Ever since the 2016 election, the media has been in a state of crisis. Part of what they’re doing to deal with that crisis is launching new websites. These websites are all run by the same Jews.
Ben Smith worked at BuzzFeed, where he was the first one to publish that stupid fake “dossier” about Donald Trump being involved in piss sex. He then went to work at the New York Times before quitting earlier this year to launch “Semafor.”
That is what the new news site is called: “Semafor.” I do not know what the word means.
It is ridiculous to me that the guy responsible for kicking off the pissgate hoax, which is the single biggest thing you can point to that caused the American people to lose faith in the media, would decide he was qualified to start a “new and much more credible” website. But since this is my field, I was interested in checking the site out and giving it a fair appraisal.
I spent some time reading it yesterday and this morning, just after its launch, and I was not impressed. It’s a gimmick site, similar to Axios, another site that was launched in the way of the 2016 election to “reimagine the news.”
The Jew Smith has claimed in every comment he’s made about the site that it is specifically intended for “college educated” people, as if it is meant to be particularly high-brow. However, the site’s gimmicks make it look as though it was designed to appeal to low IQ people with ADD. The site has extra headings, including one giving the journalist’s view.
They don’t seem to have really thought this through either. If the journalist is writing in their own voice as a commentator, it stops being a “hard news” article, and becomes an editorial. That means that the journalist should stop referring to himself as “Semafor.”
It’s also noteworthy that they are off the bat doing fake anonymous sources to push their spin.
The site also includes “zany” type commentary.
The difference between Semafor and Axios is that Axios is pretty good for a mainstream news website, and its gimmick of shortening the article and pulling out the key points in bullet format is actually useful. Axios summarizes the stupidly verbose New York Times, whereas Semafor appears to just be a dumber version of the New York Times.
In my professional opinion, this website sucks.
The real news site for the highly intellectual is the Daily Stormer, where we talk about the Jew thing and do not support trannies.