Nick Clegg’s appointment as Facebook’s new vice president of global affairs and communications raised eyebrows on both sides of the Atlantic—Brits’ in withering bemusement, Americans’ in “who he?” ignorance. In Brussels, Berlin, and Paris, however, the hire will have made perfect sense. Clegg has become a punchline in the UK; his spell as a centrist,...
Peter Dinklage recently reignited a Game of Thrones fan theory with just four words during acceptance speech at the 2018 Emmys in September. It’s a crock theory, and really only a handful of social media users jumped on his unintentional phrasing, but for several entertainment news websites hungry for any sort of Game of Thrones-related...
Ahead of the November 6 elections, CJR invited writers to spotlight stories that deserve closer scrutiny, in their states and beyond, before voters cast their ballots. Read more dispatches from “States of the Union” here. Indiana has solidly supported Republican nominees for president since 1980, with Barack Obama the lone exception, in 2008. Conservative voters and...
There’s a story behind every ingredient that goes into our meals—each plant or animal we consume carries the weight of the place where it was raised, the way it was cultivated, the history of its breeding. And as climate change alters the very nature of our planetary ecology—threatening certain staples and delicacies and modifying how...
As far back as I can remember, I have known exactly what I wanted my job to be. I worked at my grade school newspaper (shout-out to The Bobcat Chat), then my high school paper, then my college one. My...
The Jobs Issue
The Fear Issue
The Trump Issue
The Future of Local News
The Innovation Issue
A Century of Pulitzers
An Affectionate Farewell
The Cult of Vice
The Experiment
Steal this Idea
Playing the Press
You get exclusive member benefits. Journalism gets the support it needs.
It was 1933, and the Great Depression was pummeling the newspaper industry. The New York World, once owned by Joseph Pulitzer and the city’s largest paper, had closed two years earlier, throwing 3,000 people out of work. In many cities,...
FB recruiting @nick_clegg as Head of Global Affairs and Communication "will be as much of a surprise to the British political establishment as it will be to Silicon Valley, where few European politicians enjoy a high profile in the insular tech industry." https://t.co/Y6SuajcoU4
— Rasmus Kleis Nielsen (@rasmus_kleis) October 19, 2018
The US government continues its crackdown on leakers to media.
— 𝔍𝔬𝔰𝔢 𝔓𝔞𝔤𝔩𝔦𝔢𝔯𝔶 (@Jose_Pagliery) October 17, 2018
The FBI has arrested Natalie Mayflower Sours Edwards for giving a news reporter copies of US Treasury “suspicious activity reports” about Trump’s inner circle and Russians.
Advertisers allege Facebook failed to disclose key metric error for more than a year and claim scale of the miscalculation was far worse than understood. https://t.co/lq9CSqvh43 via @WSJ
— VranicaWSJ (@VranicaWSJ) October 16, 2018
Facebook is banning misinformation on voting in the U.S. midterms
— Nieman Lab (@NiemanLab) October 16, 2018
https://t.co/0OgI5mjEjm
"The Saudis are preparing a report that will conclude Jamal Khashoggi's death was the result of an interrogation that went wrong, one that was intended to lead to his abduction from Turkey, according to two sources." https://t.co/ohkvYMWr60
— Society of Professional Journalists (@spj_tweets) October 15, 2018