Victor Pickard on native ads and the new journalism economy A Q&A with the scholar February 27, 2015 By Damaris Colhoun
How TalkingPointsMemo Beat the Big Boys on the U.S. Attorney Story March 15, 2007 By Paul McLeary Can a mixture of "Web reporting" and old-fashioned investigative work be the wave of the future for journalism?
Want a Well-Designed Newspaper? Go to Europe. March 12, 2007 By Gal Beckerman The president of the Society for News Design on why American newspapers are lacking, visually.
Who’s A Journalist? ZZZZZZZZZZZZZ March 9, 2007 By Paul McLeary Every few months, media critics get themselves all in a twist over the single most overblown issue in contemporary journalism.
Obama’s Parking Tickets: Who Cares? March 9, 2007 By Edward B. Colby A little story about the candidate’s parking tickets during his law school days got way more play than it deserved.
Kurt Eichenwald, $2K and the Curious Ways of Investigative Reporters March 8, 2007 By Gal Beckerman It’s disingenuous for the Times to suggest that the $2,000 was anything other than part of the reporting process.
Nightmare Over, the Press and Bloggers Consider Libby Trial’s Legacy March 7, 2007 By Christina Hernandez Many media outlets and bloggers are questioning the trial’s effect on journalism. The consensus: it doesn’t look good.
What, Exactly, Is Stengel Doing to Time? March 7, 2007 By Paul McLeary What kind of “understanding” did Time‘s managing editor have with Apple’s CEO?
Cutting Katie Some Slack March 6, 2007 By Christina Hernandez Couric continues to inspire criticism as catty as the day she opened her first broadcast with a friendly, "Hi, everyone."
Gore’s Press Popularity Enters a New Phase March 2, 2007 By Edward B. Colby Whether or not Al Gore decides to run in ’08, the press appears intent on keeping the possibility alive.
Army Tries to Spin Walter Reed Story, Gets Bitten in the Ass March 1, 2007 By Alia Malek The Army found itself facing an attack on two fronts, forced to answer not just the Post‘s account, but the Army Times‘s story as well.
Bloggers Welcome Back Woodruff With Tears and Tantrums February 28, 2007 By Christina Hernandez The vast majority of bloggers were moved by To Iraq and Back.
Egypt Shuts Down Insurgent TV, But Other U.S. Allies Keep It Live February 28, 2007 By Lawrence Pintak Egypt this week pulled the plug on Al-Zawraa — but viewers who still want their fix of anti-American mayhem can continue to watch the channel’s offerings.
Forget the Peripheral Stuff at Gitmo. The Story Is Who’s There and Why? February 28, 2007 By Gal Beckerman On the whole, stories from the last six months have not treated the essential question about Guantanamo: Who is there and why?
Jason Whitlock Had a Great Time in Vegas … Right? February 26, 2007 By Dan Goldberg Was the NBA All-Star Vegas weekend a "Perfect Party" or was "Mayhem the Main Event?"
Some Creative Efforts to Take Back Foreign News February 22, 2007 By Paul McLeary International news — who needs it? The American public, that’s who.