<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<oembed>
  <version>1</version>
  <type>rich</type>
  <provider_name>Libsyn</provider_name>
  <provider_url>https://www.libsyn.com</provider_url>
  <height>90</height>
  <width>600</width>
  <title>All the News That's Fit to Spin with Ashley Rindsberg</title>
  <description>How much power does The New York Times really have , and what happens when that power is used to shape narrative instead of pursue truth? In this episode of The Curious Middle, we speak with Ashley Rindsberg, author of  The Gray Lady Winked, about the Times’ reporting on some of the most important stories of the last century: the Nazi invasion of Poland, Stalin’s Soviet Union, the Holocaust, Israel, the 1619 Project nd more. Ashley Rindsberg is an investigative journalist and author focused on media malfeasance, information warfare, and the hidden systems influencing public discourse. Ashley joins us to explain why he believes the paper has repeatedly protected power, buried inconvenient truths, and helped shape public opinion in ways that changed history. We also talk about the Sulzberger family, the culture inside elite newsrooms, the collapse of trust in journalism, and how listeners can build a healthier media diet today. Follow Ashley's Substack In this episode:  What first inspired Ashley to write  The Gray Lady Winked Why the New York Times is unlike any other media institution The Times’ Holocaust coverage and what was buried How tne NYT Created a Narrative on the Soviet Unioo, Hitler, Cuba, Iraq, Israel and the Intifada, The 1619 Project and narrative-driven reporting The Tom Cotton op-ed controversy, safe spaces, silencing dissent and newsroom ideology How to find better journalism in a fractured media environment  More reading: Books:  Buried by the Times by Laurel Leff Stalin’s Apologist: Walter Duranty: The New York Times’s Man in Moscow by S.J. Taylor  Articles  About the NYT Nazi Correspondent from Tablet Magazine NYT journalist Walter Duranty, who downplayed the Ukraine famine.   “Committed to protecting his own influence and to a future “greater good” promised by the Soviet regime, Duranty at first dismissed rumors of the Ukrainian Famine. Then he downplayed them. Then he claimed that Ukraine’s “food shortages” were the result of local mismanagement and the work of “wreckers” and “spoilers” intent on undermining Soviet progress.” &amp;amp;nbsp;  More podcasts with Ashley:  Ashley on the Coleman Hughes podcast Ashley on the Winston Marshall podcast  Key Quotes   “They set cultural agendas, they set the news agenda, they influence politics, they influence culture.”  “They didn’t want to appear to be the Jewish newspaper that was advocating for Jewish lives or Jewish people. So they did the exact opposite.”  “You don’t bury a story about tens of thousands of people being murdered in Europe by accident.”  “The narrative was so overpowering for them that it obliterated what was in front of their faces.&amp;quot;  “It became a culture of silence.&amp;quot;  Timestamps  05:13: Origin Story of the Book  Spark: reading The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich Shock discovery: NYT reported Poland invaded Germany (1939) Core question: “If they got that wrong, what else did they get wrong?”    08:42 – Why Focus on The New York Times   11:32 – Ochs-Sulzberger Family Ideology  German-Jewish assimilation philosophy:  Judaism = religion only (not identity)      14:23 – Holocaust Coverage Critique  Only 6 front-page Holocaust stories in 6 years    17:56 – Historical Parallels to Today  Narratives like:  “Jews cause wars” “Israel manipulation”      20:34 – Could Coverage Have Changed History?   21:12 – Fascination with Power / Dictators   24:15 – Ukraine Famine Denial (Walter Duranty)   26:43 – Publishing Barriers  Publishers avoided book due to:  Fear of NYT retaliation Bestseller list control   Insight: NYT bestseller list = editorial, not purely sales-based    30:12 – NYT Power Today  Less local dominance, more global reach ~600 million monthly users Now a digital ecosystem    32:32 – NYT Lack of Accountability   35:30 – State of Journalism Today   38:48 – Misleading Image Example (Second Intifada)  Photo falsely captioned:  Palestinian victim → actually Jewish man being saved   Example of narrative overriding facts    41:20 – Mohammed al-Dura Case  Widely reported killing blamed on Israel Later forensic evidence contradicted it NYT never corrected narrative    43:10 – The 1619 Project  Claim: U.S. founded on slavery, not liberty Criticism:  Historians said key claims were false   Still:  Won Pulitzer Entered school curricula      51:54 – Tom Cotton Op-Ed Controversy   57:55 – Future of Media   59:27 – Advice for News Consumers (GREAT CLIP) 🔥 “Unbundle the news like Spotify unbundled albums”   1:01:09 – Closing + Current Work  Focus on:  Narrative spread across platforms Wikipedia, Reddit, AI manipulation   Company: NPOV  &amp;amp;nbsp; Follow @thecuriousmiddlepod Contact us: thecuriousmiddlepod@gmail.com </description>
  <author_name>The Curious Middle</author_name>
  <author_url>https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/i-want-her-job/id1036108112</author_url>
  <html>&lt;iframe title="Libsyn Player" style="border: none" src="//html5-player.libsyn.com/embed/episode/id/40521135/height/90/theme/custom/thumbnail/yes/direction/forward/render-playlist/no/custom-color/88AA3C/" height="90" width="600" scrolling="no"  allowfullscreen webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen oallowfullscreen msallowfullscreen&gt;&lt;/iframe&gt;</html>
  <thumbnail_url>https://assets.libsyn.com/secure/item/40521135</thumbnail_url>
</oembed>
