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A week of silence.
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A Week
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of Silence
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We
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confess to a moment of doubt about our genteel policy of a week off every now
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and then when Princess Di was killed the day after our most recent skipped week
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began. When The New Yorker (which also skips an issue or three each
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year) chose to rush out a special Princess Di issue several days early, we felt
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especially heartsick. Were we the only media outlet that squandered this
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opportunity to exploit the public's revulsion at media exploitation of the dead
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princess? (For a tour d'horizon of the magazine coverage, see "In Other Magazines.")
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Could we not have profitably run a few symposiums on privacy vs. press freedom,
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personal reflections on the celebrity culture, editorials condemning the
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paparazzi ? But we decided, in the end, that a week of silence was
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actually a fitting tribute to Diana--or, at least, that it was the only fully
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satisfactory response to complaints about media exploitation. Now that the week
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is over, don't miss David Plotz's "Assessment" of
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Diana's brother and eulogizer, Earl Spencer.
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Vote
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Early and Often
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Starting today, you can take
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sides in all Slate's current "Dialogues." Each Dialogue will feature buttons
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with which you can record your support for one side or the other. The page will
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display a running vote count, expressed in percentage terms. And the polls
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never close: The tally will continue indefinitely, even after the Dialogue has
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been Composted. You can only vote once (you have to register), but you can
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change your vote as often as you like as the Dialogue proceeds. This reflects
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our hope that these Dialogues will be exercises in reasoned persuasion, and not
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repeated fusillades from fixed positions. The test of a successful argument
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will be less a matter of who gets the most votes than of who changes the
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most votes.
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And please
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note, if you haven't already, the arrival of Slate Explorer, a new way to
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explore and navigate Slate's contents. It's a cute little box that sits on your
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Windows 95 desktop and does many remarkable things. Click here for a
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detailed explanation and free installation.
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We Wuz
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Misquoted
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It's an
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old story. The Daily Newsprint reviewer writes that Titanic II: The
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Kitchen Sink is "a spectacular failure," and the producer buys ads
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declaring, " 'Spectacular'--the Daily Newsprint ." Well, not all bad
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habits start out in cyberspace and spread to traditional media--sometimes it
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happens the other way. In a recent Slate review of Web filtering software (intended to help
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parents control what sites their kids have access to), our reviewer, Nell
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Minow, said of one such product, "Parents who are willing to devote the time to
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setting their own parameters will be better off with Cyber Patrol." Cyber
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Patrol's Web site does some creative filtering and declares, "Slate says that
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of all the Internet filters, parents are 'better off with Cyber Patrol.' " A
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rival, SurfWatch, has complained, and rightly so.
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--Michael Kinsley
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