The tech world’s influence on journalism is finally receiving policy pushback—at least, outside the United States. Governments are busy drawing up plans to directly intervene with tax support and even direct subsidies for journalism. In the past year, a hail of European bills aimed at taxing and curbing platform growth have been introduced. At the...
Schoolhouses are becoming fortresses equipped with surveillance cameras and bulletproof desks, with teachers serving double duty as armed guards. Children are being pushed into terrifying drills to prepare for the possibility of a mass shooting that is statistically unlikely. Some of those trends may be fueled in part by sensational coverage of such violence. And...
In October 2011, almost a year into the Arab Spring, Robert Reid, a regional editor for the Associated Press based in Cairo, received a call from his bosses: cut the staff in Libya. Rebels had seized the capital of Tripoli two months earlier. Moammar Gadhafi was in hiding. Previously, there had been at least AP...
People seem to have a whole lot of “splaining” to do about how they are “splaining” things to people who already know better. “Splain” has become a common suffix—akin to “gate,” and attached to a word to mean: “You are trying to tell me? The one you may be most familiar with is “mansplain,” which...
Five years ago, I came across an article in The New York Times about a spate of robberies in the Bronx. It was the kind of story that has been a staple in the metro sections of newspapers since there...
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Seventy-two years ago, I worked the paper route on the west side of Montgomery, Alabama, delivering the Alabama Journal to my neighbors, who were mostly African American. One afternoon, in 1946, I met, and would eventually befriend, the son of my...
Egypt detained and turned back NYT's @ddknyt https://t.co/SvnxQAODm0
— Michael Calderone (@mlcalderone) February 19, 2019
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette guild releases eyewitness accounts of publisher John Robinson Block’s “erratic, menacing and disturbing conduct” in the newsroom: https://t.co/m0Hnq4mYj1
— Michael Calderone (@mlcalderone) February 13, 2019
NEW: More than 300 @latimes journalists oppose the company’s proposal on intellectual property, which would mark a new low in the media industry and could limit our staff’s long-standing literary and creative contributions. Read our open letter here: https://t.co/YJCIXHoLhi
— L.A. Times Guild 🦅 (@latguild) February 13, 2019
Trump has installed a room-sized "golf simulator" game at the White House, which allows him to play virtual rounds at courses all over the world by hitting a ball into a large video screen, according to two people told about the system, WaPo reports. https://t.co/F1dxfxs48e
— Kyle Griffin (@kylegriffin1) February 13, 2019
Former White House aide @Cliff_Sims is suing Pres. Trump over nondisclosure agreements.
— New Day (@NewDay) February 12, 2019
“I’m not going to be bullied on this and stand up for myself. That’s what we try to teach our kids to do when bullies are coming after them. … I’m not going to cower” https://t.co/sjh1WOuWS0 pic.twitter.com/Wt5RTwbBEy