No Free Lunch July 9, 2009 By The Editors Who will pay for news? CJR presents four stories searching for journalism’s economic model
Edifice Rex July 10, 2009 By Michael Schudson & Danielle Haas How newspapers lost their spots in the skyline
Heart of Stone July 13, 2009 By Robert G. Kaiser A distinguished new biography of a career contrarian
Brief Encounters July 14, 2009 By James Boylan Short reviews of books on campaign bloggers, tabloids, and a collection of Henry Fairlie’s essays
Groundhog Day July 15, 2009 By Trudy Lieberman Why this year’s health-care debate sounds like the one in 1993
Why John Lennon Matters July 15, 2009 By Jacob Levenson The case for professional pop-music critics in an amateur age
Into the Fold July 16, 2009 By Robert Weintraub How the online sports community has become part of the mainstream
A Man in Full July 17, 2009 By Douglas McCollam Four years after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans broadcaster Garland Robinette is still fighting mad
A Kind of Victory July 17, 2009 By Jacques Menasche Remembering El Salvador’s struggle and those who covered it
Global Village July 20, 2009 By Connie Schultz Are regional columnists under pressure to think locally?
Build the Wall July 21, 2009 By David Simon Most readers won’t pay for news, but if we move quickly, maybe enough of them will. One man’s bold blueprint.
The Grave Dancer’s Folly July 21, 2009 By The Editors Blaming newspapers for their plight is a waste of precious time
Open for Business July 22, 2009 By Michael Shapiro If you want readers to buy news, what exactly will you sell? The case for a free/paid hybrid.
What’s a Fair Share In the Age of Google? July 23, 2009 By Peter Osnos How to think about news in the link economy
‘The Greatest Liar’ July 28, 2009 By Nicholson Baker Is Defoe’s A Journal of the Plague Year a work of journalism?