Howard Rosenberg is a retired TV critic for the Los Angeles Times. He worked there for 25 years and won a Pulitzer Prize for Criticism. In recent years he has produced the anthology Not So Prime Time: Chasing the Trivial on American Television and taught at the USC Annenberg School for Communication.[1] The Los Angeles Times (also known as the LA Times) is a daily newspaper published in Los Angeles, California and distributed throughout the Western United States. ... The Pulitzer Prize for Criticism has been presented since 1970 to a newspaper writer who has demonstrated distinguished criticism. Recipients of the award are chosen by an independent board and officially administered by Columbia University. ... The USC Annenberg School for Communication is the journalism and communication program at University of Southern California (USC). ...
Controversy
In a column soon after September 11, 2001 attacks he said that George W. Bush appeared "stiff and boyish." This led to requests for him to be fired and he states that he received letters calling him "Osama bin Rosenberg" due to the controversy.[2] A sequential look at United Flight 175 crashing into the south tower of the World Trade Center The September 11, 2001 attacks (often referred to as 9/11âpronounced nine eleven or nine one one) consisted of a series of coordinated terrorist[1] suicide attacks upon the United States, predominantly... George Walker Bush (born July 6, 1946) is the 43rd and current President of the United States, inaugurated on January 20, 2001. ...