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Showing videos filed under: newspapers
Michael Wolff: What the News Needs Now
April 6, 2010Michael Wolff made his name writing long, literary feature stories for Vanity Fair, but he got started at the New York Times. Now, he says, newspapers' day is done. Aggregator sites like his own Newser.com are the future.Rory O'Connor, Michael Wolff, and the Economy
April 5, 2010A new report shows that U.S. soldiers tampered with the scene of the deaths of three women, including digging bullets out of the bodies, to cover up their involvement. Are the new procedures for the war under General McChrystal really minimizing civilian casualties, as they are supposed to?The Secret Life of Paper
February 10, 2010We talk a lot about the future of news and newspapers around here, but what about the paper that the news is printed on? In this video from Inform Inc, directed by Virginia Ramsey, Brian Ohl, and Eleanor Saunders, we take a look at paper, recycling, and its impact on the environment.Abolish the Senate, Joe Sacco and Lisa Graves
February 9, 2010With the election of Scott Brown to Ted Kennedy's former Senate seat, Democrats in DC seemed to give up on getting any major legislation passed. 59 votes (well, 58 and Joe Lieberman) was just not good enough. The blame has been flying--it's Obama's fault, Rahm Emanuel's, Harry Reid's--but what if the problem simply is the Senate?Whose News Is It, Anyway?
February 4, 2010Discussions on the future of journalism are happening so often now that they're almost trite. But Robert McChesney, John Nichols, Tracy Van Slyke and Kate Giammarise are not only interested in saving journalism; they're interested in having all of us have a say.Whose News, Julian Zelizer, and Democracy in Canada
February 3, 2010Discussions on the future of journalism are happening so often now that they're almost trite. But Robert McChesney, John Nichols, Tracy Van Slyke and Kate Giammarise are not only interested in saving journalism; they're interested in having all of us have a say.LIVE AT NOON: Whose News Is It, Anyway?
February 3, 2010Discussions on the future of journalism are happening so often now that they're almost trite. But Robert McChesney, John Nichols, Tracy Van Slyke and Kate Giammarise are not only interested in saving journalism; they're interested in having all of us have a say. They'll join us at noon to discuss.Investigative Journalism 2.0
March 24, 2009Longtime investigative reporter Andrew Schneider of the Seattle Post Inelligencer and Hal Bernton of the Seattle Times discuss whether investigative journalism will survive on the web.
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