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A Truly Free Press — Emerging From the Arab Spring

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ozy.com

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info@daily.ozy.com

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Tue, Jun 4, 2019 06:04 PM

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www.ozy.com 10 MUST READS TODAY Tuesday Jun 04, 2019 1 For decades, oligarchs and tyrants have contr

www.ozy.com [OZY.COM]( [VIEW ONLINE]( 10 MUST READS TODAY [Daily Dose]( Tuesday Jun 04, 2019 1 [Fast Forward]( [Fast Forward]( [Is a Truly Free Press Emerging in the Wake of the Arab Spring?]( For decades, oligarchs and tyrants have controlled the media of the Middle East. Now, a growing band of independents is breaking free. The newspaper where Lina Attalah was working went under at the worst possible time. It was April 2013, and Egypt was at a crossroads. Attalah feared that the brewing unrest against Mohammad Morsi — Egypt’s first freely elected president and a leader in the Muslim Brotherhood — would be poorly reported. So she rallied former colleagues to establish a new, independent outlet. They called it Mada Masr — the first word means “range” or “span” in Arabic, and the second “Egypt.” On June 30 that year, the website launched to cover the mass protests against Morsi, whom Egyptians were angry with for trying to force through an Islamist constitution by presidential decree and for the chaos in the streets and a slumping economy. Three days later, on July 3, a military coup deposed Morsi and opened the door for Gen. Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi’s authoritarian rule. Egypt was now deeply divided, but Mada Masr continued reporting with balance. “At the time, many media outlets had taken steps back in terms of reporting accurately and with integrity,” says Attalah, now 36. “I thought Mada Masr was going to serve as an important record of the history of the country.” Six years later, Attalah is the chief editor of Egypt’s only independent media outlet, with 124,000 followers on Twitter and 241,000 on Facebook. But Mada Masr isn’t alone. It’s among a growing number of independent Arabic digital outlets that are emerging as fresh sources of news in a region where tyrants and oligarchs have for decades controlled the media. [READ MORE]( 2 [The Huddle]( [The Huddle]( [Why This Pitcher Credits Motivational Speakers for His Rise]( The Philadelphia Phillies think Nick Pivetta is their future on the mound. When Nick Pivetta was in high school in British Columbia, throwing 89 miles per hour with an elbow-damaging sidearm delivery, he looked nothing like a future big league pitcher. He didn’t look good enough even for junior college baseball, where he struggled through 54 innings as a freshman. But now the 6-foot-5 right-hander is holding down a spot in the rotation for the contending Philadelphia Phillies. It’s a rotation built for October, with former Cy Young Award winner Jake Arrieta and ace Aaron Nola. “I got lucky,” he says, and the demure Pivetta means it. It was more than that, of course. Pivetta started working out more efficiently, he says, and his body changed and his fastball started to gain juice at New Mexico Junior College. The Canadian was drafted in the fourth round by the Washington Nationals in 2013 and was traded to Philadelphia for closer Jonathan Papelbon in 2015. Pivetta gained more on that fastball in the minor leagues. [READ MORE]( 3 [Need to Know]( [Need to Know]( [My Feet, My Business: Yumi Ishikawa and the High-Heeled Rebellion]( The 32-year-old Japanese woman asked a pointed question for the workplace: Why wear heels? There’s a kernel of contrarianism that fuels some of the best social movements. Movements that, if history is any judge, have traditionally begun when one, or some, people get to “enough,” or maybe “too much,” and put their feet down. In the instance of Japan’s Yumi Ishikawa, 32, that moment came, almost literally, with an online meditation on the business case for requiring Japanese women to wear high-heeled shoes, footwear that helps little with professional jobs that don’t involve “entertainment.” “This is a problem that many women believed was a personal issue because [wearing high heels] is generally seen as good etiquette,” said Ishikawa, an actress, part-time worker and writer, at a news conference Monday in Tokyo. She spoke just after she had submitted a labor ministry petition with 18,856 signatures, women mostly, signed on to ban dress codes that require women to wear high heels at work. [READ MORE]( more from ozy, below [Advert]( [Advert]([Advertisement] 4 [Need to Know]( [OZY Fest Is Back! Get Your Tickets Now]( Welcome to New York’s most eclectic festival of music, comedy and ideas. 5 [Flashback]( [The Americans Who Fought Fascism in Spain and Stuck Around for D-Day]( The Abraham Lincoln Brigade was an army of volunteers … but its members weren’t revered like other troops. 6 [True Story]( [Love Curiously]( Love is a many-splendored thing, and this series brings you stories about relationships with every degree of joy, comedy, frustration and grief. 7 [Acumen]( [Can South Africa Teach Us a Lesson in Fixing Educational Gender Gaps?]( After little improvement in decades, the country now hopes dedicated support networks can encourage female leadership. 8 [True Story]( [The Day My Shrink Tried to Get Me Shot]( Going to a doctor for help makes sense, but going to a doc for help and ending up on the business end of a gun? Makes much less sense. 9 [Flashback]( [The Original Tiananmen Crackdown ... of the 1970s]( You’ve seen footage of the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests. But the groundwork was laid 13 years before. 10 [Fast Forward]( [Giving A.I. the Old College Try ... Boosts Graduation Rates]( Graduation rates at universities in the U.S. have been plummeting for half a century. But artificial intelligence and data crunching are helping turn the tide. You Should Know This [This Simple Tap Could Save Thousands of Lives in the Next Disaster]( OZY Media Mountain View, California 94040 This email was sent to {EMAIL} [Manage Subscriptions]( | [Privacy Policy]( | [Read Online](

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