EPA Ruling Sets an Ambitious Menu For the Press April 4, 2007 By Curtis Brainard As "triumphant" as Monday’s decision may be for environmentalists, for the press the story is just beginning.
For ABC, Weather Equals Climate Change February 15, 2007 By Curtis Brainard ABCNews.com featured a poll Wednesday that was so egregiously nitwitted that it deserves comment.
Scientific American‘s Experiment in Wiki-Reporting December 4, 2006 By Curtis Brainard When the news of the oldest hominid fossil on record broke this fall, the magazine’s lineup was packed — so its editors tried an experiment they had been kicking around for months.
A Syndicated Column Preaches Beyond the Green Choir November 21, 2006 By Curtis Brainard Doug Moss, editor of E — The Environment Magazine, talks about how to present environmental and scientific issues to the public, and promoting his magazine.
Murdoch Goes Green, and His Empire Follows November 17, 2006 By Curtis Brainard Rupert Murdoch, traditionally no friend to the science of climate change, has begun to change his tune, will NewsCorp?
In the U.K., a Bang; In the U.S., Whimper November 9, 2006 By Curtis Brainard There are roughly 3,500 miles between Washington, D.C. and London. For journalists, those miles might as well be light years.
Reporters Turn Ghostbusters for Halloween October 31, 2006 By Curtis Brainard Surprising, but true: A smattering of reporters managed to ditch the lame cliches of writing about Halloween to actually do some timely reporting.
God Versus Science — Back in the News October 24, 2006 By Curtis Brainard A new book about religious belief has been burning up the pages of newspapers and magazines lately, and the outlook for a peaceful solution looks bleak.
Zebra Mussels and Mitten Crabs and Govt. Regs, Oh My! October 20, 2006 By Curtis Brainard Perhaps the criticism that the government treats invasive species as a regional, rather than international, problem applies to the press as well.
Half Full or Half Empty? U.S. Glass has 300 Million Drops of Water October 17, 2006 By Curtis Brainard As the United States population reached 300 million early this morning, reporters took the opportunity to provide a State of the Union address of sorts.