
In early 2005, the nation was shocked by the official revelation, after months of tabloid covers suggesting it, that Jennifer Aniston and Brad Pitt were splitting up. Of course, the official announcement came long after the couple made the decision to break up — and, stupidly, after the Christmas holiday when nobody cares about the news — but just in time for beacon of journalism Us Weekly to sic reporters Mara Reinstein and Joey Bartolomeo on the couple and, in five days, spit out a 40,000-word (large type) print book. An amazing feat of (ripped off?) reporting and celebrity news spin, to be sure.
And now, People is ready to carry on the tradition of rush publishing.

Though perhaps Larry Hackett's team had more time to rush its Paul Newman tribute book to shelves, since his death has, of late, been a matter of when, not if. Indeed, acknowledges People to Folio: "Because of Newman’s illness, we began working on this project before his passing."
The book, a "tribute," will be 96 pages, soft cover, have 450,000 copies printed, cost $12, and be available for purchase beginning Oct. 11. And in true un-Newman fashion, its proceeds will not benefit any charities. Which is sort of okay, because this year, the print industry basically is a charity.

Amazing reporting feat? The Us Weekly book was based on previous articles that ran in the magazine, with the two writers simply compiling the information and quotes. Us Weekly's reporters who worked hard to get all of the information that went into the book were given no credit, nor were their sources.
Those Brad and Jen authors didn't make the list of most loathsome New Yorkers for nothing! But how were anonymous sources supposed to be credited?? And, to be fair, everyone was thanked in the acknowledgements. Yes, I bought the book — a true piece of pop culture history if I ever saw one. Why else does it keep coming up again and again three years later?