What UVA journalists take away from Rolling Stone apology

Before Rolling Stone apologized for publishing her blockbuster article about a gruesome gang rape at the University of Virginia, Sabrina Rubin Erdely used to pretend on Twitter that she was an ethical journalist. In some of 

Rolling Stone magazine said Friday that it found discrepancies in its controversial story about an alleged gang rape of a woman named "Jackie" at the University of Virginia and had lost faith in the piece — a shocking retreat coming merely days after

The Rolling Stone story on an alleged gang rape at the University of Virginia is falling apart. After days of criticism, the magazine itself is backing away from a sensational report that rocked the campus and led to the temporary banning of all

Familiar covers of Queen and David Bowie's "Under Pressure," Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers' "Breakdown" and the Rolling Stones' "Miss You" took on a new friskiness. During the last, as drummer Taylor Hawkins held down vocals onstage, Grohl 

Rather than answer questions about its UVA rape story, Rolling Stone has begun issuing a blanket statement from its PR person. (I think it was first published by Erik Wemple in this excellent Washington Post column, “Rolling