Funny, @Adweek's favorite correction of 2015 is ours, too! https://t.co/s1u2jbi0hR pic.twitter.com/auamG0I7di
— Modern Farmer (@ModFarm) December 21, 2015
The Boston Globe wants to use the release and critical success of Spotlight as an opportunity to market itself to new readers.
Can @MSNBC re-center itself? Andy Lack on "the long game." https://t.co/xb6iTo3czX pic.twitter.com/xGsUikGg2t
— Deborah Potter (@TVNewsLab) December 21, 2015
David Brooks was struggling with sin. More precisely, he was seeking a way to translate the Christian understanding of sin into secular terms for millions of readers. His emerging specialty, whether in his New York Times column or best-selling books, is distilling dense concepts for the mainstream. An ugly word for that, he notes, is popularizing. On religious topics, some might say proselytizing. He calls it reporting. "He's the master," says Princeton professor Robert George, a onetime adviser to Brooks. "Nobody is better at that than David."
College campuses are alive with activism. Recent weeks have seen students assemble on quads and in academic buildings to condemn racism, debate free-expression principles, make demands of administrators—and, in many cases, try to place restrictions on journalists trying...