A front-page headline on the print edition of USA Today that landed in my driveway earlier this week grabbed my attention:
Don't have a cow over Chick-fil-A, man!
My post on the unlikely friendship between Chick-fil-A president Dan Cathy and Campus Pride executive director Shane Windmeyer prompted GetReligion reader Joel to comment:
'Loving the sinner' in Chick-fil-A gay marriage flap
An outspoken gay-rights activist and a traditional-marriage-advocating fried-chicken magnate walk into a crowded football stadium and … wait, wait … enjoy the game together.
Meet Christian financial guru Dave Ramsey, minus the faith
A decade ago, as a Tennessee-based religion and enterprise writer for The Associated Press, I profiled Dave Ramsey.
Pod people: Forgiveness is such a simple word
Ho ho ho and Merry F-word!
On its Money section cover today, USA Today celebrates a business that’s using an R-rated word to market its products during the Christmas shopping season.
Who's feeding the starving people?
If you’re familiar with USA Today, you know that the front page generally features a few short, newsy pieces and a longer “cover story” that goes in depth and jumps inside the newspaper.
Puritans lacked an Object for their Thanksgivings?
As of the moment I started writing this post, the following headlines graced — if that’s the right word — the top of The Drudge Report.
Bishops view Catholic teaching with suspicion? Oh really?
A journalism fellowship program I’m involved with recently heard from one Sam Feist, CNN’s Washington, D.C., bureau chief. He told us that many moons ago, heâd written some copy for the on-air talent to read for that nightâs show. The line was something like âClinton believes that the tax bill will pass.â The guy who was supposed to read the line â he happened to be an old-school journalist of some renown â excoriated him. He told Feist that a reporter can never know what a politician thinks, believes or feels. The reporter can only know what the politician says.