Si ces nouvelles vous intéressent… vus pouvez vous abonner à la Newsletter Dear reader,   CJR’s latest issue is live today on CJR.org and filled with great articles, take a look…You fantasize about quitting your job. Then you do it. Thanks to social media, your “I quit!” moment gets a global audience.What is « I F•cking Love Science » and how did its lone blogger get 17.9 million followers, more lire la suite

Si ces nouvelles vous intéressent… vus pouvez vous abonner à la Newsletter

Dear reader,

 

CJR’s latest issue is live today on CJR.org and filled with great articles, take a look…You fantasize about quitting your job. Then you do it. Thanks to social media, your “I quit!” moment gets a global audience.What is « I F•cking Love Science » and how did its lone blogger get 17.9 million followers, more than Popular ScienceDiscoverScientific American, and The New York Times combined? Read the entire story.Uncle Sam wants (to kill) you. The true threat to war correspondents.

Is the Tea Party timelessly American? Richard Hofstadter’s ‘Anti-Intellectualism In American Life’ reviewed by Nicholas Lemann.
Marijuana in the media. Toke on these hard numbers about pot’s roots in journalism.What sportswriters can learn from science about why we love sports.Has climate change finally become a business story? If Mike Bloomberg and Hank Paulson are putting their muscle behind it, the answer could be « yes. »Meet the robots that factcheck. As factchecking fades away due to publications trying to « do more with less, » the best form of « bot journalism » yet may be found in these five new startup tools that help journalists.

Kyiv Post punches above its weight: An editor from Minnesota and a Pakistani billionaire are riding the story of their lives as Ukraine unravels.

 

Late-night network TV talk shows seem limited to telling jokes and serving up light fare. Could Stephen Colbert bring political conversation in the Dick Cavett style back to TV when he takes over David Letterman’s show?How to build an audience: Do we exist to give readers what they want, or are we here to tell them what we think is important for them to know? Ann Friedman comments.To see the full list of over twenty-five new articles, visit CJR’s September / October 2014 Table of Contents.I’m Liz Spayd, the editor and publisher of CJR, and I hope you enjoy the new issue. If you’re a journalism aficionado who’d appreciate getting our handsomely designed print magazine in the mail, just follow this link.

Email not displaying correctly?
View it in your browserCopyright © 2014 Columbia Journalism Review, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you have subscribed at our website.Our mailing address is:

Columbia Journalism Review

801 Pulitzer Hall
2950 Broadway

New York, NY 10027

Add us to your address book

 

 

Laisser un commentaire

Logo vins de Bordeaux