-at-Large