Trump’s civil war with GOP media | NYT dreams of empire | Can you FOIA Slack?

By Matt Carroll <@MattatMIT>

Oct. 4, 2016: Cool stuff about journalism, once a week. Get notified via email? Subscribe: 3toread (at) gmail.com.

  1. How Trump started a civil war within right-wing media: A fascinating, NYT mag piece by on how the Trump candidacy ignited a bruising, ongoing battle between a new breed of Republican media and more traditional Republican opinion makers. It’s flat-out nasty. By Robert Draper. And for good measure: What it’s like to be a female reporter covering Trump. Yes, it’s as bad as you think. By Claire Landsbaum for New York magazine.
  2. The NYT dreams of an international empire: The New York Times has big plans or expanding into Europe, Asia, and Latin America. It’s not going to be easy. A breakdown of the challenges faced by the NYT, such as crowded news markets, by Jessica Davies of Digiday.
  3. Can you FOIA Slack?: Getting information through FOIAs, never a smooth road, is becoming more difficult for newsrooms. New technologies are making FOIA requests more complicated. And government agencies are daring newsrooms to go to court, knowing they often don’t have the money to fight it out. Shan Wang for Nieman Lab.
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Matt Carroll runs the Future of News initiative at the MIT Media Lab.

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3 to read: How Trump killed ‘he said she said’ journalism | What (digital) news looked like on 9/11 | Facebook gets a whupping

By Matt Carroll <@MattatMIT>

Sept. 27, 2016: Cool stuff about journalism, once a week. Get notified via email? Subscribe: 3toread (at) gmail.com.

  1. How Trump means the death of ‘he said, she said’ journalism: While you’re still digesting last night’s presidential debate, here’s an interesting take on how Trump’s constant lying has changed how reporters cover a major political figure. Essentially, his allergy to the truth has driven journalists to take off their gloves and call him out. Nice piece by Peter Beinart for The Atlantic. In a related story in the WaPo by Erik Wemple, the NYT’s new managing editor, Joe Kahn, answers this question: “Would we have a staff left if we listened to Donald Trump?”
  2. What (digital) news looked like on 9/11: It was only 15 years ago, but news sites are light years different than they were on the day America suffered its worst terrorist attack. Design changes and technical improvements make today’s pages look so much more sophisticated, while those pages look relatively primitive. Check it out. Nice work by Louis Anslow for Timeline.
  3. Facebook is being taken somewhere it never wanted to go: Emily Bell, director of Columbia’s Tow Center, takes Facebook to the woodshed for a proper whupping, after the debacle over its video ad screwup and its censorship of the one of the great war photos of all time. It’s a fun read, if you don’t happen to work for FB.

BONUS: Why I’m (a little more) optimistic about newsroom revenue: It’s not about one huge river of advertising. It’s about many small streams, from many sources, which are replicable. (By yours truly.)

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Matt Carroll runs the Future of News initiative at the MIT Media Lab.

The best: ONA award winners | Electionland for accountability | Where’s podcasting headed?

By Matt Carroll <@MattatMIT>

Sept. 20, 2016: Cool stuff about journalism, once a week. Get notified via email? Subscribe: 3toread (at) gmail.com.

  1. And the winner is: The Online News Association’s award winners: For the latest, very best in online storytelling, there’s no better short list than the ONA award winners. Some terrific reads here, with strong mixes of innovative storytelling techniques married to old-fashioned shoe leather reporting. One (if grim) example, The Globe & Mail’s The Taken, about indigenous women murdered by serial killers.
  2. Electionland: A cooperative effort to track problems at the polls: As newsrooms learn to cope with the new digital landscape, one tactic they are increasingly relying on is cooperation. Now a broad coalition of news orgs, from ProPublica to the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism, with support from Google, will work together, using technology and data, to look for problems on election day, writes Olivia Ma, Google News Lab’s head of partnerships. Electionland is an interesting experiment. I’m curious to see what comes of it.
  3. What’s the future of podcasting?: Serial made people take podcasting seriously, but it’s still small. Most podcasts are heard by only a relatively few people. On the other hand, but it is growing, and fast. Ken Doctor dissects where podcasting is headed for Nieman Lab.
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Matt Carroll runs the Future of News initiative at the MIT Media Lab.

3 to read: How Arianna lost her newsroom | A lost generation of journos | Why go into journalism?

By Matt Carroll <@MattatMIT>

Sept. 13, 2016: Cool stuff about journalism, once a week. Get notified via email? Subscribe: 3toread (at) gmail.com.

  1. How Arianna Huffington lost her newsroom: One of the pioneers of digital journalism alienated her newsroom through her willingness to sacrifice editorial standards when it came to covering her friends — who ranged from the Dalai Lama to Bill Maher. A blistering critique of someone who lost her way, by William D. Cohan of VANITY FAIR.
  2. A lost generation of journalists: It’s been a brutal decade for many experienced newspaper journalists across the country over the past decade, as layoffs and closures have transformed the face of the profession. A Kansas professor, who just happened to start studying journalists as the crisis hit, wrote a book about what he calls “Journalism’s Lost Generation.” It’s as depressing as the title sounds. An interview with Prof. Scott Reinardy, by Deron Lee of Columbia Jrn Review.
  3. Why go into journalism?: After the last piece, I thought people might need a little pick-me-up. This is it. John Harris, editor-in-chief of Politico, writes a thoughtful essay on why a young person would decide to become a journalist. Partly, he writes, it’s because the work allows you to “ask people questions, to follow personal curiosity where it will take you.” But maybe the greater answer (for many) is that in “modest ways every day, and in large ways on big occasions, we are making the world a better place.” An inspiring read.

Matt Carroll runs the Future of News initiative at the MIT Media Lab.