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Canadian Journalism Foundation

The Canadian Journalism Foundation's J-Talks LIve series explores pressing media issues.

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    Emerging Business Models for News

    In today’s shifting journalism landscape, where traditional revenue streams falter amidst fragmented digital platforms and declining ad revenues, news outlets – particularly new and entrepreneurial ones – are seeking innovative models that prioritise access to news and informed communities. Our panel features industry upstarts who are creatively rethinking how to deliver value to audiences and build healthy, diversified mission-driven businesses.  Join us to explore how these trailblazers are building active communities and reshaping the future of news through novel revenue models. The virtual discussion took place on February 27 and featured Anita Li, founder and editor in chief of The Green Line, Graham Watson-Ringo, Vice President of Success and Growth  at News Revenue Hub, which plays a crucial role in funding quality journalism, and Dru Oja Jay, Publisher of The Breach. Brett Chang, founder and CEO of The Peak moderated. About the Panelists Anita Li Anita Li is a longtime journalist, news entrepreneur, media consultant and educator. Currently, she is the founder, CEO and editor-in-chief of The Green Line, a local Toronto-based news outlet. Anita teaches journalism innovation to graduate students at Toronto Metropolitan University and community-driven journalism to undergraduate students at Centennial College in Toronto. In addition, she coaches media executives and news entrepreneurs at the City University of New York’s Craig Newmark Graduate School of journalism. Anita has over a decade of full-time experience as a multi-platform journalist in three markets: Toronto, New York City and Ottawa. She started her career as a reporter and editor at Canadian legacy publications, including The Toronto Star, The Globe and Mail and CBC. After that, she worked in strategic, management-level roles at American digital media outlets, such as Complex, Fusion and Mashable. Most recently, Anita was director of communities at The Discourse, a disruptive new player in the Canadian media scene that fills in gaps in news coverage for underserved communities. As a writer and reporter, she has been published in New York Magazine, Poynter, Policy Options and other publications across North America. Anita is an expert in community-driven journalism, audience engagement, news entrepreneurship, consumer revenue business models, newsroom diversity, media ethics and journalism innovation; she’s spoken on these topics in press interviews and at conferences worldwide. Anita has also consulted a wide range of journalism outlets and institutions, including CBC Manitoba, American Press Institute, Journalists for Human Rights, Toronto Public Library, Pink Triangle Press, Carleton University, Indiegraf, Liisbeth, Facebook Journalism Project’s Sustainability Accelerator, Google’s Project Oasis via Local Independent Online News (LION) Publishers, Radio Cité 97.9 and Informed Opinions. Anita is a member of the 2020-21 Online News Association board of directors, as well as an alum of the inaugural 2016 Poynter-NABJ Leadership Academy for Diversity in Digital Media. She also co-founded Canadian Journalists of Colour, a rapidly growing network of racialized media-makers in Canada, in 2018. To keep up with Anita, subscribe to The Other Wave, her newsletter about challenging the status quo in journalism Graham Watson-Ringo Graham Watson-Ringo is Vice President of Success and Growth with the News Revenue Hub where she helps local news outlets create strategies to become profitable and sustainable. Graham, a 20-year journalism veteran, spent the bulk of her career working in sports journalism with major metros such as the Dallas Morning News and St. Louis Post-Dispatch before moving into digital journalism with ESPN and Yahoo. She left sports to pursue holistic digital strategy at the San Antonio Express-News before eventually fostering a love of nonprofit journalism at the San Antonio Report, where she served three years as managing editor. Graham is a lover of the full-funnel approach, well-crafted CTAs, killer UX, and insider journalism speak. Graham is a graduate of the journalism school at the University of Missouri – Columbia and played goalkeeper for three seasons on the Tigers’ women’s soccer team. Graham is also graduated from the inaugural year of the Executive Leadership Program at the Craig Newmark School of Journalism at CUNY. She currently serves on the board of the APSE Foundation, which helps to foster diversity in sports journalism at the managerial level. Graham resides in San Antonio, Texas with her husband and three children. Dru Oja Jay Dru Oja Jay is a writer, organizer and web developer based in Val David, Quebec. Currently serving as Executive Director of CUTV and Publisher of The Breach, he is a co-founder of the Media Co-op, Journal Ensemble, Friends of Public Services and Courage. He is co-author, with Nikolas Barry-Shaw, of Paved with Good Intentions: Canada’s development NGOs from idealism to imperialism. Brett Chang Brett is Co-Founder and CEO of The Peak – a daily newsletter, podcast and content studio helping Canada’s modern business leaders get smarter and stay informed with news and content that’s fast, entertaining, and digestible. Since starting in 2020, The Peak now reaches an audience of over 100,000 across newsletters, podcasts, events, and social media, including hosting The Peak Daily – Canada’s no. 1 most listened to business podcast. In June 2023, Brett announced the acquisition of The Peak by Moses Znaimer’s ZoomerMedia for $5m. Brett is a serial entrepreneur and prior to The Peak started companies in digital communications and the cannabis industry. In addition, Brett was one of first few employees at Uber Canada where he helped drive and develop public policy for major cities across the country.

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    CJF J-Talk: The Chilling Tide of Abuse Faced by Women Journalists

    Online harm and harassment is one of the most significant safety issues facing women journalists today, and is on the rise globally, according to a 2021 report by the International Center for Journalists. Digital attacks aimed predominantly at women and racialized journalists are intended to belittle, discredit, humiliate and, ultimately, undermine trust in facts and jeopardize press freedom.  In Canada, several journalists – nearly all racialized women – were recently targeted by an escalating hate campaign through encrypted email services, threatening ‘real-world’ sexual violence and harm.  As part of the 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence, the Canadian Journalism Foundation, in collaboration with the #NotOk campaign and the Canadian Women’s Foundation, welcomed three journalists to share their insights on online violence against women journalists in Canada, the challenges they face and perspectives on solutions and supporting others in the industry.  The virtual discussion took place on November 30 and features journalist, broadcaster and co-founder of Media Girlfriends, Garvia Bailey; freelance journalist Christina Frangou; and Toronto Star producer and co-host of This Matters podcast, Saba Eitizaz. CBC News correspondent Salimah Shivji moderated this discussion. ABOUT THE SPEAKERS   Garvia Bailey is a co-founder of Media Girlfriends Inc. Her career in media spans close to two decades as a producer, host and columnist for the CBC and JazzFM. She is a co-founder of jazzcast.ca, a 24-hour streaming service that amplifies the roots of jazz as an African-American-derived art form. Garvia is the recipient of the 2019 RTDNA award for opinion writing and a 2017 Silver Medalist at the New York Radio Awards. She is a jurist for the prestigious Canadian Hillman Prize for investigative journalism. Garvia’s work is centered around inclusion, care and excellence in journalism. @garveyschild Saba Eitizaz is the co-host and producer of the Toronto Star’s daily news podcast “This Matters.” She is a multimedia journalist who has previously worked for the CBC, BBC World Service and Voice of America. Before moving to Canada, she reported from Pakistan, Afghanistan, and the UK. Her work has mostly been focused on human rights and social justice. @sabaeitizaz Christina Frangou is an independent journalist based in Calgary who writes about health and social issues. Her work has appeared in Maclean’s, The Globe and Mail, Chatelaine and The Guardian, among others. She’s been honoured with a National Newspaper Award and two National Magazine Awards for feature writing, and she is the 2022 recipient of the Landsberg Award, granted by the Canadian Women’s Foundation and Canadian Journalism Foundation for bringing greater profile to women’s equality issues. @cfrangou ABOUT THE HOST   Salimah Shivji is the India correspondent for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, based in Mumbai. She has worked with CBC News for nearly two decades and has covered the political scene in Ottawa, as well as major world events such as the war in Ukraine, India’s Covid-19 crisis, Sri Lanka’s economic upheaval, and the Trump White House. @salimah_shivji The Chilling Tide of Abuse Faced by Women Journalists is presented in collaboration with the #NotOk campaign and the Canadian Women's Foundation.

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  3. CJF J-Talk: An Inside Look at Investigations into Sexual Abuse Allegations in Organized Hockey

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    CJF J-Talk: An Inside Look at Investigations into Sexual Abuse Allegations in Organized Hockey

    The Canadian Journalism Foundation’s (CJF) J-Talks series returned in person on October 4 with an inside look at investigations into sexual abuse allegations in organized hockey. This past year, investigative reporting on organized hockey in Canada has revealed a toxic culture of sexual, possibly illegal, misconduct. As a result, Canada’s governing body for its national sport – Hockey Canada – is facing an ongoing crisis and official scrutiny regarding its response to allegations going back to 1989, largely exposed by rigorous investigative journalism. The event, which took place at the Toronto Reference Library's Bram & Bluma Appel Salon at 789 Yonge Street, featured TSN award-winning journalist Rick Westhead, TSN Executive Producer Ken Volden and The Athletic's Katie Strang. They discussed their investigations, which brought these issues to light, in conversation with CTV National News Correspondent Judy Trinh. ABOUT THE SPEAKERS Katie Strang is a senior investigative and enterprise writer for The Athletic where she specializes in covering the intersection of sports and social issues, with a particular focus on sexual abuse and gendered violence. Strang was part of a team that won the 2021 Associated Press Sports Editors award for investigative writing and was a finalist for the 2019 Dan Jenkins Medal for Excellence in Sportswriting. @KatieJStrang Rick Westhead is an award-winning investigative journalist and TSN’s Senior Correspondent. In 2021, Westhead led TSN’s reporting on the Chicago Blackhawks sexual assault investigation, which included an exclusive interview with Blackhawks first-round draft pick Kyle Beach, in which Beach identified himself as the player abused by the team’s former video coach Brad Aldrich. Throughout his 20-year career, Westhead has reported on a variety of sports issues for a slate of leading publications including the Toronto Star, Bloomberg News, The Canadian Press, The Globe and Mail and The New York Times. @rwesthead Ken Volden is Vice President and Executive Producer at TSN, overseeing all of TSN’s in-house studio productions and the development of digital and social media platforms. A winner of multiple Canadian Screen Awards, Volden joined TSN as an associate producer in 1995.  ABOUT THE HOST Judy Trinh is a broadcast journalist and CTV National News Correspondent, Investigations and Politics. Trinh has been nominated for two Canadian Screen Awards and a National Magazine Award for feature writing. She has reported from disaster zones, investigated terror suspects and shone a light on sexual assault in the music industry. In 2017, her personal story of fleeing Vietnam inspired a Heritage Minute that marked Canada’s humanitarian efforts on the country’s 150th birthday. @judyatrinh This in-person event was part of the CJF's J-Talks program that explores pressing journalistic issues. The CJF thanks the generosity of exclusive J-Talks Live series sponsor TD Bank Group and in-kind supporters CPAC and Cision.

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The Canadian Journalism Foundation's J-Talks LIve series explores pressing media issues.