BREAKING: @SlantNews is shutting down. https://t.co/2yI6va5xrl
— Peter Sterne (@petersterne) April 8, 2016
The Arizona House of Representatives has imposed new security policies that restrict access for journalists who refuse to submit to extensive background checks
NYT's Baquet responds to Gay Talese story: "Too often, we are clumsy in handling issues of race and gender." https://t.co/SwilYTSE7B
— Gerry Smith (@gerryfsmith) April 7, 2016
Above all, Esquire editor in chief David Granger wants to bring his readers to tears. As the longest-serving editor of America's oldest men's magazine, Granger, who exits this week, restored Esquire's relevance by embracing the emotional depth of men's interests. Cars, sports, sex, and suits have their place, but with ambitious reporting and inventive storytelling, Granger has sought to bring readers to their emotional edge, and even to tip them over it. His Esquire succeeded when its manliest reader was compelled to weep.
On March 6, the San Francisco Chronicle published “Last Men Standing,” a feature on long-term AIDS survivors that told the stories of eight people who aren’t supposed to be here—men who were diagnosed with HIV in the 1980s,...