journalism
To cite an anonymous source, a media outlet must first enjoy a high level of credibility.
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This economy has us in survival mode, stressing out our bodies and minds.
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Consider the decline and fall of the South China Morning Post.
The most powerful editors in the world? Algorithms.
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Opinion ruined journalism and Facebook killed truth—but there’s a way to make it right.
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It’s the first time the association hasn’t hired a comedian in 16 years.
A federal judge ruled that the Trump administration likely violated the reporter’s Fifth Amendment rights when it stripped his press credentials earlier this month.
Delay, deny and deflect were the strategies Facebook has used to navigate scandals it’s faced in recent years, according to the New York Times.
“Secret Service passes for working White House journalists should never be weaponized,” Fox News’ president said in a statement.
The lawsuit claims the administration violated the First Amendment when it revoked the press credentials of reporter Jim Acosta.
China’s state-run news agency and the search engine company Sogou have developed an artificially intelligent news anchor that can read the news “tirelessly” 24 hours a day.
New York Times reporter Melissa Chan outlined in a Twitter thread how authoritarian governments strategically destroy the reputations of journalists they dislike.
Sean Hannity took the stage at a rally for President Donald Trump Monday night and delivered a short, supportive speech.
Several members of the far-right group were recently arrested after getting into a fight with protesters in New York City.
It’s a little scary out there, folks.
A senior official told a Turkish newspaper that audio recordings prove that missing Saudi journalist was murdered in the Saudi consulate.
The disappearance of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi has caused international controversy.
Middle America is tired of those latte-sipping liberals and their “elite media” hanging out in New York City, but Ariel Levy makes the case that Americans aren’t as different from one another as they’d like to think.
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How to be media savvy? Sample ideas you disagree with, and be duly skeptical of celebrity journalists.
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What happens to a nation that only reads headlines? They get journalists who chase clicks, rather than facts.
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Journalists were once outsiders looking in, says Gay Talese, but today their proximity to Washington makes them myopic; they’d be wiser to disperse and keep their eyes on the horizon.
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Why do people believe fake news? It’s not because it gets shared all over Facebook; it’s because they don’t trust mainstream news. And Snopes agrees with them.
Recent research in psychology reveals insights into how the stories we are exposed to affect our identities and ideas. What implications does this hold for the influence of the news and the ethics of journalism?