Category

Media

Is Journalistic Writing Failing Us?

By Angelo Franco-DeWitt
Modern newswriting still runs on conventions engineered for the telegraph—speed first, cut from the bottom, clarity through simplification—yet it is tasked with narrating wars that demand history and power that is perfectly happy to be misunderstood. The problem lies less in what we are told and more in how we are taught to understand it.

State of the Free Press: Public Knowledge Is Under Siege

By Andy Lee Roth, Shealeigh Voitl, and Mickey Huff
These reactionary and authoritarian actions are indicative of a post-truth society, in which beliefs and feelings too often “trump” facts, evidence, and reason. Many Americans seem locked into what historian Richard Hofstadter referred to as the “paranoid style in American politics."

The Gen Z Newsroom That Covers Europe -- And Ruffles Continental Feathers

By Josh Axelrod
“When I read it and I compare it to others, it has more migration; it has more about mental health. It has also more climate from a different angle somehow. More hopeful coverage without cynicism,” Allenbach said. Their competitors, she said, are focused on a professional audience of policy wonks who read the news for their work.

Do Journalists Project Their Own Opinions Onto the Public?

By Mark Coddington and Tamar Wilner
They found that, as you might expect, journalists across all three countries had perceptions of public opinion across the issues that correlated with their own opinions on the issues. (It’s possible, of course, that the influence went the other way, and journalists were calibrating their own opinions to the perceived opinion climate.

The Important (and Surprising) Survival of Physical Media in the Digital Age

By Garrett Hartman
As media is increasingly released only digitally, we risk the possibility of losing content forever should a company decide it’s not worth keeping on its server. While, the relative failure of TV and film to carve out the same physical niche as games and music bodes poorly, the retro revival signifies hope.

How the U.S. Media Establishment Continues Its Biased Reporting of Israel’s Assault on Gaza

By Robin Andersen
The papers reserved outrage and apathy for Israeli casualties. Israeli victims were “slaughtered” and “massacred” by Hamas, and their deaths were “horrific.” But Palestinian victims were reported without emotion, often in the language of abstract numbers, through body counts. In addition, Palestinians were rarely “killed” and certainly never “murdered.”