627. How peer support can help journalists facing online abuse and secondary trauma
Viktorya Vilk and Jeje Mohamed wrote a report for PEN America with Columbia University’s Susan McGregor that focused on using peer support to reduce harm and increase resilience against...
602. Public radio reporter from Phoenix pens first mystery novel
Christina Estes, a senior field correspondent at Phoenix NPR station KJZZ, recently penned “Off the Air," a mystery novel that was inspired by her career as a broadcast journalist
601. What drives journalists to put themselves at risk?
Dr. Anthony Feinstein, author of “Moral Courage: 19 Profiles of Investigative Journalists," conducted the first study on the topic of journalists, trauma and emotional well-being.
600. Legacy media is failing to give people the news they really want
Meghann Cuniff, a legal affairs reporter based in Southern California, has a long history of covering breaking news, conducting investigations and writing long-form narratives from courtrooms about high-profile cases.
Better News: Food and drink reporting drives revenue to The Sacramento Bee
Benji Egel of The Sacramento Bee discusses how news organizations can create a regional keepsake that drives revenue toward their newsroom.
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“I’m not saying we forget the lessons we learned in print or that we abandon the good value that was created.”
“The heavy reliance on law enforcement to tell these narratives is really problematic. Their reports are inaccurate.”
“Here in Israel, I can be my whole full self and I can be a journalist and I can also be a Jew, it’s just my lifestyle.”
“Such a simple observation really made me reconsider every image of every person I had ever taken up to that point.”
628. Informed debate is reporting that spurs conversation: Carrie Melago
Carrie Melago discusses how Chalkbeat, the education-focused, local newsroom, tracks impact rather than just chasing clicks.