This Site Is Trying to Bring 'Snark Brevity' Into Media

Published: June 25, 2021, 7 a.m.

How can the culture of the current news cycle\u2014never ending and never positive\u2014be tempered?\nJonathan Grella, the founder of JAG Public Affairs and Daily Malarkey, has some ideas.\n"We really think that there is a place in the market for 'snark brevity,' as we call it. Like Axios coined the phrase, 'smart brevity,' and we do 'snark brevity,'" Grella said.\n"There's a lot of competition for people's attention nowadays. So, you've got to be quick and to the point and in order to get and keep people's attention, you have to be creative and clever. So, we bring those couple of things together."\n"It's not terribly difficult to come up with inspirations for our daily email blast because there's just a deluge of malarkey out there that we can opine on and poke fun at," Grella adds.\nWe also cover these stories:\n\n\nThe New York Supreme Court has suspended the law license of former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani, saying that the former mayor made \u201cdemonstrably false and misleading statements\u201d when he was representing former President Donald Trump in his efforts to contest the 2020 presidential election.\xa0\n\nHouse Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced Thursday that House Democrats will soon create a special congressional committee to investigate the Jan. 6th capitol riot.\xa0\n\nA judge in Florida is halting a $4 billion relief program from the Biden administration for farmers that leaves out farmers who are white.\xa0\n\n\n Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.