Azrael
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- Feb 5, 2010
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Good cautionary example of the same phenomenon in print.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/12/15/new-yorker-editors-note-japan-family-romance/
An award-winning 2018 New Yorker story now has a whopper of an editor's note atop it. In "A Theory of Relativity," published in April 2018, staff writer Elif Batuman profiled a Japanese company called Family Romance, which supplies actors who sub in for missing family members. Need to convince your parents that you have a girlfriend? Need to convince your girlfriend that you have parents? Family Romance can help. The story won a National Magazine Award for feature writing from the American Society of Magazine Editors in March 2019. And on Sunday night, it collapsed.
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In short, the New Yorker found that the people who provided most of the narrative juice in the story — Ishii, Nishida and Shimada — were unreliable.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/12/15/new-yorker-editors-note-japan-family-romance/
An award-winning 2018 New Yorker story now has a whopper of an editor's note atop it. In "A Theory of Relativity," published in April 2018, staff writer Elif Batuman profiled a Japanese company called Family Romance, which supplies actors who sub in for missing family members. Need to convince your parents that you have a girlfriend? Need to convince your girlfriend that you have parents? Family Romance can help. The story won a National Magazine Award for feature writing from the American Society of Magazine Editors in March 2019. And on Sunday night, it collapsed.
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In short, the New Yorker found that the people who provided most of the narrative juice in the story — Ishii, Nishida and Shimada — were unreliable.
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