- James Taranto
James Taranto (born
1966 ) is aManhattan -based columnist for "The Wall Street Journal " and editor of its online editorial page,OpinionJournal.com . He is best known for his daily online column, entitled "Best of the Web Today", in which he links to and comments on news stories and Web sites submitted by readers.Most of Taranto's commentary is politically oriented and conservative/
neoliberal in perspective. He lambastes various public figures and organizations, fromJohn Kerry , often described as "the haughty, French-lookingMassachusetts Democrat, who by the way served in Vietnam," toReuters , for which he uses headlines with excessive use of quotes in mockery of the service's overuse ofscare quotes .Taranto comments occasionally on topics of special interest to him such as the
Roe effect (which proposes that parents who supportabortion rights will have fewer children, causing support for abortion rights and politically liberal causes to decline among young people) in his column and also wrote an article [ [http://www.opinionjournal.com/extra/?id=110006913 The Wall Street Journal Online - Extra ] ] about it."Best of the Web Today" features a number of recurrent in jokes and self-referential word plays that are not readily apparent to novice readers. One of Taranto's pet peeves is the
metric system of measurements, "an outmoded collection of weights and measures based on pagan superstitions about the power of the number10 ." Moreover, "metric" has become a derogatory term as when Taranto refers to soccer as "metric football." (August 24 andAugust 25 ,2005 )"Best of the Web Today" also includes non-political items which are concerned with journalism nationwide. Often-seen titles are "You Don't Say", "This Just In", or "Stop the Presses", followed by a common-sense headline such as "Shedding a Few Pounds Beneficial for Obese" (
June 1 ,2004 ) or "Sperm May Play Role in Growth of Embryo" (May 13 ,2004 ). Another commonly used title is "What Would We Do Without Experts?", followed by headlines such as "Experts Remind Staying Warm Important After Cold Contributes to 5 Deaths" (January 7 ,2004 ). "World's Smallest Violin" is his lead-in for stories about whiners undeserving of sympathy. A more recent recurring feature is "Bottom Stories of the Day", rounding up supposedly unimportant or unsurprising news items, such as "No E. Coli Reported in Tompkins County" (December 8 ,2006 ).Taranto exposes what he sees as overly harsh punishment of minor drug- or weapon-related offenses in schools under the title "Zero-Tolerance Watch". He corrects his previous mistakes under the title "Homer Nods". Taranto used to publish a section called "Good News Watch" to counteract what he viewed as liberal media bias in covering the 2003 Iraq war and the subsequent
U.S.-led occupation of Iraq .Other recurring features include "Homelessness Rediscovery Watch" and references to Generalissimo
Francisco Franco (in turn an obvious reference to the catch phrase fromSaturday Night Live ).A newer feature is "Man (or Woman) Without a Party," taking note of the tendency by many news organizations to avoid mentioning the party affiliation of Democratic politicians caught in embarrassing or corrupt circumstances, while Republican officials usually are so identified. Another new feature is "Everything Seemingly is Spinning Out of Control," a collection of panicky-sounding headlines. The name of the feature mocks the headline of a recent Associated Press story that indeed suggested everything is spinning out of control.
He also appears occasionally on "
Journal Editorial Report " in the role of "funny man."Taranto attended
California State University, Northridge but "never bothered to graduate". [ [http://www.opinionjournal.com/taste/?id=110010091 The Wall Street Journal Online - Taste Commentary ] ]Excerpts
The subheading on each item in "Best of the Web Today" are
hyperlink ed to whatever Taranto is commenting on. For example:: [http://www.nytimes.com/2004/05/25/international/europe/25CND-FRAN.html?ex=1400904000&en=a8198358533cb3b8&ei=5007&partner=USERLAND Contre le Stéréotype] ::ANew York Times report suggests maybe the French aren'tcheese-eating surrender monkeys after all::::AParis court today sentenced a Frenchman with ties to a suspect in the Madrid train bombings to four years in prison for helping Islamic terrorists inEurope .:::The man, David Courtallier, was convicted of conspiring with criminals engaged in a terrorist enterprise and was not implicated in theMadrid bombings, which killed 191 people onMarch 11 . But Mr. Courtallier, a cheese vendor from France'sSavoy region who converted to Islam in 1997, had been in contact withJamal Zougam , one of the first suspects arrested in the Madrid attacks.::That they have arrested him in spite of his vocation is all the more impressive.One of his signature styles is an alternate headline for a news item, followed by the actual headline. Examples:: [http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2007/06/12/SPG55QDNED1.DTL Parry! Thrust!] ::"Raiders Safeties to Play Duel Roles"--headline,
San Francisco Chronicle ,June 12 ::: [http://www.opinionjournal.com/best/?id=110010205 —"BOTWT", June 13, 2007] : [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/06/13/AR2007061302124.html ‘This Is a Fashion Disaster!’] ::"Frank Critical of Bush on Suits"--headline, Washington Post, June 14::: [http://www.opinionjournal.com/best/?id=110010217 —"BOTWT", June 15, 2007]References
External links
* [http://jamestaranto.com/ James Taranto's own homepage]
* [http://www.opinionjournal.com/best/ Taranto's "Best of the Web Today" column]
* [http://www.opinionjournal.com/ The OpinionJournal home page]
* [http://www.opinionjournal.com/bios/bio_taranto.html James Taranto's biography] at OpinionJournal.com
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