-
27 votes
-
The Messenger shuts down amid journalism industry-wide layoffs
5 votes -
HomeVestors (the “We Buy Ugly Houses” company) overhauls policies in the wake of ProPublica investigation
19 votes -
The ambitious plan to open up a treasure trove of Black history
8 votes -
How Nellie Bly and other trailblazing women wrote creative nonfiction in English before it was a thing
12 votes -
Every year since 1989, a hotel built out of snow and ice is constructed anew, and welcomes guests in the Swedish village of Jukkasjärvi
17 votes -
Coverage of Gaza War in the New York Times and other major newspapers heavily favored Israel, analysis shows
35 votes -
On media outlets frequent use of the term "Iranian-backed"
Hamas in Gaza, Hezbollah in Lebanon, Houthi rebels in Yemen, and militias in Iraq and Syria. Whenever western media outlets speak of these groups they seem to prefix the term Iranian-Backed. I'm...
Hamas in Gaza, Hezbollah in Lebanon, Houthi rebels in Yemen, and militias in Iraq and Syria.
Whenever western media outlets speak of these groups they seem to prefix the term Iranian-Backed.
I'm starting to raise my eyebrows a bit at how universally the term is being used. It feels almost mandated. My understanding is these are indeed supported financially and materially by Iran, but they also very much operate independently. So the extent of the relationship is unknown or at least debated.
Does this strike anyone else as odd or suspicious? Is this use fair and justified?
My mind can't help but wander to the laying of a propaganda foundation for direct conflict with Iran.
23 votes -
The New York Times sues OpenAI, Microsoft over the use of its stories to train chatbots
62 votes -
The myth of the unemployed US college grad
31 votes -
Startup Channel 1 creates news service presented by AI
10 votes -
When the New York Times lost its way
23 votes -
Decolonise media: How do you cover genocide?
18 votes -
Hilariously bad news reporting
11 votes -
Opinion - journalism needs to lose its dependent relationship with big tech companies
24 votes -
Slate's latest article about US Social Security benefits was full of errors, myths and lies
28 votes -
On nonprofit news, funding, operations and success over time
5 votes -
Sports Illustrated published articles by fake, AI-generated writers
29 votes -
Advertisers want to place ads next to content that is 'Brand Safe'. The end of Jezebel is a case study of how that impacts hard hitting news sites
44 votes -
In Canada’s battle with Big Tech, smaller publishers and independent outlets struggle to survive
15 votes -
The Escapist magazine's entire video team has either been fired or resigned
This is breaking news and I'm no journalist, so bear with me here. It looks like a bunch of people at The Escapist were fired earlier today (one, two, possibly more). In response, the entire rest...
This is breaking news and I'm no journalist, so bear with me here.
It looks like a bunch of people at The Escapist were fired earlier today (one, two, possibly more). In response, the entire rest of the video team has quit (including Yahtzee, plus all the rest)
The video team has plans to go independent. From their new Discord, they made this statement (from Nick Calandro):
I was fired from The Escapist along with many others today, and in response the entire video team, including Yahtzee, has resigned from The Escapist.
Our plan is to go independent, but we will share more plans on that later this week.
79 votes -
Welcome to Aftermath
19 votes -
Multi-source journalism subscriptions? Also, seeking recommendations for sources.
Every few months I get the itch to support journalism and expand my news from the low quality high fluff news sources that tend to be free and subscribe to some long-form sources of news, opinion,...
Every few months I get the itch to support journalism and expand my news from the low quality high fluff news sources that tend to be free and subscribe to some long-form sources of news, opinion, and investigative journalism, but every time I go through the same process of pricing subscriptions, struggling to decide which one, and then finally just giving up and not subscribing to any of them.
If money was no object I'd probably subscribe right now to:
- The Atlantic
- The New Yorker
- Harpers
- The Economist
- National Review
- WSJ
- NYT
(trying to focus on a variety of political leanings, but mostly from generally high-factuality sources)
I like Apple News+ in concept, and the price is decent, but after a trial subscription I felt like the UI was difficult to navigate, difficult to search and filter, and the news sources were still a subset of the entire publications. I also have to wonder whether the journalists are sufficiently compensated by Apple or whether they get pennies compared to a direct subscription.
So, I come here seeking recommendations -- perhaps somebody here has found a good solution to this problem?
20 votes -
"Did the entire media industry misquote a Hamas spokesperson?" (searching for sources of the initial hospital bombing claims)
31 votes -
Jon Stewart’s Apple TV Plus show ends, reportedly over coverage of AI and China
65 votes -
Welcome to Norway, the world's most unlikely wine hotspot – in Oslo, there are weeks-long campouts to secure top burgundies. What's going on?
14 votes -
Swedish crime novelist Camilla Läckberg has been forced to deny claims that she tricked readers into buying books she didn't write herself
12 votes -
Thomson Reuters AI copyright dispute must go to trial, judge says
17 votes -
Award winning photojournalist James Nachtwey holds retrospective exhibition in Thailand
2 votes -
Rupert Murdoch steps down as chairman of Fox Corporation and News Corp
44 votes -
Russell Brand: In Plain Sight: Dispatches (sexual abuse allegations against Russell Brand)
19 votes -
Hasan Minhaj’s “Emotional Truths”
20 votes -
Bad-faith coverage of trans issues — who does it serve?
16 votes -
A deadly 6.8-magnitude earthquake hit near the historic Moroccan city of Marrakesh
26 votes -
US political journalists need to focus on the stakes, not the odds
23 votes -
Nebraska volleyball claim women’s world record for sports attendance of 92,003 fans
10 votes -
Gannett stops using AI to write articles for now because they were hilariously terrible
20 votes -
Journalists, how did you get into your profession?
I'm looking at making a major career change and I'm considering trying out one of our local newspapers to see if I can get into a semi regular gig with them. Is there anything in particular I...
I'm looking at making a major career change and I'm considering trying out one of our local newspapers to see if I can get into a semi regular gig with them. Is there anything in particular I should know or be looking for?
13 votes -
Pro cycling's most beautiful race? The best photos from the Arctic Race of Norway.
9 votes -
Four former VICE Motherboard journalists founded an independent news company
41 votes -
From solo protest to global movement – five years of 'Fridays for Future' in pictures
3 votes -
Canada demands Facebook lift news ban to allow wildfire info sharing
51 votes -
Marion County Record newspaper raid: the sworn affidavit for the search warrant is essentially just the text of the search warrant
31 votes -
CNET is deleting old articles to try to improve its Google Search ranking
29 votes -
Vladimir Putin’s forever war
43 votes -
Understanding Bill C-18: Canada’s Online News Act
25 votes -
Canada's digital news subscription tax credit
13 votes -
Exposed: The Sunday World’s lucrative partnership with South Africa's National Lotteries Commission
4 votes -
Five tips for using PubPeer to investigate scientific research errors and misconduct
8 votes -
SS Baychimo: The unsinkable Arctic ghost ship
7 votes