BREAKING: White House press corps receives brand-new espresso machine from @tomhanks. Come for the coffee... stay for his note. 👇 pic.twitter.com/cirbLKHEt0
— Peter Alexander (@PeterAlexander) March 2, 2017
Beginning today, rank-and-file journalists at @NPR will be responsible for making financial disclosures in stories:https://t.co/TE0tkCC1Yz
— Ben Mullin (@BenMullin) March 2, 2017
Craigslist founder gives $1 million to ProPublicahttps://t.co/NWCKPTfHIF
— Poynter (@Poynter) March 2, 2017
We began work on this issue with the belief that the conventional wisdom about journalism is almost certainly wrong. You know the litany: Newspapers are dying; young people are abandoning mainstream news sources for Snapchat and Twitter; talented college students are choosing different professions; journalism, at least as it has been practiced for the last century, is done. The result of all of these facts, some of which are actually true, is deemed to be stagnation and decline, a scary spiral into an unfriendly future. At CJR, that is not the world we see. For the last six months, we've gone on the hunt for dispatches from a different future of journalism, and the results are here, in what we're calling our Innovation Issue. This future is dynamic, promising, and rife with opportunity.
IN A SURREAL SCENE near the end of Black Orpheus, the title character seeks his lost love, Eurydice, in a government building at night. Orpheus sees a janitor pushing a broom toward him from the other end of a long, half-lit...