‘We Know the Pressure Will Come’ November 4, 2024 By Sacha Biazzo For reporters covering cartels in the Mexican state of Sinaloa, ethical considerations are more than academic.
What Jeff Bezos Got Wrong About Newspaper Endorsements November 1, 2024 By Gary Miles His decision misstated our influence and underestimated our impact.
Dearborn Diaries November 1, 2024 By Masrat Zahra Media consumption in the Arab American capital has the potential to swing the presidential election. No story is bigger than the war in Gaza, now spilling over into Lebanon and across the Middle East.
Requiem for the Jersey Journal October 31, 2024 By Helene Stapinski As scrappy and gritty as the city it covered, the only newspaper in Hudson County, N.J., will close in February, at age 157.
Crossing Over October 31, 2024 By Julia Preston After four decades in journalism, I felt I could no longer follow the rules of impartiality. But I still believe in them.
There are two kinds of journalism drama. Soon we’ll find out which we’re living. October 31, 2024 By Joel Simon
Martin Baron on Jeff Bezos, the Post, and the role of presidential endorsements October 30, 2024 By Josh Hersh
Jeff Bezos Should Donate the Washington Post to a Charity October 30, 2024 By Steven Waldman His conflicts of interests are insurmountable. He can take a heroic path to strengthen journalism.
Campaign Notebook, International Edition October 30, 2024 By CJR Staff Foreign reporters on covering the Americanest election imaginable.
Q&A: The Nevada Current’s Michael Lyle on covering a swing state amid poll anxiety October 30, 2024 By Lauren Watson
Why Are Liberals Infuriated with the Media? October 29, 2024 By Jeff Jarvis From sanewashing to false equivalence, many readers have had it with their favorite news publications. Editors would do well to listen.