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Trump Wins, the Press Loses

A second Trump administration is poised to be devastating to journalism.

Truth Social and Consequences

The political press gears up for an unprecedented story: the social media executive in chief.

Hanging off the Line

Election polls were largely accurate. But the stories we tell about them are often distorting.

The Promise of IndyMedia

Twenty-five years after its founding, a much-diminished community journalism organization may still offer a model for the future.

The Wall Street Journal’s Campaign to Free Evan Gershkovich

What newsrooms need to know, from an insider who helped lead the effort.

A New Normal

The Espionage Act offers Trump a clear path to stifle press freedom.

The Media Marine

How J.D. Vance keeps the press calls coming.
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How Twitter Turning to X Changed Journalism

Reporters and editors discuss the ‘information cesspool’ the site has become under the stewardship of one Elon Musk.

No New News

America’s politicians are old. So are news consumers. At a home for the elderly, residents weigh in on journalism’s obsession with age.

‘One Hundred Percent Gentleman’ 

Jason Miller, Trump’s press strategist, is the ultimate survivor.

How Politics Broke Content Moderation

First came Elon Musk, then the House of Representatives.

Crossing Over

After four decades in journalism, I felt I could no longer follow the rules of impartiality. But I still believe in them.

La Periodista de Iowa

At a Spanish-language newspaper in rural Iowa, Lorena López proves that the best counter to online misinformation is human connection.

Requiem for the Jersey Journal 

As scrappy and gritty as the city it covered, the only newspaper in Hudson County, N.J., will close in February, at age 157.

Turnaround Time

Mark Thompson, CNN’s chief executive, is tasked with transforming a struggling network. All he asks is patience.

Hiding in Plain Sight

The climate story this election missed.

Complicating the Latino-Voter Story

Portraying Latinos as homogeneous misrepresents them. Some reporters showed another way.

Otherwise Lost

In Austin, a movement journalist named Kit O’Connell covers the trans community—and many others—as major outlets don’t.

The Outsiders

How The Business of Fashion became an unlikely insider’s guide.

The Before and After

Meta’s Canadian news ban, as told through my small town.

From the Archive

Corridor of Mirrors

The Democratic Convention in Chicago, in August 1968, was surrounded by protesters and made bloody by police violence. Whiteside was on the scene, following along with CBS News.