176 episodes

The Journalism Salute is a journalism appreciation podcast. We interview working journalists about who they are and what they do.

Our aim is to have diverse guests, thoughtful questions, and interesting conversation.

If you're an aspiring journalist, you'll learn potential careers to pursue and tips to put to use.

If you're an experienced journalist, you'll learn about like-minded members of your profession with notable stories to tell.

And if you're not a journalist, we hope you'll garner or further an appreciation for journalists and realize that they are NOT the enemy.

Try us!

And find us at our website or on Twitter and e-mail us at journalismsalute@gmail.com

The Journalism Salute Mark Simon

    • Society & Culture

The Journalism Salute is a journalism appreciation podcast. We interview working journalists about who they are and what they do.

Our aim is to have diverse guests, thoughtful questions, and interesting conversation.

If you're an aspiring journalist, you'll learn potential careers to pursue and tips to put to use.

If you're an experienced journalist, you'll learn about like-minded members of your profession with notable stories to tell.

And if you're not a journalist, we hope you'll garner or further an appreciation for journalists and realize that they are NOT the enemy.

Try us!

And find us at our website or on Twitter and e-mail us at journalismsalute@gmail.com

    Lomi Kriel & Lexi Churchill: ProPublica & The Texas Tribune

    Lomi Kriel & Lexi Churchill: ProPublica & The Texas Tribune

    On this episode, we’re joined by Lomi Kriel and Lexi Churchill.

    They are 2 reporters on the team of journalists that just won The Collier Prize, a prestigious award given by The Collier Companies and The University of Florida for investigative journalism and political reporting specific to state governments.

    The award was given for coverage on reporting on the actions and lack of actions by law enforcement that were responding to a school shooting in Uvalde, Texas that resulted in 21 deaths.

    This team of journalists encompasses reporters from Pro Publica, The Texas Tribune, and PBS’ documentary series, Frontline. Lomi and Lexi are 2 of many who worked on this. They work jointly for ProPublica and the Tribune.

    The stories we talk about are

    “Someone Tell Me What To Do,” which describes the police response to the shooting in-depth.

    https://www.texastribune.org/2023/12/05/uvalde-officer-student-trainings-mass-shootings/

    “Reports Analyzing the Police Response To A Mass Shooting Can Leave Unanswered Questions – If They’re Released At All”

    https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/frontline/article/police-reponse-mass-shooting-reports-questions/

    Lomi and Lexi talked about the 2.5 years of work that has gone into their reporting, explaining both their findings and the challenges they faced in their reporting.

    They described the collaborative effort, the databases they created, the records requests they filed, and the police interviews and body camera footage they obtained and watched. And they shared the empathy needed to cover a story of this magnitude.

    They jointly salute: The entire staff of the Uvalde Leader-News

    If you wish to watch the documentary, Inside the Uvalde Response, click here.

    Thank you as always for listening. Please send us feedback to journalismsalute@gmail.com,

    Visit our website: thejournalismsalute.org

    Mark's website (MarkSimonmedia.com)

    Tweet us at @journalismpod.

    Subscribe to our newsletter- journalismsalute.substack.com

    • 46 min
    Chatwan Mongkol: Creator, The Nutgraf

    Chatwan Mongkol: Creator, The Nutgraf

    On this episode we’re joined by Chatwan Mongkol.

    Chatwan is the editor and reporter for The Nutgraf, a newsletter that covers student journalism. He’s also a graduate student at The New School going for his masters degree in Media Management. Chatwan is a 2022 grad of Quinnipiac University.

    You can find the newsletter at nutgrafnews.substack.com or bit.ly/thenutgraf

    Chatwan talked about his journalism path (he was born in Bangkok, Thailand), his brief career as a newspaper reporter, and the types of stories in the newsletter. He also spoke about a certificate program for journalism entrepreneurs at CUNY-Newmark School that he’s participating in.

    Newsletter examples

    Student journalists in states where DE&I offices are being eliminated

    Students covering school shootings

    Lesser-known student newspapers that made an impact

    Chatwan’s salutes:
    College newspapers at Quinnipiac, Michigan State, and Michigan

    Thank you as always for listening. Please send us feedback to journalismsalute@gmail.com,
    Visit our website: thejournalismsalute.org
    Mark's website (MarkSimonmedia.com)
    Tweet us at @journalismpod.
    Subscribe to our newsletter- journalismsalute.substack.com

    • 28 min
    Rebecca Worby, Editorial Director: Reasons To Be Cheerful

    Rebecca Worby, Editorial Director: Reasons To Be Cheerful

    On this episode, we’re joined by Rebecca Worby. Rebecca is the editorial director for Reasons to Be Cheerful.

    Reasons to Be Cheerful is a non-profit website and newsletter founded by the musician and artist David Byrne. And it is what it says it is- reporting on news that should make you feel good. Many of these reasons to be cheerful come in the form of smart, proven, replicable solutions to the world’s most pressing problems. Their newsletter has 135,000 subscribers and the stories in it literally span the globe.

    Rebecca talked about her journalism path, which includes getting a masters degree in creative non-fiction, and time as an editor of travel guides. She explained what makes a story appropriate for Reasons To Be Cheerful and provided examples of the kinds of stories they like.

    1)Make America Rake Again – A story about trying to wean people off gas-powered leaf blowers

    2) One from Vilnius, Lithuania – about “Befriend Vilnius” a program that provides mentorship to Ukranian migrants.

    3) How student journalists are stepping up to fill news deserts

    And we discussed a piece she wrote for Lithub.com, linking together several crimes – vandalism in national parks, the stealing of Native American artifacts on public lands, and dismantled sculptures.



    Thank you as always for listening. Please send us feedback to journalismsalute@gmail.com,

    Visit our website: thejournalismsalute.org

    Mark's website (MarkSimonmedia.com)

    Tweet us at @journalismpod.

    Subscribe to our newsletter- journalismsalute.substack.com

    • 30 min
    Jay Boller, co-founder: Racket

    Jay Boller, co-founder: Racket

    On this episode, we’re joined by Jay Boller. Jay is co-owner and editor of Racket. RacketMN.com is a writer-owned, reader-funded alternative journalism source for news, arts, and culture in Minneapolis. He has previously worked for the Minneapolis Star Tribune and City Pages. Racket was founded in August 2021.

    Jay talked about his journalism origin story and Racket’s origin story. He shared examples of his work, including pieces on a day at a megachurch’s moneymaking event, potential environmental pollution near Lake Superior, the closing of a popular McDonald’s, and the troubles of Minneapolis Public Radio.

    Jay also explained how starting a writer-owned, reader-funded journalism business is challenging and not necessarily for everyone.



    Jay’s salute: Minnesota Reformer



    Thank you as always for listening. Please send us feedback to journalismsalute@gmail.com,

    Visit our website: thejournalismsalute.org

    Mark's website (MarkSimonmedia.com)

    Tweet us at @journalismpod.

    Subscribe to our newsletter- journalismsalute.substack.com

    • 40 min
    167. Itto Outini, Blind Journalist- The Datekeepers

    167. Itto Outini, Blind Journalist- The Datekeepers

    On this episode, we’re joined by Itto Outini. Itto and her husband Mekiya run the website, The Datekeepers. This online platform operates under the idea that stories move mountains and that we need to see better stories about humanity and people overcoming extraordinary odds to make contributions to the world.

    I should note that Itto is blind. She has a degree in applied linguistics from Mohamed V University in Rabat Morocco and a masters in journalism and strategic media from the University of Arkansas. She is writing a book, Blindness is the Light of My Life. Her backstory is remarkable.

    Itto talked about her origin story and some of the notable stories she’s written, like one about a blind cricketer and another about how immigrants have to deal with remittances for family and friends. She also shared how some people are more willing to open up to her because of her being blind and how she comes up with story ideas.

    Itto’s salute: Nicholas Kristof

    Thank you as always for listening. Please send us feedback to journalismsalute@gmail.com,
    Visit our website: thejournalismsalute.org
    Mark's website (MarkSimonmedia.com)
    Tweet us at @journalismpod.
    Subscribe to our newsletter- journalismsalute.substack.com

    • 35 min
    166. Shi En Kim PHD, Science Writer, Co-Founder of Sequencer

    166. Shi En Kim PHD, Science Writer, Co-Founder of Sequencer

    On this episode, we’re joined by Shi En Kim PHD. Kim (she goes by her last name) is a freelance science writer who was just awarded a Pulitzer Center fellowship to cover a health and science story in Brazil.

    Kim has written for many publications including Scientific American and National Geographic. She often covers new research and emerging trends in sciences, tech, the environment, and health and medicine.

    Kim was born in Malaysia. She is a graduate of Cal Tech who got her doctorate in molecular biology from the University of Chicago.

    She talked about her non-traditional path to journalism (“One long overcorrection …”), the process by which she comes up with story ideas and reports on stories, how being a journalist has impacted her life, and a new journalism collective project she’s working on, Sequencer.

    Notable links

    - Article on precision cancer drugs and access to them

    https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/precision-cancer-drugs-glitter-with-promise-if-you-can-get-them/

    - Article on the world’s smelliest flower

    https://www.nationalgeographic.com/environment/article/cultivating-the-worlds-largest-stinkiest-flower-is-no-small-task

    - Article on pesticides and the link to childhood chancer in Brazil

    https://news.mongabay.com/2023/11/study-links-pesticides-to-child-cancer-deaths-in-brazilian-amazon-cerrado/

    - Sequencer

    https://www.sequencermag.com/welcome-to-sequencer/

    Kim’s salutes

    - The Open Notebook

    - Jane C Hu

    - Brent Crane



    Thank you as always for listening. Please send us feedback to journalismsalute@gmail.com,

    Visit our website: thejournalismsalute.org

    Mark's website (MarkSimonmedia.com)

    Tweet us at @journalismpod.

    Subscribe to our newsletter- journalismsalute.substack.com

    • 35 min

Top Podcasts In Society & Culture

Čestmír Strakatý
Čestmír Strakatý
Doba složitá
Český rozhlas
Nový svět
Michal Půr, Miroslav Bárta, Martin Kovář.
13 hříchů rodičovství - Jak z toho ven
13 hříchů rodičovství
Slepá mapa
Novinky.cz
U Kulatého stolu
Forcapture

You Might Also Like

Journalism History
AEJMC
It's All Journalism
AllJournalismPod LLC
Longform
Longform
On the Media
WNYC Studios
The Daily
The New York Times
Up First
NPR