Ms. Barrett had been a rising young political reporter in the 1990s before accusations of plagiarism derailed her career as an associate editor at The New Republic.
www.nytimes.com
It might be better to have a discussion of the broader social and economic issues raised by the outright lies, plagiarism, and cutthroat competition in niche magazine journalism.
I don't know how if there is much economic gain here. Print and online journalism are in a decline. In May the Atlantic laid off a bunch of people due to declining revenue. I doubt they thought this particular piece was going to save them.
I think it's more about prestige and also creating a brand. The Atlantic publishes a lot of these deep dives into social issues and normally does a good job. It's on brand for them and they hope to win awards. Maybe those will translate into money but probably not.
I am not aware there is a pattern of "outright lies, plagiarism, and cutthroat competition in niche magazine journalism" either. I'm not saying it doesn't happen but it seems to be fairly rare.
I thought the most interesting part was where one of the college coaches talked about how he'd see one of these athletes and think they had potential, but also things they could work on, and then would think the kid likely had many high-level, highly paid private coaches who probably tried to work on those things, and decided that the kid had less potential coachable upside than a kid with the same potential, but without the same advantages.
I was struck by that as well. It's hard to judge talent.
Part of what drew me to this article is that I am in the middle of the admissions process with my youngest who is trying to get into a conservatory. She is competing with kids who got weekly voice lessons for years, did dance competitively, and have professional acting coaches. It's not like she's completely untrained but I let her decide how many and what kind of classes she wanted to do so she hasn't done nearly that much, most just voice lessons off and on.

We are paying at least $1k to a company that helps these kids with their auditions and their college apps. They'll look over her personal essay and her college apps, coach her on her acting, dancing, and singing auditions and also they give advice on how many and what colleges to apply for.
I sure hope it's worth it!