Clinton spokesperson to reporter: ‘F*ck off’
The email exchange between Philippe Reines and Michael Hastings is the stuff of PR/journalism legend, and it’s been published on the Internet for all to see.
The email exchange between Philippe Reines and Michael Hastings is the stuff of PR/journalism legend, and it’s been published on the Internet for all to see.
Knock, knock. Who’s there? Boo. Boo Who? Exactly. Plus, ‘Fox and Friends’ gets punked, Dos Equis’ ‘Most Interesting Man’ endorses Obama, the Starbucks diet, Jeremy Lin might want to sleep on your couch, and more.
A step-by-step guide to preparing for the worst in order to get the best results possible.
Copied-and-pasted emails with all-caps subject lines, sent to dozens of reporters and bloggers, will only lead them to ignore you. Here’s what you should do.
Don’t waste your day on social media. By referring to this list you’ll actually save yourself time in the long run.
Most reporters aren’t out to nail you, but some will try to coax a statement that you’ll admit later. Here’s advice for working with these risky journalists.
Apparently, it was common knowledge among folks in the community and no one—except a pesky rival media outlet—seemed to care.
Often, PR people are asked to pitch a story that isn’t newsworthy. Here are ways to make those non-news stories attractive to journalists.
Harry Reid on Tuesday deployed the latest Internet meme when a reporter asked about the DREAM act. So should you.
The agency that employed the public relations professional said she went rogue and is no longer with the company.
A PR guy allegedly barricaded the journalist to shield the CEO from questions. The worst media relations gaffe you’ll see all year, maybe all decade—oh, hell, ever.
A one-time Huffington Post contributor offers advice for pitching the growing legion of serf writers online.
Given that the Washington Post has accused PR folks of lobbing loogieballs, let’s hear what the press does to get your goat.
Three things your PR agency or department needs to accommodate journalists in the Digital Age.
The somewhat bizarre story of Kristopher J. Brooks, the man who was canned before he even started.