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Matt O'Grady resigned from his editor-in-chief position at BC Business one week ago. It wasn't one of those resignations that's code for "got fired." He really truly quit.

According to this Vancouver Sun article, his beef with the magazine's publisher, Peter Legge, was over a cover story for the June issue that O'Grady felt was very much worth running essential, in fact while Legge felt quite the opposite, ordering it cancelled and replacing it with a decidedly uncontroversial article about a Vancouver bikini-swimsuit designer. He said he didn't feel it was the "right fit" for the magazine, while O'Grady seems to think there were bigger issues at play: "What makes it a most interesting story is the implications for how we write about people in positions of privilege, people with power, and how they implicitly deter journalists from writing about them in a negative fashion."

The story in question was about a libel lawsuit by former senator Edward Lawson against Vancouver Sun business columnist David Baines over a column he wrote in 2008 (more details of that case here, if you're curious). O'Grady clearly felt he'd done more than his due diligence with the piece, running it past a defamation and privacy specialist and changing the title to protect the magazine and Legge from being sued too. Despite both Legge and the writer of the article, Richard Littlemore, telling O'Grady he  shouldn't quit over it, he was unmoved: "When you've lost the confidence of the publisher, that's a good time to part ways."

It's unclear whether the article about the Lawson/Baines case will find a home elsewhere, but if there's any justice in the world of journalism, O'Grady will find himself an even better position where he can exercise his clearly rock-solid principles.

[caption id="attachment_1047" align="aligncenter" width="580" caption="Screengrab from Rue Frontenac's front page, May 19, 2011."][/caption] Rue Frontenac launched in winter 2009 as website for locked-out workers at the Journal de Montreal, offering union information on the conflict between the paper and its unionized workers that began in…
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Since the Greek government undertook austerity measures to begin to deal with its cripping debt, strikes in the country have become a regular occurrence. While we over in North America are used to the idea of work stoppages in areas like education, garbage collection, postal services, and transit, the idea of the entire country's media going on…
In a post on her own site, Arianna Huffington takes time out from "aggregating adorable kitten videos" to discuss the $105 million lawsuit that Jonathan Tasini is pursuing against the Huffington Post and AOL on behalf of 9,000 unpaid HuffPo writers.Huffington's tone is entirely dismissive: "First, let's look at the merits of the case," she writes.…

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