June 8, 2014

Mississippi Is Like The Rest of the U.S.


[From article]
The range of experience in New York or San Francisco—or in DC or Boston or LA or Chicago or sometimes Seattle or Miami or a few other places—is a staple part of American news and pop-culture coverage. But when somewhere in South Dakota, or Alabama, or Inland-Empire California, or Kentucky is in the news, it's usually because of:
• a disaster, natural or man-made: tornado, shooting, explosion, flood, drought, hate crime, sinkhole;
• a sporting event (NASCAR, Little League World Series) occasionally or a political event regularly: any place in Iowa or New Hampshire every four years in primary season, then Ohio and Florida in the general election campaigns;
• a "concept" piece— "meth in the heartland," "the new economy of prisons" "climate change hits the farm"—that involves picking out some Middle American location and using it as the narrative setting for your thesis.http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2014/06/from-a-lawyer-in-jackson-mississippi/372253/

Now That Mississippi Is In the News
Can the media avoid a freak-show tone?
JAMES FALLOWS
JUN 7 2014, 1:57 PM ET

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