What We’re Reading
Date: 06 September 2016
By THE NEW YORK TIMES
Get recommendations from New York Times reporters and editors, highlighting great stories from around the web. Today, great reads from Mike Isaac, Sam Sifton and others.
Il 5 settembre 2016 era una lunedì sotto il segno zodiacale del ♍. Era il 248 ° giorno dell'anno. Il presidente degli Stati Uniti era Barack Obama.
Se sei nato in questo giorno, hai 9 anni. Il tuo ultimo compleanno era il venerdì 5 settembre 2025, 273 giorni fa. Il tuo prossimo compleanno è il sabato 5 settembre 2026, in 91 giorni. Hai vissuto per 3.560 giorni, o circa 85.457 ore, o circa 5.127.448 minuti, o circa 307.646.880 secondi.
Date: 06 September 2016
By THE NEW YORK TIMES
Get recommendations from New York Times reporters and editors, highlighting great stories from around the web. Today, great reads from Mike Isaac, Sam Sifton and others.
Date: 06 September 2016
By SYDNEY EMBER
Sydney EMBER
BuzzFeed, confronting headwinds, splits its news and entertainment units; reorganization is betting on future of video and entertainment, with video hopefully bringing in over 75 percent of advertising revenue within next two years.
Date: 05 September 2016
By STEVEN ROCKER
Steven ROCKER
Date: 06 September 2016
By SYDNEY EMBER and STACY COWLEY
Sydney EMBER
Former Fox News chairman Roger Ailes has informed New York magazine he may sue publication over its reporting about him; New York reporter Gabriel Sherman wrote extensively about Ailes and sexual harassment allegations by female employees that resulted in his ouster from Fox.
Date: 06 September 2016
By AMY CHOZICK
Amy CHOZICK
Hillary Clinton enters fall general election campaign with her new plane; Boeing 737 has 'H' on tail, with slogan 'Stronger Together' on side; she permits journalists on specially outfitted aircraft.
Date: 05 September 2016
By JIM RUTENBERG
Jim RUTENBERG
Date: 05 September 2016
By SAPNA MAHESHWARI
Sapna MAHESHWARI
Date: 06 September 2016
By DAVID STREITFELD
David STREITFELD
Redwood City Journal; demand for homes in Silicon Valley, where inventory is minuscule, drives desperate buyers to make offers on houses not officially for sale; technology boom brings both wealth and culture of impatience to region's housing market and causing prices to soar in places like Redwood City.