Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism / Matthew Leake
The Wall Street Journal / Keach Hagey, Miles Kruppa and Alexandra Bruell
The New York Times / Katie Robertson
Vanity Fair / Charlotte Klein
“We wanted to keep chasing it”: How student journalists at Harvard and Penn are beating big-time reporters to the punch →“‘We made several trips between The Crimson’s office and the library that night,’ said [Crimson reporter Miles] Herszenhorn. ‘We kept trying to just call it a night and spend the rest of the night at the library’—they are, after all, in the middle of finals—but ‘we wanted to keep chasing it.’ That they did: Around 4:30 a.m. Tuesday, the Crimson reporters, beating every national newspaper, scooped that Gay would stay on as president with the support of the Harvard Corporation, the university’s governing board, which had remained silent since the hearing.”
The Washington Post / Laura Wagner
Masha Gessen won a “political thought” prize. Then they wrote on Gaza. →“The Hannah Arendt Association wrote in a statement: ‘We find it remarkable that the public debate about understanding and condemning Hamas’s terrorist attacks on Israel and Israel’s bombing of Gaza is being blocked by boycotting a political thinker who is trying to bring knowledge, insight and sharp thinking to this debate.'”
The New York Times / Benjamin Mullin
Punchbowl News strikes deal to buy data start-up →“Punchbowl News said Thursday that it was acquiring Electo Analytics, a company that provides data to help decipher and analyze legislation…The deal is a sign of an increasingly popular approach among digital news start-ups. Instead of trying to cover the whole world and rely on advertising, the outlets are focused on narrow lanes of coverage that people are willing to pay for.”
Rest of World / Andrew Deck
Japan’s SmartNews was growing fast in the U.S. What went wrong? →“SmartNews was one of the few Japanese startups to crack the U.S. market — and the second ever to clear a billion-dollar valuation and reach unicorn status. But employees told Rest of World the U.S. expansion’s initial success was tempered by a chaotic product development process and [former CEO Ken] Suzuki’s own obsession with the fractures of American political life, distracting from more central business challenges.”
Columbia Journalism Review / Yona TR Golding
Q&A: Alexa Koenig on the potential and pitfalls of open source investigations →“One thing that’s been lauded about open source investigations is that they can be democratizing. Most people, if they want to, can learn some of these skills fairly quickly. It takes a lot of practice to get really good at them, but they’re not out of reach for most people who have any proficiency with the internet. I think the challenge, however, is the community’s growth without the safeguards in place around professional ethics. Just because you can do something in digital spaces doesn’t mean you necessarily should.”