263 episodios

Columbia Journalism Review's mission is to encourage excellence in journalism in the service of a free society.

The Kicker Columbia Journalism Review

    • Noticias

Columbia Journalism Review's mission is to encourage excellence in journalism in the service of a free society.

    Josh Fine: How to Revive Investigative Sports Reporting in the Age of the Athlete

    Josh Fine: How to Revive Investigative Sports Reporting in the Age of the Athlete

    In recent years, numerous beloved sports news institutions have been shut down, or dramatically reduced their operations, while digital shows hosted by professional sportspeople, current and retired, have become ubiquitous.

    Meanwhile, traditional sports journalism—particularly of the type that asks uncomfortable questions of what is, ultimately, a huge and powerful business—has been in decline. Last year, Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel, an HBO show that mixed softer features with hard-nosed investigative journalism, wrapped its final season after twenty-nine years on air. Josh Fine was an investigative producer at Real Sports for seventeen years. He has some ideas on how sports journalism can revive itself.

    Host: Josh Hersh
    Producer: Amanda Darrach

    Show Notes:
    Can sports journalism survive in the era of the athlete? by Josh Hersh for CJR
    https://www.cjr.org/business_of_news/sports-journalism-survival-foul-territory-mcafee-braun-mlb.php

    • 38 min
    Alissa Quart: on reimagining reporting on a recession

    Alissa Quart: on reimagining reporting on a recession

    News of stubborn inflation, increasing unemployment, and the housing crisis dominate headlines of late. Alissa Quart is trying to improve that reportage, in content and form. 

    Quart is the executive director of the Economic Hardship Reporting Project, which challenges traditional narratives of economic class and issues through funding original reporting, done by independent journalists from diverse economic backgrounds. Quart explains to Kyle Pope, Columbia Journalism Review’s editor and publisher, how this helps dismantle the “American myth” of self-reliance — the subject of her latest book, Bootstrapped: Liberating Ourselves from the American Dream. 

    In the interview, Quart and Pope discuss how the media’s reliance on this myth impacts electoral politics and what solutions exist. Quart suggests changing language standards, expanding recruiting criteria for newsrooms, and even reimagining news sections.

    • 25 min
    Svitlana Oslavska: On Documenting a War on Her Home Front

    Svitlana Oslavska: On Documenting a War on Her Home Front

    Before Russia invaded her home country, Ukrainian journalist Svitlana Oslavska was reviewing books for Krytyka, a Ukrainian magazine, and writing nonfiction books. Now, she’s documenting war crimes committed by the Russians against Ukrainians for the Reckoning Project.

    Since joining the Project, Oslavska’s reporting serves two purposes — to provide detailed witness testimonies for court cases against the Russians and to publish accounts of the war in the international media. In this episode of the Kicker, Oslavska recounts the war crimes she documented for the Project and later published as a story in TIME.

    • 25 min
    How Authoritarians Erase the Past

    How Authoritarians Erase the Past

    The Columbia Journalism Review recently invited journalists, academics, and experts to convene at a conference called "FaultLines: Democracy."

    In this episode, taped at the FaultLines conference, Masha Gessen, of The New Yorker; Jodie Ginseberg, president of the Committee to Protect Journalists; and Sheila Coronel, an expert in global investigative journalism, discuss how authoritarian regimes are erasing traces of the past and recasting history in dangerous ways.

    • 37 min
    Hearts and Minds Media

    Hearts and Minds Media

    For decades, Voice of America and Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty have broadcast into countries all over, in dozens of languages. Yet in some places where the United States has invested the most soft power, authoritarianism has only gotten stronger—and journalists remain at risk. That may be especially true in Afghanistan since the Taliban’s takeover. For CJR's latest digital issue, Emily Russell reports on hearts and minds media in Afghanistan and beyond.

    Visit cjr.org to read the Authoritarianism Issue.

    • 33 min
    Feven Merid: On Jacaranda Nigeria Limited

    Feven Merid: On Jacaranda Nigeria Limited

    In 1982, about twenty Black journalists quit their jobs at American networks, banded together under the name Jacaranda Nigeria Limited, and flew to Nigeria, where they would work under the country’s newly elected president to revamp a state-funded journalism network. On today’s episode of the Kicker, Feven Merid, a Columbia Journalism Review staff writer, tells their story.

    She explains the many unforeseen challenges Jacaranda’s journalists faced — the Nigerian government’s interference in their reporting, the lack of proper training and resources, the confusion over their racial identity — and, ultimately, how the problems they went to Nigeria to escape never really disappeared.

    Read Feven's article at https://www.cjr.org/the_feature/black-american-journalists-nigeria.php.

    • 19 min

Top podcasts en Noticias

Tan/GenteGT
Tangente Podcast
Global News Podcast
BBC World Service
Análisis y debate ConCriterio
Con Criterio
El hilo
Radio Ambulante Estudios
Journal en français facile
Français Facile - RFI
monos estocásticos
Antonio Ortiz, Matías S. Zavia

También te podría interesar

It's All Journalism
AllJournalismPod LLC
Longform
Longform
On the Media
WNYC Studios
The Political Scene | The New Yorker
WNYC Studios and The New Yorker
The New Yorker Radio Hour
WNYC Studios and The New Yorker
Post Reports
The Washington Post