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How can journalism get better at covering climate change? Being a bummer might help
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How can journalism get better at covering climate change? Being a bummer might help
A new study of social media about a climate change conference found journalists’ negative tweets gained far more traction with users than positive ones. That’s one of the findings in this new collection of research into climate journalism.
By Joshua Benton
The Equal Info Text Line is bridging information gaps in Philadelphia through action items via SMS
“We’re not putting you through an automated service. You’re actually interacting with Lily and Gabriela.”
By Hanaa' Tameez
“We ask”: How the bilingual Cicero Independiente taps the community to identify information needs
“We want to serve people like our parents: Immigrants, monolingual Spanish speakers who have specific needs and many stories to tell but who are often left out of mainstream media.”
By Sara Shahriari and Emily Roseman
“Beyond political correctness”: The exclusionary messaging of gendered language in journalism
“Speaking to and incorporating more diverse experts and sources can address a lot of the disparities that exist in talking about people, but more than that, it can work to achieve a higher healthcare standard for a lot of people.”
By Liana DeMasi
A new publication springs up in a former news desert outside Chicago
“This community has largely dealt with news organizations that parachute in and write stories on education without speaking to parents, or they write stories about crime without speaking to residents. “
By Shraddha Chakradhar
A Substack-funded local news publication’s founders talk candidly about how things are going
“We don’t have bad news to share about how it’s going, but it’s not great news either. It’s just…news.”
By Rachel Leingang and Hank Stephenson
“News as a public utility”: Outlier Media and Detour Detroit are joining forces
“We’re going past the idea of thinking ‘How can we get someone to give $5 a month?’ and thinking, ‘How do we inspire people to action?’”
By Laura Hazard Owen
Is “headline stress disorder” real? Yes, but those who thrive on the news often lose sight of it
“[T]he question is not whether the problem is real, but how research might quantify and describe its true prevalence, and how to address the problem.”
By Michael J. Socolow
Celebrating the life and work of Brent Renaud, the filmmaker and Nieman Fellow killed in Ukraine
“We’re bombarded these days with judgment and analysis of everything. What we’re trying to do is give the audience a look into cultures or worlds that they don’t have access to, and give some empathy to that story.”
By Joshua Benton
More than $4 million has been raised for independent Ukrainian media. Here’s where it’s going.
Plus: Blocked by the Kremlin, the largest remaining independent news site in Russia is turning to an international audience for help.
By Sarah Scire
Substack’s new platform play
The company has an iOS app and big new ambitions. Should writers be scared?
By Casey Newton
“Perfect moderation does not exist,” but here are some lessons from Twitter’s labels of Trump tweets
“How can you make people discuss [information] instead of polarizing them further?” A new study offers some clues.
By Shraddha Chakradhar
In the Ukraine conflict, fake fact-checks are being used to spread disinformation
Researchers at Clemson University’s Media Forensics Hub and ProPublica identified more than a dozen videos that purport to debunk apparently nonexistent Ukrainian fakes.
By Craig Silverman and Jeff Kao, ProPublica
Russia is having less success at spreading social media disinformation (for now)
But that could change if people tire of defending against an onslaught of misinformation.
By Sophie Bushwick
How can journalism get better at covering climate change? Being a bummer might help
A new study of social media about a climate change conference found journalists’ negative tweets gained far more traction with users than positive ones. That’s one of the findings in this new collection of research into climate journalism.
By Joshua Benton
The Equal Info Text Line is bridging information gaps in Philadelphia through action items via SMS
“We’re not putting you through an automated service. You’re actually interacting with Lily and Gabriela.”
“We ask”: How the bilingual Cicero Independiente taps the community to identify information needs
“We want to serve people like our parents: Immigrants, monolingual Spanish speakers who have specific needs and many stories to tell but who are often left out of mainstream media.”
What We’re Reading
Politico / Max Tani
Reuters staff raise alarms over partnership with Russian-owned wire service
“Reuters staff have specifically expressed concern about Tass’ uncritical reporting of information from the Russian government, which critics and media experts say is propaganda.”
Associated Press / Philipp Reissfelder
A German broadcaster is launching a 10-minute Ukrainian-language news show for refugees there
Anchor Karolina “Ashion only made it to Germany about a week ago herself, following an arduous journey from Kyiv via Moldova and Romania…‘My life has changed completely,’ Ashion said. ‘But I’m Ukrainian, and I want to be like a voice of freedom for people. For all the people suffering from this (war).'”
Digiday / Sara Guaglione
How publishers are working to make their Russia-Ukraine coverage available to readers in those countries
“Although similar to how many publishers chose to lift their paywalls to provide coverage of the pandemic for free, the handling of their Russia-Ukraine reporting marks a different strategy, where publishers — including Dow Jones, Financial Times, The Economist and The Washington Post — are giving free access to specific countries..it’s an example of news organizations recognizing their mission as a public service in times of crisis.”
Deadline / Ted Johnson
A judge tossed out Project Veritas’ defamation lawsuit against CNN
“…concluding that an on-air statement made about the conservative group did not rise to the level of an actionable claim.”
Second Rough Draft / Richard J. Tofel
It’s important not to look away from the news deserts problem
“We need to be honest in acknowledging that, even as nonprofit initiatives are expanding at an accelerating pace, a great deal more liquidity will be required before the tide rises high enough everywhere. So there is a scenario — in the medium term perhaps a likelihood — that many of the poorer, more sparsely populated parts of our country face an especially bleak news picture. For them, advertising won’t be enough, readers and local donors lack resources, and help from the national philanthropic cavalry may not arrive, at least yet.”
The Philadelphia Inquirer / Will Bunch
America has a New York Times-doesn’t-get-the-First Amendment problem
“The First Amendment’s rightly revered protections of free speech and a free press only hold that the government can’t silence your rights to speak freely. When someone in the wider public conversation puts forth an opinion that’s controversial or even highly unpopular, America’s free speech protections say the answer is not censorship but criticism — which in its not-prettier forms can comprise getting ‘shamed or shunned.’ The nation’s leading journalistic outlet has the First Amendment bass-ackwards.”
CNN
“Media criticism can improve media diets”
“Brian Stelter marks the 30th anniversary of ‘Reliable Sources’ by looking back at the very first episode.”
BBC News / Paul Kirby
Russia’s state TV has been hit by a stream of resignations
“Channel One colleague Zhanna Agalakova quit her job as Europe correspondent while two journalists have left rival NTV. Lilia Gildeyeva had worked for the channel as a presenter since 2006 and Vadim Glusker had been at NTV for almost 30 years.”
The Washington Post / Missy Ryan, Ellen Nakashima, Michael Birnbaum, and David L. Stern
Outmatched in military might, Ukraine has excelled in the information war
“The Ukrainian leader’s plea to Congress — in which he appeared unshaven and grave-faced, in his trademark military tee — is the latest example of how the one-time TV star has overseen an extraordinarily effective communications campaign that has proven crucial in marshaling global support for Ukraine’s fight against Russia.”
Press Gazette / Andrew Kersley
The Times of London gained 1,000 digital subs a day in the first two weeks of the war in Ukraine
“The trend that we’re seeing is that in moments of crisis, whether it’s the onset of coronavirus or Brexit, you see this shift towards trusted brands…The previous times when we’ve had that type of rate have been more connected with things like flash sales.”
Nieman Lab is a project to try to help figure out where the news is headed in the Internet age. Sign up for The Digest, our daily email with all the freshest future-of-journalism news.