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The Drudge Report started in 1995 as a gossip column focusing on Hollywood and Washington, D.C. [11] Matt Drudge began the email-based newsletter from an apartment in Hollywood, California, using his connections with industry and media insiders to break stories, sometimes before they hit the mainstream media.
Mimics the name of the Drudge Report. [17] United Media Publishing unitedmediapublishing.com [17] usatoday.com.co usatoday.com.co Defunct Falsely reports celebrity appearances and filming locations in random local towns [17] washingtonpost.com.co washingtonpost.com.co Originally registered by Jestin Coler.
Drudge met Andrew Breitbart in Los Angeles during the 1990s and became his mentor, with Breitbart later helping to run the Drudge Report. [ 7 ] [ 8 ] Breitbart announced in 2005 that he was "amicably leaving the Drudge Report after a long and close working relationship with Matt Drudge", but still helped run Drudge's website from Los Angeles by ...
In 1995, Breitbart saw The Drudge Report and was so impressed that he e-mailed Matt Drudge. Breitbart said, "I thought what he was doing was by far the coolest thing on the Internet. And I still do." [2] Breitbart described himself as "Matt Drudge's bitch" [23] and selected and posted links to other
A drudge is a person who does tedious, menial, or unpleasant work; it can also refer to the work itself, known as drudgery. Drudge can also refer to: Matt Drudge, American Internet journalist Drudge, Matt Drudge's former TV series; Drudge Report, news aggregator run by Matt Drudge
Matt Drudge (1966–), founder of the Drudge Report [49] Harry Enten (1988–), senior political writer and analyst for FiveThirtyEight, senior writer and analyst for CNN Politics [50] Preston Fassel, entertainment journalist and former staff writer for Fangoria magazine [51] Danny Fenster (1984–), managing editor of Frontier Myanmar [52] [53]
The competing logos of the Drudge Report and the parody website Drudge Retort. When news aggregator Matt Drudge failed to register drudge.com for his news website Drudge Report, Cadenhead registered drudge.com in 1998 and started the Drudge Retort as a liberal alternative to what he perceived to be the right-leaning Drudge Report, [5] and as "a send-up of Mr. Drudge's breathless style".
The following is a list of websites, separated by owner, that have both been considered by journalists and researchers as distributing false news - or otherwise participating in disinformation - and have been designated by journalists and researchers as likely being linked to political actors in the United States.