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  1. Sarah Edelman Change Your Thinking
  2. Sarah Edelman Change Your Thinking Pdf Writer
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Booktopia has Change Your Thinking, 3rd Edition by Sarah Edelman. Buy a discounted Paperback of Change Your Thinking online from Australia's leading online bookstore. The author gives a lot of simple tips that work, and the exercises are a big help.

What's the use of worrying? Strategies for breaking the worry habit Sarah Edelman My life has been full of terrible misfortunes. Changing ways of thinking that have been with us for years or decades requires self-awareness and motivation. We will need to recognise the. A brand new CD from best selling practitioner, Dr Sarah Edelman who provides us with another tool for becoming more aware and mindful in our everyday lives. Mindfulness Meditation is a technique in which a person becomes more intentionally conscious of their judgement and events in the present instant or situation, non-judgementally.

This is my list of books on clinical depression. I am writing this from the perspective of a Lutheran pastor, but not all of the books listed are Christian. They are all worthwhile however.
1The Bell Jar
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really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 525,750 ratings
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2Darkness Visible: A Memoir of Madness
by
4.04 avg rating — 18,862 ratings
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3The Noonday Demon: An Atlas of Depression
by
4.18 avg rating — 10,341 ratings
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4The Virgin Suicides
by
3.84 avg rating — 213,351 ratings
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5Prozac Nation
by
3.59 avg rating — 51,946 ratings
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6The Perks of Being a Wallflower
by
4.20 avg rating — 1,124,244 ratings
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7Silenced
by
4.06 avg rating — 193 ratings
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8Girl, Interrupted
by
3.90 avg rating — 167,953 ratings
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9It's Kind of a Funny Story
by
4.13 avg rating — 194,174 ratings
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10Thirteen Reasons Why
by
3.95 avg rating — 702,197 ratings
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11An Unquiet Mind: A Memoir of Moods and Madness
by
4.05 avg rating — 53,613 ratings
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12Looking for Alaska
by
4.05 avg rating — 998,592 ratings
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13Hyperbole and a Half: Unfortunate Situations, Flawed Coping Mechanisms, Mayhem, and Other Things That Happened
by
4.18 avg rating — 155,205 ratings
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14Wasted: A Memoir of Anorexia and Bulimia
by
4.01 avg rating — 28,489 ratings
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15God's Favor - Breath Of Heaven
by
4.48 avg rating — 82 ratings
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16Night Falls Fast: Understanding Suicide
by
4.10 avg rating — 5,598 ratings
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17If I Wake
by
3.96 avg rating — 476 ratings
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18She's Come Undone
by
3.87 avg rating — 297,986 ratings
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19Man's Search for Meaning
by
4.36 avg rating — 298,074 ratings
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20The Stranger
by
3.97 avg rating — 607,320 ratings
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21Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
by
3.98 avg rating — 359,710 ratings
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22Madness: A Bipolar Life
by
4.02 avg rating — 11,351 ratings
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23When the Darkness Will Not Lift: Doing What We Can While We Wait for God—And Joy
by
4.13 avg rating — 1,351 ratings
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24Furiously Happy: A Funny Book About Horrible Things
by
3.92 avg rating — 105,033 ratings
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25A Legacy of Madness: Recovering My Family from Generations of Mental Illness
by
3.64 avg rating — 171 ratings
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25The Day We Are Born (an Elements novel)
by
3.94 avg rating — 53 ratings
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25Moving the Chains
by
4.43 avg rating — 14 ratings
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28Fangirl
by
4.08 avg rating — 496,361 ratings
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29My Alien Self: My Journey Back to Me
by
3.79 avg rating — 145 ratings
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29The Mind Shaman
by
3.33 avg rating — 36 ratings
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31Spiritual Depression: Its Causes and Cure
by
4.35 avg rating — 3,394 ratings
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32Living with a Black Dog: His Name Is Depression
by
4.38 avg rating — 535 ratings
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33A Lethal Inheritance: A Mother Uncovers the Science behind Three Generations of Mental Illness
by
3.55 avg rating — 196 ratings
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33New Moon (Twilight, #2)
by
3.53 avg rating — 1,315,711 ratings
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35Manic: A Memoir
by
3.79 avg rating — 9,428 ratings
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36The Year of Magical Thinking
by
3.89 avg rating — 123,384 ratings
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37Understanding Depression: What We Know and What You Can Do about It
by
3.88 avg rating — 48 ratings
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37Just Enough Light for the Step I'm On
by
4.43 avg rating — 1,000 ratings
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37The Reengineers
by
4.14 avg rating — 22 ratings
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37Diary of the mad: A short story collection
by
4.14 avg rating — 7 ratings
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37The Leper Messiah
by
4.89 avg rating — 44 ratings
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42When I Don't Desire God: How to Fight for Joy
by
4.18 avg rating — 4,510 ratings
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43Angst: Origins of Anxiety and Depression
by
3.34 avg rating — 41 ratings
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44I Don't Want to Talk About It: Overcoming the Secret Legacy of Male Depression
by
4.22 avg rating — 1,116 ratings
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44The Ragamuffin Gospel: Good News for the Bedraggled, Beat-Up, and Burnt Out
by
4.19 avg rating — 30,990 ratings
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46Loud in the House of Myself: Memoir of a Strange Girl
by
3.88 avg rating — 3,258 ratings
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46The Magicians (The Magicians, #1)
by
3.51 avg rating — 208,457 ratings
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48Speaking of Sadness: Depression, Disconnection, and the Meanings of Illness
by
3.78 avg rating — 205 ratings
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49Malignant Sadness: The Anatomy of Depression
by
3.66 avg rating — 596 ratings
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50Willow
by
3.93 avg rating — 31,066 ratings
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51When Life Goes Dark: Finding Hope in the Midst of Depression
by
4.11 avg rating — 82 ratings
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52The Highly Sensitive Person: How to Thrive When the World Overwhelms You
by
3.87 avg rating — 25,433 ratings
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53I Trust When Dark My Road: A Lutheran View of Depression
by
4.52 avg rating — 69 ratings
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53Your Depression Map: Find the Source of Your Depression and Chart Your Own Recovery
by
4.07 avg rating — 14 ratings
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53Entangled in Darkness
by
3.30 avg rating — 20 ratings
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53I'm Here to Help
by
3.51 avg rating — 63 ratings
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53Letters to a Young Madman: A Memoir
by
4.36 avg rating — 76 ratings
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53A Mouthful of Air
by
3.61 avg rating — 142 ratings
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53Undercurrents: A Life Beneath the Surface
by
3.94 avg rating — 991 ratings
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53It Will Rain
by
4.20 avg rating — 15 ratings
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53Change Your Thinking: Overcome Stress, Anxiety, and Depression, and Improve Your Life with CBT
by
4.15 avg rating — 449 ratings
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53What Healing Should Be: How to relieve pain and stop suffering
by
4.94 avg rating — 18 ratings
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53Without Merit
by
3.91 avg rating — 45,862 ratings
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53Lessons Learned from The Path Less Traveled Volume 1: Get motivated & overcome obstacles with courage, confidence & self-discipline
by
4.73 avg rating — 49 ratings
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65Reasons to Stay Alive
by
4.18 avg rating — 32,264 ratings
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66Lord, I Want to Be Whole: The Power of Prayer and Scripture in Emotional Healing
by
4.36 avg rating — 397 ratings
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66Depression : Cured at Last!
by
4.11 avg rating — 19 ratings
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66The Weight of Blood
by
3.74 avg rating — 19,605 ratings
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69How People Grow: What the Bible Reveals About Personal Growth
by
4.24 avg rating — 1,881 ratings
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70Madness: a Memoir
by
4.29 avg rating — 625 ratings
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71Losing Hope (Hopeless, #2)
by
4.35 avg rating — 91,807 ratings
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72Darkness Is My Only Companion: A Christian Response to Mental Illness
by
4.02 avg rating — 371 ratings
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73Dorie: The Girl Nobody Loved
by
4.24 avg rating — 755 ratings
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73J.B. Phillips, the Wounded Healer
by
really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 12 ratings
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73When God Interrupts: Finding New Life Through Unwanted Change
by
4.35 avg rating — 136 ratings
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73Beyond Blue: Surviving Depression & Anxiety and Making the Most of Bad Genes
by
3.91 avg rating — 357 ratings
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77The Final Leap: Suicide on the Golden Gate Bridge
by
3.76 avg rating — 228 ratings
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78The Lords of Discipline
by
4.30 avg rating — 23,640 ratings
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79Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal?
by
3.97 avg rating — 26,491 ratings
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80Does Stress Damage the Brain?: Understanding Trauma-Related Disorders from a Mind-Body Perspective
by
3.75 avg rating — 20 ratings
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81Unhinged: The Trouble with Psychiatry - A Doctor's Revelations about a Profession in Crisis
by
3.91 avg rating — 414 ratings
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82The Depression Book: Depression as an Opportunity for Spiritual Growth
by
4.18 avg rating — 317 ratings
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82Depression: The Way Out of Your Prison
by
3.97 avg rating — 176 ratings
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82Seeing Beyond Depression
by
4.22 avg rating — 98 ratings
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82Depression Can Be Fun
by
4.67 avg rating — 6 ratings
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82Growing Up Dead
by
4.50 avg rating — 2 ratings
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82My Heart Stopped Beating
by
3.37 avg rating — 117 ratings
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82Hammer and Hoe: Alabama Communists During the Great Depression
by
4.27 avg rating — 514 ratings
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82Broke the Grape's Joy
by
3.59 avg rating — 81 ratings
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82Defying Mental Illness
by
really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 3 ratings
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82Mr Chartwell
by
3.40 avg rating — 1,970 ratings
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82De Profundis
by
4.18 avg rating — 9,413 ratings
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82Laughter is Sacred Space: The Not-So-Typical Journey of a Mennonite Actor
by
4.05 avg rating — 143 ratings
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82The Lighthouse of Asaph
by
4.35 avg rating — 17 ratings
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82Distant Echoes: Finding Keys To Life After Abuse
by
4.33 avg rating — 3 ratings
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82Depression Help: Stop! - 5 Top Secrets To Create A Depression Free Life.Finally Revealed - Exclusive Edition
by
4.33 avg rating — 3 ratings
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82Your Meaning
by
4.06 avg rating — 16 ratings
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82How to Find God's Will
by
4.12 avg rating — 32 ratings
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82Letting Go
by
4.06 avg rating — 128 ratings
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82Acedia & Me: A Marriage, Monks, and a Writer's Life
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3.80 avg rating — 2,143 ratings
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235 books · 396 voters · list created June 19th, 2009 by Todd(votes) .
Tags: anxiety, biographies, biography, christian, clinical-depression, cognition, depression, fiction-and-nonfiction, health, illness, literary-fiction, lutheran, memoir, memoirs, mental-health, psychiatry, psychology
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Sarah edelman change your thinking pdf writers
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The Bell Jar is so great it's on the list more than once!


Hey y'all,
I just started a new book club called 'Damage' under groups that you can join if you'd like! It focuses on reading a book every other month that is about physical, mental, emotional, or intellectual differences. (And yes, I redefine how 'damage' should be viewed in the group description!) Hope you join!


Jacob wrote: 'The Bell Jar is so great it's on the list more than once!'
A librarian could fix that if they ran a merge which would put the books together.

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Vox
News and opinion website
Available inEnglish
OwnerVox Media
EditorLauren Williams
Websitevox.com
Alexa rank 1,047 (as of April 2019)[1]
CommercialYes
RegistrationOptional
LaunchedApril 6, 2014; 5 years ago
Current statusActive

Vox is an American news and opinion website owned by Vox Media. The website was founded in April 2014 by Ezra Klein, Matt Yglesias and Melissa Bell, and is noted for its concept of explanatory journalism.[2]

  • 2Content

History

Prior to founding Vox, Ezra Klein worked for The Washington Post as the head of Wonkblog, a public policy blog.[3] When Klein attempted to launch a new site using funding from the newspaper's editors, his proposal was turned down and Klein subsequently left The Washington Post for a position with Vox Media, another communications company, in January 2014.[3][4]The New York Times described Vox Media as 'a technology company that produces media' rather than its inverse, associated with 'Old Media'.[4] From his new position, Klein worked towards the establishing of Vox, including hiring new journalists for the site.[3] Klein expected to 'improve the technology of news' and build an online platform better equipped for making news understandable.[4] The new site's 20-person staff was chosen for their expertise in topic areas and included Slate'sMatthew Yglesias, Melissa Bell, and Klein's colleagues from The Washington Post.[4][5][6][7]Vox was launched on April 6, 2014 with Klein serving as editor-in-chief.[3][8]

Klein's opening editorial essay, 'How politics makes us stupid', explained his distress about political polarization in the context of Yale Law School professor Dan Kahan's theories on how people protect themselves from information that conflicts with their core beliefs.[9]

In June 2016, Vox suspended contributor Emmett Rensin for a series of tweets calling for anti-Trump riots, including one on June 3, 2016, that urged, 'If Trump comes to your town, start a riot.' The tweets drew attention after violent anti-Trump protests took place in San Jose, California on the day of Rensin's tweet.[10][11][12][13]Elizabeth Plank was hired in 2016 as a political correspondent,[14] and in 2017 launched her own series with Vox Media, called Divided States of Women.[15]

In September 2017, Klein published a post on vox.com announcing that he was taking on a new role as editor-at-large, and that Lauren Williams, who joined Vox a few months after its founding, was the new editor-in-chief.[16][17]

Content

According to Vox's founding editors, the site seeks to explain news by providing additional contextual information not usually found in traditional news sources.[18] To reuse work from authors prior to the relaunch in 2014, Vox Ashrae standard 70 2006 pdf free. creates 'card stacks' in bright canary yellow that provide context and define terms within an article. The cards are perpetually maintained as a form of 'wiki page written by one person with a little attitude'.[19] As an example, a card about the term 'insurance exchange' may be reused on stories about the Affordable Care Act.[19]

Vox uses Vox Media's Chorus content management system, which enables journalists to easily create articles with complex visual effects and transitions, such as photos that change as the reader scrolls.[19] Vox Media's properties target educated households with six-figure incomes and a head of house less than 35 years old.[19]

Video

Vox has a YouTube channel by the same name where they have regularly posted videos on news and informational subjects since 2014.[20] These videos are accompanied by an article on their website. The themes covered in the videos are usually similar to the themes covered in the regular, written articles on the website.[21] The channel has over 5.7 million subscribers and over one billion views as of early April 10, 2019.[20] Content surrounds both current affairs, timeline of certain events, and interesting facts.[22]

In May 2018, Vox partnered with Netflix to release a weekly TV show called Explained.[23][24]

Podcasts

Vox distributes eight podcasts, all hosted by Vox staff:[25]

Sarah Edelman Change Your Thinking

  • The Weeds is a twice-weekly roundtable podcast, hosted by Klein, Yglesias, healthcare-policy correspondent Sarah Kliff, immigration correspondent Dara Lind, and senior politics reporter Jane Coaston focusing on U.S. national news with a focus on the fine details of public policy.[25][26][27]
  • The Ezra Klein Show is a twice-weekly interview podcast in which Klein interviews guests in politics and media.[28]
  • I Think You're Interesting is a weekly interview podcast about the arts, entertainment, and pop culture, hosted by Vox's 'critic at large' Emily Todd VanDerWerff.[25][29]
  • Worldly is a weekly roundtable podcast focusing on U.S. foreign policy and international affairs, hosted by Vox foreign-and-security-policy writers Jennifer Williams, Zach Beauchamp, and Alex Ward; Yochi Dreazen also previously hosted.[25][30]
  • The Impact is a weekly narrative podcast hosted by Kliff investigating the effects of policy decisions in practice.[31]
  • Today, Explained is a daily podcast, hosted by Sean Ramaswaram, providing short explanations of items in the news.[25][32]
  • Future Perfect is a weekly podcast, hosted by Dylan Matthews, exploring provocative ideas with the potential to radically improve the world, often discussing ideas associated with effective altruism.[33][34][35]
  • Primetime is a short-run podcast hosted by Emily Todd VanDerWerff. Season 1 (six episodes) focused on TV's relationship with the presidency and was released on a weekly schedule.[25][36]

Accolades

Original programming by Vox has been recognized by the News & Documentary Emmy Awards, which are presented by the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. In 2017, the documentary 2016 Olympics: What Rio Doesn't Want the World to See was nominated in the 'Outstanding News Special' category, Vox Pop was nominated in the 'Outstanding Arts, Culture and Entertainment Report' and 'Outstanding Graphic Design and Art Direction' categories,[37] and The Secret Life of Muslims was nominated in the 'Outstanding Short Documentary' category.[38] In 2018, Borders was nominated in the 'Outstanding Video Journalism: News' category,[39] and Earworm received nominations in the 'Outstanding Graphic Design and Art Direction' and 'Outstanding New Approaches: Arts, Lifestyle and Culture' categories.[40]

Editorial stance

Vox takes a liberal-leaning editorial stance.[41]The New York Times columnist Ross Douthat, writing in 2016, described Vox as 'mostly liberal'.[42]

Reception

In March 2014, before it had officially launched, Vox was criticized by conservative media commentators, including Erick Erickson, for a video it had published arguing the U.S. public debt 'isn't a problem right now'.[43]

The website's launch received significant media attention.[44] Websites noted that the launch came around the same time as other data and explainer websites like FiveThirtyEight and The New York Times' The Upshot.[45][46]Vox was described as using clickbait-style headlines to enhance shareability and to act as a 'Wikipedia for ongoing news stories'.[44] Blue tags software planner pro tutorial.

Shortly after it launched, conservative writer David Harsanyi criticized the site's concept of 'explanatory journalism' in an article in The Federalist titled 'How Vox makes us stupid', arguing that the website selectively chose facts, and that 'explanatory journalism' inherently leaves out opposing viewpoints and different perspectives.[47] Pascal-Emmanuel Gobry at The Week argued that the website produced 'partisan commentary in question-and-answer disguise' and criticized the site for having a 'starting lineup [that] was mostly made up of ideological liberals'.[48]The Week's Ryu Spaeth described the site's operations as: 'It essentially takes the news (in other words, what is happening in the world at any given moment in time) and frames it in a way that appeals to its young, liberal audience.'[49]

The Economist, commenting on Klein's launching essay 'How politics makes us stupid', said the website was 'bright and promising' and the premise behind the site was 'profoundly honourable', and positively compared the site's mission to John Keats's negative capability.[9] In December 2014, the website Deadspin wrote a post listing each time Vox ran a correction for a factual error in an article.[50] In an opinion piece in The Washington Times, Christopher J. Harper criticized the site for numerous reporting mistakes.[51]

Descargar gratis musica instrumental de richard clayderman. The New York Times'David Carr associated Klein's exit for Vox with other 'big-name journalists' leaving newspapers for digital start-ups, such as Walter Mossberg and Kara Swisher (of Recode), David Pogue, and Nate Silver.[4] In 2015, the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry presented Julia Belluz the Robert B. Balles Prize for Critical Thinking for her work on Vox.[52]

Controversy

In December 2018, Vox received criticism from fans of YouTube personalityPewDiePie for a series of articles written by reporter Aja Romano, including one that alleged that PewDiePie had ties to the alt-right and white supremacism.[53] Romano has said she had received harassment on Twitter, while many of the fans urged PewDiePie to sue Vox.[53]

Readership

Vox received 8.2 million unique visitors in July 2014.[54]

In a 2017 interview on Nieman Lab, Klein stated: 'We watch our audience data pretty closely, and our audience data does not show or suggest to us that we are overwhelmingly read on one side or the other of the political sphere, which is good..And overall our audience leans a bit left, but it doesn't lean overwhelmingly so.'[55]

See also

Sarah Edelman Change Your Thinking Pdf Writer

References

  1. ^'vox.com Traffic Statistics'. Alexa Internet. Retrieved April 28, 2019.
  2. ^Bercovici, Jeff (May 12, 2014). 'Why Do So Many Journalists Hate Vox?'. Forbes. Retrieved June 9, 2019.
  3. ^ abcdYu, Roger (April 7, 2014). 'Ezra Klein launches news site Vox.com'. USA Today. Retrieved July 26, 2018.
  4. ^ abcdeCarr, David (January 26, 2014). 'Ezra Klein Is Joining Vox Media as Web Journalism Asserts Itself'. The New York Times. Archived from the original on December 27, 2014. Retrieved December 26, 2014.
  5. ^Vox.com is going to be a great test of Ezra Klein's critique of journalism, Columbia Journalism Review (April 7, 2014).
  6. ^Klein, Ezra (January 26, 2014). 'Vox is our next'. The Verge.
  7. ^Staff, Vox (April 3, 2017). 'About us'. Vox.
  8. ^Hartmann, Margaret. 'Understanding Ezra Klein's Newly Launched Vox.com'. New York Media LLC Money. Retrieved January 21, 2018.
  9. ^ ab'Ezra Klein's strangled Vox'. The Economist. April 11, 2014. ISSN0013-0613. Retrieved November 4, 2016.
  10. ^Byers, Dylan (June 3, 2016). 'Vox suspends editor for encouraging riots at Donald Trump rallies'. CNN. Retrieved June 3, 2016.
  11. ^Halper, Evan (June 3, 2016). 'Vox suspends editor who called for anti-Trump riots'. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 3, 2016.
  12. ^Emmett Rensin [emmettrensin] (June 2, 2016). 'Advice: If Trump comes to your town, start a riot' (Twitter post). Retrieved June 2, 2016.
  13. ^Wemple, Eric (June 3, 2016). 'What will a suspension do for a Vox editor who urged anti-Trump riots?'. Washington Post. Retrieved June 5, 2016.
  14. ^'Vox Snags Mic's Elizabeth Plank for Election Coverage'. The Hollywood Reporter. March 1, 2016. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
  15. ^Barr, Jeremy (October 5, 2017). 'Vox Media Launching New Video Series Focused on Women'. The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved July 26, 2018.
  16. ^Stelter, Brian. 'Lauren Williams named editor in chief of Vox; Ezra Klein to be editor at large'. CNN Money. Retrieved September 29, 2017.
  17. ^Klein, Ezra. 'Lauren Williams is the new editor-in-chief of Vox'. Vox Media, Inc. Retrieved January 21, 2018.
  18. ^Klein, Ezra; Bell, Melissa; Yglesias, Matt (March 9, 2014). 'Nine questions about Vox'. Vox. Retrieved February 22, 2018.
  19. ^ abcdKaufman, Leslie (April 6, 2014). 'Vox Takes Melding of Journalism and Technology to a New Level'. The New York Times. Archived from the original on December 27, 2014. Retrieved December 26, 2014.
  20. ^ ab'Vox Channel About Page'. youtube.com. Retrieved October 30, 2018.
  21. ^Patel, Sahil (May 15, 2017). 'How YouTube latecomer Vox beat the odds and built a big channel'. Digiday. Retrieved July 26, 2018.
  22. ^'Vox Channel Home Page'. youtube.com. Retrieved April 6, 2018.
  23. ^'Why Vox's Netflix show 'Explained' is different from Vox's YouTube videos, explained (by Ezra Klein)'. Recode. Retrieved August 29, 2018.
  24. ^Weissman, Cale Guthrie (May 23, 2018). 'Vox's new Netflix show is just the start of its video ambitions'. Fast Company. Retrieved July 26, 2018.
  25. ^ abcdef'Podcasts'. Vox. Vox Media. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
  26. ^'The Weeds'. Vox. Vox Media. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
  27. ^'Vox's The Weeds'. Stitcher. Retrieved March 8, 2019.
  28. ^'The Ezra Klein Show'. Vox. Vox Media. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
  29. ^'I Think You're Interesting'. Vox. Vox Media. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
  30. ^'Worldly'. Vox. Vox Media. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
  31. ^'The Impact'. Vox. Vox Media. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
  32. ^'Today, Explained'. Vox. Vox Media. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
  33. ^Matthews, Dylan (October 15, 2018). 'Future Perfect, explained'. Vox. Retrieved December 8, 2018.
  34. ^Matthews, Dylan (October 15, 2018). 'How to save a stranger's life (Future Perfect Podcast Ep. 1)'. Vox. Retrieved December 8, 2018.
  35. ^Matthews, Dylan (November 28, 2018). 'How to pick a career that counts'. Vox. Retrieved December 8, 2018.
  36. ^'Primetime'. www.vox.com. Retrieved June 8, 2019.
  37. ^Peterson, Tim (August 9, 2018). 'Vox Entertainment is developing a TV show with Vox.com's Emmy-nominated YouTube producer'. Digiday. Retrieved September 5, 2018.
  38. ^'Nominees for the 38th Annual News and Documentary Emmy Awards Announced'(PDF). Retrieved September 5, 2018.
  39. ^Scott, Caroline (August 23, 2018). 'How Vox expanded its network by crowdsourcing for its latest documentary series'. Journalism.co.uk. Retrieved September 5, 2018.
  40. ^'Nominees for the 39th Annual News and Documentary Emmy Awards Announced'(PDF). National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. July 26, 2018. Retrieved September 5, 2018.
  41. ^Bump, Philip (July 11, 2014). 'The political moderate is dead. Long live the moderate'. The Washington Post.
  42. ^Douthat, Ross (January 16, 2016). 'The Bill Clinton Question'. The New York Times.
  43. ^Cosman, Ben. 'Ezra Klein's Vox Is Already Being Labeled 'Left-Wing Propaganda' by Conservatives'. The Atlantic. Retrieved November 3, 2016.
  44. ^ ab'How Vox is going to make its way to the top'. The Daily Dot. April 7, 2014. Retrieved November 4, 2016.
  45. ^'The Upshot, Vox and FiveThirtyEight: data journalism's golden age, or TMI?'. The Guardian. April 22, 2014. ISSN0261-3077. Retrieved November 4, 2016.
  46. ^'Ezra Klein launches news site Vox.com'. USA TODAY. Retrieved November 4, 2016.
  47. ^Politics. 'How Vox makes us stupid'. Retrieved March 17, 2016.
  48. ^'Vox, derp, and the intellectual stagnation of the left'. The Week. Retrieved March 17, 2016.
  49. ^Ryu Spaeth (July 21, 2015). 'The Gawker meltdown and the Vox-ification of the news media'. Retrieved October 24, 2016.
  50. ^Draper, Kevin. '46 Times Vox Totally Fucked Up a Story'. The Concourse. Retrieved November 4, 2016.
  51. ^Harper, Christopher (January 7, 2015). 'Vox news website needs to take serious look at how it 'reinvents' journalism'. The Washingtion Times. Retrieved March 17, 2016.
  52. ^Fidalgo, Paul (2016). 'CSI's Balles Prize in Critical Thinking Awarded to Julia Belluz of Vox.com'. Skeptical Inquirer. 40 (5): 6.
  53. ^ abDube Dwilson, Stephanie (December 17, 2018). 'PewDiePie, Wall Street Journal & Vox Feud Explained'. Heavy.com. Retrieved December 29, 2018.
  54. ^Weigel, David (August 23, 2014). 'Here's What You Need to Know About Politico's Coverage of Vox, in Two Charts'. Slate. Retrieved July 26, 2018.
  55. ^'Ezra Klein hopes Vox can change the fact that 'people who are more into the news read the news more''. Nieman Lab. Retrieved November 20, 2017.

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