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Climate Journalism Rage

March 18, 2020 admin 0

Climate journalism rage: Emily Atkin describes how she put passion into reporting on climate change. “In order to make an impact on climate journalism, I’ve learned, I need to turn my despair into rage,” she writes. “Only then can others feel the burning importance of the story.”   Visit […]

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Extraordinary Times

March 16, 2020 admin 0

Extraordinary times: We can no longer doubt that we are living through extraordinary times, writes Pankaj Mishra about the coronavirus pandemic. “In fact, the last such churning occurred almost exactly a century ago, and it altered the world so dramatically that a revolution in the arts, sciences and philosophy, not […]

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Journalists With Kids Work At Home

March 13, 2020 admin 0

Journalists with kids work at home: As schools close, the impact depends on the age of kids, writes Kristen Hare. “It’s like a snow day, but for a pandemic.”   Visit the Ethics AdviceLine blog for more.

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Focusing on Public Health, Not Politics

March 12, 2020 admin 0

Focusing on public health, not politics: The train wreck becomes the story, at the expense of informing the public or holding power to account, writes Maria Bustillo. MSNBC demonstrates an alternative, sober path away from outrage mania, she writes.   Visit the Ethics AdviceLine blog for more.

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Crisis Demands Media Collaboration

March 11, 2020 admin 0

Crisis demands media collaboration: Working together is more efficient and conserves resources that “could be deployed in smarter ways that the public needs,” writes Dan Gillmore. Be calm, broad, precise, transparent, engaged and relentlessly useful, he writes.   Visit the Ethics AdviceLine blog for more.

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Journalism With Tears

March 10, 2020 admin 0

Journalism with tears: When  broadcasters‘ tears inundate us, their impact is lost, writes Savannah Jacobson. The crying reporter is a new genre of clickbait, she writes.   Visit the Ethics AdviceLine blog for more.

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Covering Coronavirus Better

March 9, 2020 admin 0

Covering coronavirus better: Shoddy coverage of the virus can cause panic and overreaction, writes Al Tompkins. Limit adjectives, choose images carefully, frame stories with context, bust myths and get creative. “The public is starting to freak out,” he writes. “Don’t add to it with screaming clickbait headlines and scary generic […]

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Picture This

March 6, 2020 admin 0

Picture this: Today, accuracy in photography is seen as important as accuracy in reporting. Altering is forbidden. From the Ethics AdviceLine for Journalists archives.   Visit the Ethics AdviceLine blog for more.

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WhatsApp Fans Coronavirus Fears

March 5, 2020 admin 0

WhatsApp fans coronavirus fears: The messaging service spreads panic-inducing conspiracy theories as officials race to contain the outbreak, writes Tony Romm. The are battling an explosion of half-truths and outright falsehoods online, he writes.   Visit the Ethics AdviceLine blog for more.

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Coronavirus News Goes Viral

March 4, 2020 admin 0

Coronavirus news goes viral: “There are so many coronavirus newsletters popping up that even the same Twitter jokes are going viral,” writes Hanaa’ Tameez. They include the Washington Post, New York Times, Dallas Morning News, Quartz and BuzzFeed. CNN airs a podcast.   Visit the Ethics AdviceLine blog for […]