Google Executive Sets Record for Free Fall: Reporter’s Notebook

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Credit John Markoff

A well-known computer scientist parachuted from a balloon near the top of the stratosphere on Friday, Oct. 24, falling faster than the speed of sound and breaking the world altitude record set just two years ago. The jump was made by Alan Eustace, 57, a senior vice president of Google.
The Times reporter John Markoff was at the abandoned runway at a New Mexico airport where Mr. Eustace lifted off — in a balloon filled with 35,000 cubic feet of helium — and wrote about Mr. Eustace’s feat in Saturday’s paper. Here he gives Insiders a full sense of the story behind the story.

Google and Me: A Short History

Since Google’s days in a garage in Menlo Park, Calif., I have had what might be called a “nuanced” relationship with it.

I was invited to the garage on Willow Road in 1998 and may have been the first reporter to speak with Sergey Brin and Larry Page about the search engine they were building. At the time it was impossible to pick which company would be the premiere search engine, and beyond vague memories of a jumble of computers, the meeting didn’t leave a huge impression. And, because there were so many other search engines bouncing around Silicon Valley at that moment, I chose not to write about Google in its earliest start-up phase. This is one of my biggest regrets as a reporter.

Several years later, Google was growing rapidly and was anxious to hide this fact from the world (and mostly from Microsoft).
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1892: General Electric Avoids Taxes

This feature looks at the first time famous names or terms appeared in The Times. Have an idea for someone or something you would like to read about? Send a suggestion in the comments section.

General Electric has a longstanding reputation for the remarkable measure it takes to avoid taxes.

What most readers may not realize is just how longstanding those efforts are. On May 3, 1892, The Times reached this conclusion about the company, then just weeks old: “Its Special Charter Robs the State of a Large Tax Revenue”:

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Daily Clip Report

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Good morning. Here is Daily Clip Report, a collection of articles about The Times and the media sent by email each morning to senior executives and newsroom editors. The email is produced by the Corporate Communications Department at The Times.

Her Job Split in Two, Veteran Times Executive Opts to Leave
The New York Times – 10/28

USA Today Remains Top Newspaper by Circulation
​​Wall Street Journal – 10/28

Why the newspaper industry is leaving six-month circulation reports behind
Poynter – 10/28

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Building a Story on Autism’s Impact on Dental Care

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Kerry Sellers, left, Holly Bradley, Registered Dental Hygienist, and Jamie Chilton, Registered Dental Assistant, right, help Vail Ollivierre, 7, sit in the dentist chair.Credit Katie Hayes Luke for The New York Times

An anecdote from a friend led Catherine Saint Louis, a health reporter, to a story that ran last week about the difficulty children on the autism spectrum have receiving proper dental care. She explains the reporting process.

Sometimes reporters hear about important stories by chance. In this case, a friend who is the mother of a 9-year-old son with autism had recently moved to New Jersey and had finally found a dentist willing to work with him after years of struggle.

She said their first dentist had given up on her son. Cleanings were possible only if he sat on her lap in the chair and she wrapped her arms and legs around him to keep him still. “It is awful,” she said.

Another dentist suggested general anesthesia to facilitate a simple cleaning, which I later found is not uncommon, but ill-advised for routine preventive care because of anesthesia’s risks.

The situation changed only when she happened to find a dentist who specialized in using behavior modification techniques. Her son had been “terrified,” she said, but with accommodations, he could finally tolerate cleanings and sit on his own. (X-rays are still but a dream, alas.)
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What We’re Reading

Get recommendations from New York Times reporters and editors, highlighting great stories from around the web. What We’re Reading emails are sent twice a week.

The New Yorker

The Gluten Myth?

Michael Specter loves to bake, and is dismayed by the rise in gluten-free foods, which he — a skeptic by nature — thought to be faddish. In a thorough exploration of celiac disease and the enormous market in gluten-free foods, he comes to the conclusion that there could be factors other than gluten causing the symptoms many people complain of, but that there might be changes in the way bread is baked nowadays that could be causing digestion problems for some. Mainly, the story made me crave a sandwich. — John Schwartz
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Tracking the Postal Surveillance System

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Mail handlers in Virginia. The Postal Service approved nearly 50,000 requests last year to track the mail of Americans.Credit Luke Sharrett for The New York Times

Last year, Ron Nixon discovered a small-business owner whose mail was being monitored by the United States Postal Service. After looking deeper, he realized that the snail-mail monitoring program is more common than he thought. Mr. Nixon describes the year-long reporting process. He also spoke to WNYC’s The Takeaway about the subject this morning.

The idea for a story on the Postal Service’s century’s old mail cover program, in which all the information on the outside of letters and packages are recorded for law enforcement purposes, actually started over a year ago. I was discussing the government’s mass surveillance programs with colleagues in the Washington bureau and looking for those beyond the National Security Agency’s well-known program, which was in the news at the time.
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Midterm Elections, Yawn? Not for a Political Reporter.

Jonathan Martin is the national political correspondent for the paper. He lives in the D.C. area, is often on various campaign trails and has been on the beat since June 2013. His enthusiasm for his subject seems undiminished.

As a political reporter and political junkie, I find it as tricky to pick among my favorite midterm races as it would be for parents to choose their favorite child: Each is lovable in his or her own way. But what really fascinates me are those races that mix interesting candidates against the canvas of culturally rich states.

I spent a good bit of time this summer covering the Senate race in Kentucky for The Times Magazine. Mitch McConnell, the Senate Republican leader, is on the brink of fulfilling his decades-long goal of being majority leader. First, though, he must survive what may be his final campaign against the Kentucky secretary of state, Alison Lundergan Grimes, who is half his age. And the two are facing off in a state that combines Appalachia, the Midwest and the South. It is conservative in some ways — President Obama is widely disliked — but also happens to be home to perhaps the most successful implementation of Mr. Obama’s chief domestic legacy: the Affordable Care Act.

The race in the Bluegrass is, to me, an example of what makes covering campaigns so fulfilling. Yes, the horse race (pun intended) is interesting and the policy and political implications of the outcome are important. But what makes this beat so enjoyable is that in covering these races we are also telling the story of the country and its people. Capturing a sense of place and the moment is important for readers, and I think providing a living history is a vital part of The Times’s mission. Closer to home, it is also a hell of a lot of fun. Whether it is the people, the places or the local cuisine, there is nothing like being there.

Now, how do I go about plunging into a race? It’s not all that complicated and is probably similar to how any reporter at the paper prepares for a datelined story: read and report, read some more and report some more, and so on. My long-ago predecessors in this job often made their first stop on the road at the local paper to talk to the reporters and (ideally) read through some clips. Thanks to the Internet, however, I can skip this step. I usually arrive in a state having already read much of the local coverage. This is a breeze not just because news outlets are online, but also because most political reporters are on Twitter. Their pieces are almost always easy to find.

I’m a bit of an old soul, though, because I still like to print out the stories and read them from my hands on the plane. And when I get to whatever state I’m covering, the first thing I do is find is as many different local papers as possible. Print edition, of course.

Daily Clip Report

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Good morning. Here is Daily Clip Report, a collection of articles about The Times and the media sent by email each morning to senior executives and newsroom editors. The email is produced by the Corporate Communications Department at The Times.

​NYTimes.com Goes Big On Video​
Media Post – 10/27

The NY Times’ Video Presence Just Got Bigger
Video Ink – 10/27

The New York Times recreates ISIS captivity of Foley, Sotloff
Columbia Journalism, Review – 10/27

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Steering the Climate Change Coverage

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Adam Bryant, Environment editor.Credit Earl Wilson/The New York Times

Few topics fuel as much reader attention as climate change. Adam Bryant recently became editor of The Times’s expanded team covering the environment. We asked him how he is approaching the position.

Q.

How did this job come about for you?

A.

When I met with Dean Baquet, our executive editor, in August, he said he wanted to beef up The Times’s coverage of climate change and the environment, and asked me if I would be interested in overseeing an expanded team of reporters. I had just come off a long project – I was part of the team that worked on the Innovation Report – and I jumped at the opportunity.

It’s a fascinating and important topic, full of nuance and complexity (example here), and I get to work with an amazing group of reporters. It’s also a subject that touches on so many different aspects – science, politics, policy, population growth, agriculture, history. The list goes on and on.
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