The light in Beirut March 27, 2014 By Stephen Franklin Up against a wall, waiting to die on a late afternoon in August 1982, a journalist’s life stops and then starts over
The thankless work of a ‘fixer’ April 30, 2014 By Andrew Bossone Foreign journalists know they’d be lost, or even dead, without the locals they hire, but do they give them credit back home?
Brief encounters May 1, 2014 By James Boylan Short reviews of Journalism and Memory and Protest and Propaganda: W.E.B. Du Bois, The Crisis, and American History
A fierce hunt for justice May 1, 2014 By Anna Clark Corruption, sexual assaults, and the cops who did it
The fixer, the flacks, and the dictator’s son May 1, 2014 By Edirin Oputu Ken Silverstein delves deep into the clandestine world of oil
The danger of fair and balanced May 1, 2014 By Robert S. Eshelman As the science grew more convincing about man’s effect on climate change, it’s as if the journalists were stuck in time
Who’s running The Miami Herald? May 1, 2014 By Mirta Ojito Three Hispanics and one African-American, all of them women
Immersive Experience May 1, 2014 By Edirin Oputu Passing the stunt journalism torch to a new generation
Part of the club May 1, 2014 By Michael Canyon Meyer Voice of San Diego’s membership model has once again earned the organization a place in the national spotlight. If the model succeeds in San Diego, can it succeed elsewhere?
The king of content May 1, 2014 By Alexis Sobel Fitts How Upworthy aims to alter the Web, and could end up altering the world
Eye in the sky May 1, 2014 By Louise Roug Drones are cheap, simple, and potential game changers for newsrooms
Drones and the free press May 1, 2014 By Elizabeth Spayd Somehow, the FAA became an arbiter of the First Amendment
Opening Shot May 1, 2014 By The Editors Just because the media says you’re the front-runner, does that make it so?