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Examples

  • After sifting through all the great names, the Reds decided that the name that truly fit was "Gapper".

    It's Mets For Me: Off-Beat, Tangentially Relevant Mets Ruminations 2009

  • Gapper writes: ... there were also boos from near where I sat in the balcony, followed by an angry debate in the row in front of me, with one of the booers declaring “he’s an evil man” and a couple next to her telling her to “shut up” and to leave the theatre.

    Kert Davies: David Koch Booed at NY Christmas Ballet Performance Kert Davies 2011

  • But it's enough to get Gapper going on Obama's "Manichean world in which small business is worthy and big business suspicious."

    Our sensitive corporate overlords Ezra Klein 2010

  • In a deeply reported and wonderfully told story, Gapper unpacks the bizarre history of the Landis/Father Scott/Gardiner forgeries, then manages to get inside the world of the elusive, mercurial figure at the center of the scandal to find out why Landis, a one-time Washingtonian, did what he did.

    Story pick: A forger's story J. Freedom du Lac 2011

  • What if I am related to fellow FT journalist John Gapper?

    The $1,000 Genome Kevin Davies 2010

  • Gapper instead treated the premise with surprising literalness for a Brit and decreed that Google is not a good example for business; Apple is.

    The Gapper gap « BuzzMachine 2009

  • But if media people refuse to – if, like the moguls Gapper eulogizes, they insist on holding onto their old ways – how good will they be at analyzing and predicting the future?

    The Gapper gap « BuzzMachine 2009

  • Gapper does acknowledge fundamental change but he still explains it in the old, expired terms of the old economy, in terms of control.

    The Gapper gap « BuzzMachine 2009

  • Gapper, however, links two episodes as part of a unified dysfunction: The fight among regulators over Vikram Pandit's competence (FDIC anti-Pandit vs. Fed pro-Pandit, with Treasury waffling and the White House, meaning Larry Summers, lurking) and the not-so-subtle maneuvering over regulatory precedence in a post-reform system.

    Robert Teitelman: Paying The Price Of Fragmented Regulation 2009

  • "No wonder (Klaus) Schwab looked so stricken," said FT's Gapper.

    Competing Ideologies: Davos v. Belem 2009

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