WIRED / Nilesh Christopher and Varsha Bansal
The New York Times / Benjamin Mullin and Katie Robertson
The Washington Post / Pranshu Verma
CNN / Lauren Kent, Jack Guy, Claudia Rebaza and Lauren Said-Moorhouse
Vanity Fair / Charlotte Klein
Meet “the Inspector General” of the New York Times newsroom →“Today the Times newsroom is a different place than it was 10 years ago…Management feels they have to provide more guidance across the board and take concerted moves to protect the institution. [Charlotte] Behrendt’s evolved role seems to be one such mechanism. As one former senior editor put it, ‘The fact that she has internal investigations in her title is a character change of astonishing order.'”
Chicago Tribune / Robert Channick and Vincent Alban
Pew Research Center / Emily Tomasik
Ars Technica / Scharon Harding
Columbia Journalism Review / Jon Allsop
A tale of two shocking stories about world leaders →“If the Raisi incident suggests that state media control can never be absolute, particularly in a globalized world, the Fico incident points to ways in which censorship can grow even in democratic soil—and to how polarization can be weaponized to heighten it.”
The Guardian / Otis Filley
From mining to Meta: the slow decline of Broken Hill’s only newspaper →“The Barrier Industrial Council was formed in 1923 by 18 trade unions, with the aim of improving worker conditions in Broken Hill. It successfully secured a 35-hour work week and five weeks of annual leave for mining employees….It took over as publisher of the Barrier Daily Truth from the Barrier District Australasian Labor Federation. But the unusual ownership was not able to protect the paper from the winds buffeting regional media.”