Journalism is essentially an immature craft. The output is inevitably provisional, incomplete and less accurate, complex and objective than the reality it seeks to portray. It must always resort to simplification and formula. Like a child it demands attention and revels in its own power, even if that is mainly the ability to entertain. Of course, some journalists are more childish than others, but even the wisest and most skilful cannot escape the limits on their work of time and the practicalities of topical communication
When you take a close up look at how european journalists are innovating with new technology it’s cl...
I gave a talk to the Swedish Journalism Fund’s 40th anniversary conference on the Next Five Years fo...
Journalism is not going to disappear. As author Michael Schudson observed, if there were not journal...
Goldsmith University Media Research Centre has just published initial results from a very extensive ...
How can we decide what journalism education should look like in the future if we do not know what jo...
Rapid and comprehensive development of the internet, the number, quality and diversity of informatio...
Traditional journalism is indeed in crisis. In the face of corporate conglomeration and economic rat...
The biggest stories of our age are based on science: global warming, abortion term limits, even the ...
This article considers the thesis that, in western liberal societies, news values, news agenda and s...
Polis Intern Sakshi Dayal reports on the latest Polis Media Agenda Talk featuring Andrew Miller, CEO...
Contains fulltext : 157151.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Speed has alway...
The ‘lines’ between news and entertainment have been blurring for many decades now. Many have bemoan...
The London School of Economics and Political Science where my think-tank POLIS is based is an elite ...
The ‘lines’ between news and entertainment have been blurring for many decades now. Many have bemoan...
Journalism matters to us all. I believe that or I wouldn’t have spent my working life as a journalis...
When you take a close up look at how european journalists are innovating with new technology it’s cl...
I gave a talk to the Swedish Journalism Fund’s 40th anniversary conference on the Next Five Years fo...
Journalism is not going to disappear. As author Michael Schudson observed, if there were not journal...
Goldsmith University Media Research Centre has just published initial results from a very extensive ...
How can we decide what journalism education should look like in the future if we do not know what jo...
Rapid and comprehensive development of the internet, the number, quality and diversity of informatio...
Traditional journalism is indeed in crisis. In the face of corporate conglomeration and economic rat...
The biggest stories of our age are based on science: global warming, abortion term limits, even the ...
This article considers the thesis that, in western liberal societies, news values, news agenda and s...
Polis Intern Sakshi Dayal reports on the latest Polis Media Agenda Talk featuring Andrew Miller, CEO...
Contains fulltext : 157151.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Speed has alway...
The ‘lines’ between news and entertainment have been blurring for many decades now. Many have bemoan...
The London School of Economics and Political Science where my think-tank POLIS is based is an elite ...
The ‘lines’ between news and entertainment have been blurring for many decades now. Many have bemoan...
Journalism matters to us all. I believe that or I wouldn’t have spent my working life as a journalis...
When you take a close up look at how european journalists are innovating with new technology it’s cl...
I gave a talk to the Swedish Journalism Fund’s 40th anniversary conference on the Next Five Years fo...
Journalism is not going to disappear. As author Michael Schudson observed, if there were not journal...