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Spies, Lies, and Stonewalling: What It’s Like to Report on Facebook
Spies, Lies, and Stonewalling: What It’s Like to Report on Facebook
pOne day in July 2016, Casey Newton, a tech reporter for The Verge, sat down at Facebook headquarters in Menlo Park for the biggest interview of his career. Across from him was Mark Zuckerberg. With his characteristic geeky excitement, Zuckerberg described the promising initial test flight of Aquila, a drone with a wingspan larger than […]/p
·cjr.org·
Spies, Lies, and Stonewalling: What It’s Like to Report on Facebook
How Virginia Heffernan is reinventing tech criticism
How Virginia Heffernan is reinventing tech criticism
pVirginia Heffernan’s Twitter bio once described her as “something like a critic.” Her reluctance to fully embrace the title is understandable, given that most of what passes as technology criticism today tends either towards gadget reviews or curmudgeons bemoaning the loss of what makes us human. Somewhere along the line, critical writing about technology became […]/p
·cjr.org·
How Virginia Heffernan is reinventing tech criticism
The transformation of the word geek
The transformation of the word geek
pIn Liar’s Poker, his 1989 seminal account of trading, Michael Lewis has a chapter called “From Geek to Man.” Here’s what he says about “geeks”: “A geek is a circus performer who bites the heads off live chickens and snakes. Or so says the red American Heritage Dictionary.” When Lewis arrived at Salomon Brothers in […]/p
·cjr.org·
The transformation of the word geek
Introducing Red Pen: A Grammar Podcast
Introducing Red Pen: A Grammar Podcast
pCJR · Introducing Red Pen: A Grammar Podcast   There’s a famous scene from the final season of The Wire—y’know, The One With the Newspeople—where cub reporter Alma Gutierrez, new to the show’s (thinly) fictionalized version of the Baltimore Sun, receives a crash course in the paper’s lofty lexical standards: “Gutierrez!” her editor shouts across […]/p
·cjr.org·
Introducing Red Pen: A Grammar Podcast
Journalists want to re-create Twitter on Mastodon. Mastodon is not into it.
Journalists want to re-create Twitter on Mastodon. Mastodon is not into it.
pEver since Elon Musk completed his $45 billion takeover of Twitter last month, there has been a steady stream of users, including a number of journalists, signing up for Mastodon, an open-source alternative. No one controls Mastodon—or rather, everyone controls their own version of it. There are thousands of servers running the software, and each […]/p
·cjr.org·
Journalists want to re-create Twitter on Mastodon. Mastodon is not into it.
Five perspectives on newsroom social media policies
Five perspectives on newsroom social media policies
Yesterday, we published a report that explores journalists’ experiences with and views of newsroom social media policies. Below are five responses to the report written by journalists and media scholars. Each of these focuses on a specific issue raised in the report, including legal considerations (Victoria Baranetsky), online harassment (Michelle Ferrier), representation (Leonor Ayala Polley), audience trust (Benjamin Toff), and objectivity […]
·cjr.org·
Five perspectives on newsroom social media policies
In defense of the newspaper endorsement - Columbia Journalism Review
In defense of the newspaper endorsement - Columbia Journalism Review
Over the weekend, the Union Leader, a newspaper in Manchester, New Hampshire, endorsed Joe Biden for president. “We have found Mr. Biden to be a caring, compassionate and professional public servant,” an editorial in the paper read; President Trump, by contrast, “is not always 100 percent wrong, but he is 100 percent wrong for America.” […]
·cjr.org·
In defense of the newspaper endorsement - Columbia Journalism Review
Journalism beyond competition
Journalism beyond competition
The story of contemporary Colorado journalism can be told in two acts. In the first, the Rocky Mountain News and the Denver Post are locked in one of the late twentieth century’s wildest newspaper wars, which ended in 2009 with the Rocky’s demise. In the second, a fragmented media landscape of upstart publications is galvanized […]
·cjr.org·
Journalism beyond competition
The poet editor of West Marin - Columbia Journalism Review
The poet editor of West Marin - Columbia Journalism Review
Wednesday is production day at the Point Reyes Light, a weekly newspaper based in the town of Inverness, just over an hour north of San Francisco along the bucolic, switchbacked coastal roads of West Marin County. In the middle of the Light’s skylit newsroom, lined with heavy wooden desks and filing cabinets containing years of […]
·cjr.org·
The poet editor of West Marin - Columbia Journalism Review