"Last week the Independent ran a feature with the exciting headline 'I was a hooker who became an agony aunt'. Sounded fascinating. Another tart with a heart story, perhaps?
No, reading the piece indicated the headline was wrong.
The feature described blogger and sex writer Zoe Margolis, better known as the Girl with a One Track Mind. It focused in part on Margolis work as an ambassador for sexual health charity Brook, raising issues about sex and relationships with young people.
Zoe Margolis is not, and has never been, a sex worker."
Apparently, this facts vs. opinions confusion is making other people really frustrated too. Via
no subject
Date: 2010-03-16 05:27 pm (UTC)This would've been around '98 or so. My dad and I took off for a few days to Disneyland (I used to live in San Fran, so a 6-hour drive), just the two of us. (We'd been as a family a few years previous.) On our last night there, around 2:30am, there was a sizable quake, a 7.0 if I recall right, about 100 miles east. Dad felt it, woke up, and tried to rouse me, but I was a sound sleeper (and still am).
So Dad turned on the news to get reports and see whether we would have to do anything crazy like evacuate the hotel (we didn't). All the local news outlets were on the story, of course. Except...there was no story. No buildings collapsed, no people were killed. The big stories were potential minor gas leaks, dishes falling off walls, and a train that went slightly off the tracks, injuring a few people.
Yet the news stations kept covering the non-story, because none could afford (for PR purposes) to be the first to break away. "There's nothing to report, really...but we will stay with you JUST IN CASE something breaks." It was quite amusing to watch these reporters trying to cover the story that wasn't there.
I'm not sure what the point of that was, except that I like telling the story, and the coverage of disasters is certainly nothing new--but there's more now than there was before, for all the reasons others have stated above.