Correspondents Dinner: Google and other techco's search for common ground

mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com — Late on Saturday evening at the Bloomberg-Vanity Fair party after the White House Correspondents' Association annual dinner, Judd Apatow, a Hollywood director-producer who was a long way from home, asked who might be interesting to talk to. There were a lot of folks to pick from, including David Axelrod, President Obama's political strategist; the retired general and former Secretary of State Colin L.
RT @brainpicker: Why the White House Correspondents’ dinner has become much like a high school cafeteria– @carr2n t.co/kXCjUjnK
Silicon Valley warms up to Washington, @carr2n on a DC nerd summit disguised as a dinner party for media types t.co/MNAKqJfk #whcd
Has the White House Correspondents’ Dinner Become a Nerd Unity Conference? t.co/Mm5GMD7K @carr2n
Has the Correspondents’ Dinner Become a Nerd Unity Conference? t.co/Mm5GMD7K @carr2n
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