We're doing a retroactive live blog of how the press and social media reacted to #Dallas. Many more updates TK. https://t.co/p4n36Dndsn
— Tom Kludt (@TomKludt) July 8, 2016
ICYMI, New York Daily News editor didn't think twice about running graphic photo https://t.co/at78xuKBRK pic.twitter.com/cAYTuRh1Ng
— Poynter (@Poynter) July 8, 2016
Media covers chaos during a long night of protest and police shootings https://t.co/J1n8aDtbqc pic.twitter.com/Y9aVoYfphB
— Poynter (@Poynter) July 8, 2016
CJR chose the subject of the Pulitzer Prize for our first special print edition because it offers a rich means to observe the craft of journalism--its powers and its shortcomings. The conceit of the issue is this: We asked nine Pulitzer Prize winners to write, not about their own work, but about some other Pulitzer winner's work. They could choose from any category, from any period over the Pulitzer's 100 years.
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,...