The scandal attention cycle August 1, 2013 By Brendan Nyhan How the media lost interest in IRS targeting, even as new facts emerged
Factchecking enters ‘Conversation’ in Oz July 31, 2013 By Brendan Nyhan How an Australian news site is taking a new approach to the format
When ‘he said,’ ‘she said’ is dangerous July 16, 2013 By Brendan Nyhan Media errs in giving "balanced" coverage to McCarthy’s discredited views
A cure for second-term doldrums? July 2, 2013 By Brendan Nyhan TNR’s Obama "recovery guide" is a break from the media tedium
Hillary’s first tweet: A 2016 harbinger? June 17, 2013 By Brendan Nyhan Trivia and speculation signifying nothing
No, the scandals aren’t dragging down Obama’s ratings (yet) June 3, 2013 By Brendan Nyhan Some reporters seize on an outlier poll, but others get the story right
How extreme is that legislator, really? May 23, 2013 By Brendan Nyhan A new data set on lawmakers’ ideology can bolster reporting at the state level
Covering facts versus the ‘narrative’ May 17, 2013 By Brendan Nyhan The challenge for journalists when scandal fever hits
Backsliding on the ‘death panels’ myth May 10, 2013 By Brendan Nyhan The need for caution–and avoiding "he said," "she said"–in reporting on IPAB
Covering ‘The American Presidency’ April 30, 2013 By Brendan Nyhan Fiction vs. reality in coverage of the White House