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Views of the News: Should journalists get off Twitter?
Views of the News: Should journalists get off Twitter?
Is it time for journalists to get off Twitter? One of the nation’s leading newspapers has made a presence on the social platform optional. We’ll talk about why, and what effects this could have on the quality of reporting and the safety of reporters. Also, Warner Bros. Discovery’s takeover of CNN and HBO, the collapse of Black News Channel and the USA Today’s innovative use of comic journalism. From Missouri School of Journalism professors Amy Simons, Earnest Perry and Kathy Kiely: Views of the News.
·kbia.org·
Views of the News: Should journalists get off Twitter?
A Twitter tightrope without a net: Journalists’ reactions to newsroom social media policies
A Twitter tightrope without a net: Journalists’ reactions to newsroom social media policies
pResponses to this report written by journalists and media scholars. Each focusing on a specific issue raised,  including legal considerations (Victoria Baranetsky), online harassment (Michelle Ferrier), representation (Leonor Ayala Polley), audience trust (Benjamin Toff), and objectivity (Laura Wagner), can be read here. Executive Summary Journalists increasingly rely on social media platforms such as Facebook and Twitter […]/p
·cjr.org·
A Twitter tightrope without a net: Journalists’ reactions to newsroom social media policies
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
Toward a Constructive Technology Criticism - Columbia Journalism Review
Toward a Constructive Technology Criticism - Columbia Journalism Review
“This is a work of criticism. If it were literary criticism, everyone would immediately understand the underlying purpose is positive. A critic of literature examines a work, analyzing its features, evaluating its qualities, seeking a deeper appreciation that might be useful to other readers of the same text. In a similar way, critics of music, […]
·cjr.org·
Toward a Constructive Technology Criticism - Columbia Journalism Review
Not Your Mother’s Morals: How the New Sincerity is Changing Pop Culture for the Better | Jonathan D. Fitzgerald
Not Your Mother’s Morals: How the New Sincerity is Changing Pop Culture for the Better | Jonathan D. Fitzgerald
In Not Your Mother’s Morals: How the New Sincerity is Changing Pop Culture for the Better, Jonathan D. Fitzgerald argues that today’s popular music, movies, TV shows, and books are making the world a better place. For all the hand-wringing about the decline of morals and the cheapening of culture in our time, contemporary media brims with examples of fascinating and innovative art that promote positive and uplifting moral messages—without coming across as “preachy.”
·jonathandfitzgerald.com·
Not Your Mother’s Morals: How the New Sincerity is Changing Pop Culture for the Better | Jonathan D. Fitzgerald
Reporting today, with yesterday’s context
Reporting today, with yesterday’s context
In San Francisco, Becca Andrews pulled the filing for a 1976 Supreme Court decision that granted abortion providers the power to sue for their patients’ well-being. In Chicago, Michael O’Loughlin headed to an archive to pore over records documenting the lives of gay Catholics during the AIDS epidemic of the 1980s and 1990s. And in […]
·cjr.org·
Reporting today, with yesterday’s context