Columbia Journalism Review
@CJR
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Monitoring the press, tracking the evolving media business & encouraging excellence in journalism since 1961.
New York, NY
Joined July 2009
Today, we’re introducing the Journalism 2050 Issue, looking at where the wind is blowing the media industry and habits of news consumption. https://t.co/iW1BaQ8TU1
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Podcasters like Lex Fridman are reshaping the news environment. "Accountability reporting this is not," Maddy Crowell writes in CJR's Journalism 2050 Issue.
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Lex Fridman’s expansive, compelling, anti-journalistic podcast style.
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On Journalism 2050, @Nantelava tells why life in in Silicon Valley felt like living in the heart of the Roman Empire, with hosts @emilybell and @heatherchaplin. Listen or watch wherever you get your podcasts. https://t.co/nIgx4WPtAn
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“Debunking videos are a perfect distillation of our online discourse: a debunk is a reaction to bunk tinged with moral outrage, and outraged reaction is, after all, the language of social media,” @chameauleon writes for CJR’s Journalism 2050 Issue.
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In our very online news environment, truth and lies are becoming interchangeable.
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World leaders, decreasingly inclined to talk with journalists, speak at length to Lex Fridman, a podcaster with about five million YouTube subscribers, about their ideas and feelings—and Fridman does not push back on the facts. Read Maddy Crowell in CJR: https://t.co/4ocum1iqwD
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“‘News influencers’ I look at as kind of the opinion section of the internet,” Liz Kelly Nelson tells @viajoshhunt for CJR’s Journalism 2050 Issue.
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An interview with Liz Kelly Nelson, who wants to help journalists navigate the independent creator economy.
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The connection between politics and the longevity game. @antelava joins hosts @emilybell and Heather Chaplin on a new episode of Journalism 2050. Listen or watch wherever you get your podcasts. https://t.co/rRePO2uPRb
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Amid ICE crackdowns on Somali immigrants, a local outlet relies on time and community trust to tell stories others can’t. Read @RiddhiKSetty.
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Amid ICE crackdowns on Somali immigrants, a local outlet relies on time and community trust to tell stories others can’t.
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For CJR’s Journalism 2050 Issue, Amos Barshad reports on the rising industry of startups aiming to screen and catalogue news coverage for bias, including the use of AI “to break stories down into their component parts” and avoid a right-left binary. https://t.co/iH4CvNfdVe
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For CJR’s Journalism 2050 Issue, @viajoshhunt speaks with Liz Kelly Nelson, who wants to help journalists navigate the independent creator economy with Project C.
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An interview with Liz Kelly Nelson, who wants to help journalists navigate the independent creator economy.
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Gaza has shown governments around the world just how much they can get away with when it comes to silencing the press,” @AtossaAraxia writes for CJR’s Journalism 2050 Issue. Will other countries follow suit?
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What the crisis for press freedom in Gaza portends.
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If a judge decided that Perez Hilton had to cough up his sources, that ruling could erode protections that all journalists have long enjoyed. Read the piece by @JoelSimonSays from CJR’s Journalism 2050 Issue.
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A recent lawsuit tested whether Perez Hilton is a journalist. Reporters and influencers should be equally concerned with the legal answer to that question.
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Anya Schiffrin on the power of buried journalism in trials, with @azmatzahra and Journalism 2050 hosts @emilybell and Heather Chaplin. https://t.co/v0vDsyP8Hv
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A new report documents a hostile environment for US journalists this year, with 32 arrests and 170 assaults. Read Jem Bartholomew.
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A new report documents a hostile environment for US journalists this year, with 32 arrests and 170 assaults.
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“There are a lot of unknowns about the next twenty-five years. But we can, at least, dress for the weather,” CJR’s editor, Betsy Morais, writes. In the Journalism 2050 Issue, we look where the wind is blowing the news media.
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Introducing the Journalism 2050 Issue.
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What happens when a hedge fund buys the only source for satellite imagery of a conflict zone? @AzmatZahra with Anya Schiffrin and Journalism 2050 hosts @emilybell and @heatherchaplin. https://t.co/IEnqNjBsfe
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Hong Kong’s Jimmy Lai—the publisher of Apple Daily, a pro-democracy newspaper—has been convicted and is now expected to spend the rest of his life in prison. Read the story by @liamjscott
https://t.co/nhCuSuygdN
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The former publisher of a pro-democracy newspaper, Apple Daily, is expected to spend the rest of his life in prison.
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Anya Schiffrin on the normalization of media capture, with @AzmatZahra and Journalism 2050 hosts @emilybell and @heatherchaplin. https://t.co/qNUB38Dr9A
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In this week's Laurels and Darts, a devastating photograph. Plus: Trump’s war of words with women journalists; sticking with the story in South Texas. Read @BGrueskin. https://t.co/eEOcfYG4k8
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“Republican hegemony online is mostly due to the enormously successful style of direct-to-consumer communications that was pioneered by Donald Trump,” @KPaoletta writes. https://t.co/KPcvjb58XK
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What happens when politicians can get their message out without the press.
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The ethos for documentation in Gaza. @Azmatzahra with Journalism 2050 hosts @emilybellnyc and @heatherchaplin. Listen wherever you get your podcasts. https://t.co/FK7lhZgEMd
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