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  2. Hillary Clinton email controversy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hillary_Clinton_email...

    A screenshot of the default Outlook Web App login page that is displayed when navigating to Clinton's email service. At the time of Senate confirmation hearings on Hillary Clinton's nomination as Secretary of State, the domain names clintonemail.com, wjcoffice.com, and presidentclinton.com were registered to Eric Hoteham, [23] with the home of Clinton and her husband in Chappaqua, New York, as ...

  3. Tabloid journalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tabloid_journalism

    Scandal sheets were the precursors to tabloid journalism. Around 1770, scandal sheets appeared in London, and in the United States as early as the 1840s. [4] Reverend Henry Bate Dudley was the editor of one of the earliest scandal sheets, The Morning Post, which specialized in printing malicious society gossip, selling positive mentions in its pages, and collecting suppression fees to keep ...

  4. Correction (newspaper) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Correction_(newspaper)

    The corrections affected 10 articles that had been published from 2000 to 2003, with the errors reported to the newspaper after the scandal broke. [ 4 ] One 2007 study suggested that "fewer than 2 percent of factually flawed articles" in daily newspapers are actually followed by a correction.

  5. Killian documents controversy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Killian_documents_controversy

    Charles Foster Johnson 's animated GIF image comparing a memo purportedly typewritten in 1973 with a proportional-spaced document made in Microsoft Word with default settings in 2004. The Killian documents controversy (also referred to as Memogate or Rathergate[1][2]) involved six documents containing allegations about President George W. Bush ...

  6. Tabloid (newspaper format) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tabloid_(newspaper_format)

    As a weekly alternative newspaper. The more recent usage of the term 'tabloid' refers to weekly or semi-weekly newspapers in tabloid format. Many of these are essentially straightforward newspapers, publishing in tabloid format, because subway and bus commuters prefer to read smaller-size newspapers due to lack of space.

  7. Daily Telegraph Affair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daily_Telegraph_Affair

    Affair. The Daily Telegraph Affair (German: Daily-Telegraph-Affäre) was the uproar that followed the 28 October 1908 publication in British newspaper The Daily Telegraph of comments by German Emperor Wilhelm II intended to improve German–British relations. It was a major diplomatic blunder that worsened relations and badly hurt the Kaiser's ...

  8. Cash-for-questions affair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cash-for-questions_affair

    The "cash-for-questions affair" was a political scandal of the 1990s in the United Kingdom.. It began in October 1994 when The Guardian newspaper alleged that London's most successful parliamentary lobbyist, [1] Ian Greer of Ian Greer Associates, had bribed two Conservative Members of Parliament to ask parliamentary questions and perform other tasks on behalf of the Egyptian owner of Harrods ...

  9. Confidential (magazine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confidential_(magazine)

    Confidential. (magazine) Confidential was an American magazine considered a pioneer in scandal, gossip and exposé journalism. Founded by Robert Harrison, it was published quarterly from December 1952 to August 1953 and then bi-monthly until it ceased publication in 1978.