How a new Washington stifles a new political press August 6, 2014 By David Uberti As political PR machines become more sophisticated and aggressive, journalists need to rethink how they cover government
Bill Keller-led Marshall Project gives readers a ‘sneak preview’ August 5, 2014 By David Uberti The criminal justice nonprofit cross-published its first story in The Washington Post on Monday
Jobs day is a party on Twitter August 1, 2014 By David Uberti Financial journalists on Twitter have a monthly feeding frenzy when the government releases its jobs report
In a tabloidized world, tabloids struggle July 29, 2014 By David Uberti With dwindling newsstand sales and fierce competition for viral stories online, the New York tabloids are forced to recalibrate
Journalists subpoenaed in ‘pink-slime’ suit July 25, 2014 By David Uberti BPI wants emails from NYT’s Michael Moss, public-health lawyer Michele Simon, and others
Must-reads of the week July 25, 2014 By David Uberti Bloomberg struggles to find direction, the Times is accused of anti-Israel bias, and the New Yorker opens its archives to the public
Twitter and factchecking don’t mix during debates July 21, 2014 By David Uberti Though Twitter provides real-time opportunities to hold candidates accountable during debates, factchecking on the quick isn’t as easy as it looks
6 Wikipedia edits made from Capitol Hill July 15, 2014 By David Uberti A new Twitter bot records anonymous changes, ranging from serious to mundane, made on computers in Congress
On the NSA, a White House credibility problem July 14, 2014 By David Uberti The AP report on the destruction of The Guardian‘s hard drives is just the latest evidence that reporters can’t trust the Obama administration on spying claims
Daily Caller editor doubles down on Menendez ‘scoop’ July 9, 2014 By David Uberti Until The Washington Post‘s story that it was a Cuban plot is proven true, Tucker Carlson says, there is nothing to correct