In a corner of a big, empty Krispy Kreme in Atlanta, Valeria Sistrunk is nibbling on a donut. She is 27, with wide eyes and an ever-present smile. She has the positive energy of a TV newscaster—a job she stumbled into by chance: in high school, her guidance counselor randomly stuck her in an elective...
The distribution of the Pulitzer Prizes, in the rotunda of Low Library at Columbia University, one of the stateliest columned rooms this side of the Atlantic, is a perennially anticlimactic affair. The winners are announced weeks ahead. So it was rather stunning when, as servers set down plates of dessert, with chocolates pressed into the...
The story, headlined “Drunk, shirtless Florida man arrested after shoveling spaghetti in his mouth at Olive Garden,” hit the website of southwest Florida’s NBC-Channel 2 at 11:13am on April 8 this year. The mugshot revealed a scraped and bruised 32-year-old man named Ben Padgett. His long brown hair, beard, and penetrating eyes caused some...
Jill and Michael Fischer live seven miles outside the city of Durango, a historic mountain town of nearly 20,000 and the seat of La Plata County in southwest Colorado. When they turn on their TV for local news, however, evening broadcasts—about community events, the weather, and most notably politics—arrive via satellite from Albuquerque, New Mexico,...
I am not a fangirl. I may have camped out in Central Park once to see the Backstreet Boys perform for Good Morning America. I may have started my own BSB email newsletter and fan site in the sixth grade. I...
The Perception Issue
The Race Issue
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
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In 2003, with what felt like an angel on my shoulder, I wrote a story that became a myth. It was a once-in-a-lifetime piece. An emblem for human courage in the face of adversity, and an inspiration for motorcyclists like...
In interview, Michael Wolff says as a non-institutional reporter it's "silly" to ask subjects for their responses to claims when you know what they will be (@grynbaum / New York Times)https://t.co/X0KwJcaz2Fhttps://t.co/7dej5lWagd
— Mediagazer (@mediagazer) May 30, 2019
Depressing: CNN is laying off a big chunk (maybe dozens) of journalists in its London newsroom and trimming coverage by, possibly, four hours a day. https://t.co/QpyM9BOOJO
— Heidi N. Moore (@moorehn) May 28, 2019
#BREAK Facebook says Zuckerberg and Sandberg will defy Canadian subpoena, risking contempt vote @CNN https://t.co/ImW0JUfZfY
— Donie O'Sullivan (@donie) May 27, 2019
BREAKING: A grand jury in the Eastern District of Virginia has returned an 18-count superseding indictment against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, DOJ officials tell us. He's been charged with violating the Espionage Act. Story TK.
— Natasha Bertrand (@NatashaBertrand) May 23, 2019
Inbox: McClatchy names Kristin Roberts as it’s first female news lead in its 162 year old history. (Noteworthy: Eleanor McClatchy was CEO back in 1936.) The company owns the Miami Herald among other papers.
— Claire Atkinson (@claireatki) May 23, 2019