Media in the Margins

bleep bleep productions // BEcky BEamer

What happens to journalism when trust is broken? Through interviews and critical commentary, the podcast explores legacy and independent media, creator-journalists, democratic accountability, and the cultural and political conditions shaping how truth is produced, performed, and tested today.  Hosted by academic researcher and documentarian BEcky BEamer, it asks what democratic media can become when built from the margins. For transparency, each episode includes show notes with relevant sources, disclosures, and ethical context: https://bleepbleepproductions.start.page

Episodes

  1. 18h ago

    The Founder Storyteller: What Media Becomes After the Institution

    In Episode 08 of Media in the Margins, Becky Beamer speaks with Carrie Regan about what media becomes after the institution — when a storyteller trained in global television builds an independent, founder-led platform of her own. Regan reflects on her years at National Geographic and Warner Bros. Discovery, her transition into entrepreneurship, and the launch of My Great Pivot, a podcast from The Female Founders Project featuring women who have left stability to build something new. The conversation explores storytelling, journalism, trust, audience-building, monetization, cultural communication, messy-middle entrepreneurship, and the difference between telling stories for a mass audience and building a niche platform that can survive. At its center, this episode is about the founder as storyteller: the person who must create the story, the audience, the business model, and the trust structure at the same time. GUEST BIO Carrie Regan is a media strategist, producer, podcast host, and cross-cultural consultant with more than 25 years of experience developing global media content. She spent more than a decade at National Geographic Television and later worked across global production and collaboration contexts, including Warner Bros. Discovery. She now runs her own consulting work through Globally Minded and Global Content Strategies and hosts My Great Pivot, a podcast from The Female Founders Project featuring candid interviews with women who have reinvented themselves as founders and entrepreneurs. Her work sits at the intersection of legacy media production, entrepreneurial storytelling, cultural communication, audience trust, and founder-led media. https://www.carrieregan.com/ FOR MORE INFORMATION, SHOW NOTES & DISCLOSURES Ethics & Transparency - This episode is part of Media in the Margins, a public-facing research and journalism project. We treat journalism as an evolving process built through dialogue, transparency, and revision. Editorial control remains with the host and production team, and any corrections, updates, ethics notes, or source links will be documented in the show notes: https://bleepbleepproductions.start.page Profile image provided by: Carrie Regan

    57 min
  2. Jun 5

    The Critical Witness: What Journalism Must Remember About Labor, Language, and the Planet

    In Episode 07 of Media in the Margins, Becky Beamer speaks with Dr. Toby Miller about journalism’s future through the lenses of labor, language, digital materiality, environmental consequence, and long-form public knowledge. The episode opens with a provocation: “The golden age of journalism is over and there’s no hope… This is nonsense.” For Miller, journalism is not dying simply because legacy newsrooms in wealthy countries are shrinking. The larger picture is more complex. More people are literate than ever before, more people are seeking information across the world, and journalism continues to emerge through local reporting, independent media, foundation-supported investigations, peace journalism, social movements, and collective forms of public witnessing. At its center, this episode is about witness: not only seeing and reporting, but remembering the labor behind media, the languages that shape stories, the planetary costs of digital production, and the communities that remain outside the screen. Miller calls for more gumshoe journalism, more language learning, more history, more sociology, more anthropology, and more journalism that reaches beyond the “online as the only truth.” GUEST BIO Dr. Toby Miller is an interdisciplinary social scientist, media theorist, author, and podcaster whose work spans cultural studies, journalism, political economy, environmental media studies, labor, sport, and global cultural production. As stated in the episode recording, he is Distinguished Professor in Media and Cultural Studies at Tecnológico de Monterrey and Professor Emeritus at the University of California, Riverside. He is the author and editor of more than 50 books, including Why Journalism? A Polemic and How Green Is Your Smartphone?, and his newest co-authored book with Joan Pedro Carañana is Global Sports Go Green—Or Do They? Miller is also the creator and host of the long-running culturalstudies podcast, a noncommercial, long-form interview archive that has published more than 940 episodes and currently surfaces over 187,000 downloads on Podbean. https://www.tobymiller.org/ FOR MORE INFORMATION, SHOW NOTES & DISCLOSURES Ethics & Transparency This episode is part of Media in the Margins, a public-facing research and journalism project. We treat journalism as an evolving process built through dialogue, transparency, and revision. Editorial control remains with the host and production team, and any corrections, updates, ethics notes, or source links will be documented in the show notes: https://bleepbleepproductions.start.page Profile image provided by: Toby Miller

    46 min
  3. The Trust Builder: How Journalism Earns Trust in Public

    May 22

    The Trust Builder: How Journalism Earns Trust in Public

    How do journalists earn trust in the public? In Episode 06 of Media in the Margins, Becky Beamer speaks with Mollie Muchna, project manager at @TrustingNews, about how journalism earns trust in the public. Mollie Muchna turns trust into practice: transparency, corrections, sourcing, ethics, AI disclosure, and credibility signals that help audiences understand why journalism deserves trust and how to get it. Mollie works with journalists and newsrooms to develop strategies for transparency, audience engagement, ethical clarity, and clearer communication. In this episode, she explains why journalists cannot assume that audiences understand how reporting works — or why they should trust it. As more people encounter news through independent creators, newsletters, TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, Substack, and other platform-native spaces, credibility has to be signaled clearly. Audiences need to know how information was gathered, what sources were used, how claims were verified, what the journalist’s mission is, and what ethical standards guide the work. This conversation asks what journalism must explain about itself if it wants to survive in a fragmented, low-trust information ecosystem. Full show notes, guest links, ethical statement, AI usage statement, research notes, references, transcript annotations, and corrections/updates are available here: https://bleepbleepproductions.start.page/ Platform, Rights, and Disclosure Note: This episode is an independent interview and educational media commentary produced for Media in the Margins. It is not sponsored, and no guest, organization, platform, or company paid for placement or editorial influence in this episode. Profile image provided by: Mollie Muchna. Guest Links Mollie Muchna — Trusting News author page: https://trustingnews.org/author/mollie/ Trusting News — Resources: https://trustingnews.org/category/resources/ Trust Kits: https://medium.com/trusting-news/introducing-trust-kits-a-new-tool-for-journalists-to-simplify-earning-trust-86526436af7c Trusting News — Show you’re trustworthy: An ethics checklist for creator journalists: https://trustingnews.org/show-youre-trustworthy-an-ethics-checklist-for-creator-journalists/ Creator Journalism Trust and Credibility Toolkit — Lenfest Institute: https://www.lenfestinstitute.org/solutions-resources/creator-journalism-trust-and-credibility-toolkit/ For full show notes, references, guest links, ethical statement, AI usage statement, research notes, and corrections/updates, visit: https://bleepbleepproductions.start.page/

    46 min
  4. The Primary Source: Documenting Public Life Before Power Frames the Record

    May 8

    The Primary Source: Documenting Public Life Before Power Frames the Record

    In Episode 5 of Media in the Margins, Becky Beamer speaks with Ford Fischer, independent journalist, filmmaker, co-founder of News2Share, and one of the clearest voices in primary-source documentary journalism. Ford describes his work not as “neutral,” but as primary source documentation: raw videography and livestreaming that records events as they happen, without shaping the footage around his personal position. His work is about preserving evidence, context, and public memory. The conversation explores how raw footage moves through the media ecosystem from livestreams and YouTube uploads to licensing by news outlets and documentary films. Ford also discusses demonetization, platform moderation failures, algorithmic misunderstanding of context, and the challenge of documenting political conflict in an attention economy that rewards personality over evidence. Guest BioFord Fischer is an independent journalist, filmmaker, and co-founder/editor-in-chief of News2Share. Since 2014, he has specialized in primary-source video documentation of political activism, protest, civil unrest, and public conflict. His work is widely used by newsrooms, documentary filmmakers, and public-interest media. News2Share publishes raw video journalism and field documentation, and its official site lists Ford Fischer as a regular author and producer. Key ThemesPrimary-source documentary journalism Raw footage as public evidence Livestreaming and verification Platform demonetization and context collapse The difference between neutrality and taking no position Independent field journalism and risk Links News2Share: https://news2share.com/ News2Share YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbBm6SZ235HFxwVKC7Po5IA Ford Fischer / News2Share profile and work: https://news2share.com/author/fordfischer/ Ethics & Transparency This episode is part of Media in the Margins, a public-facing research and journalism project. We treat journalism as an evolving process built through dialogue, transparency, and revision. Editorial control remains with the host and production team, and any corrections, updates, ethics notes, or source links will be documented in the show notes: https://bleepbleepproductions.start.page

    48 min
  5. The Infrastructure Builder: What Independent Journalists Need

    May 7

    The Infrastructure Builder: What Independent Journalists Need

    In Episode 4 of Media in the Margins, Becky Beamer speaks with Liz Kelly Nelson, founder of Project C and co-developer of The Independent Journalism Atlas, about whether creator-led journalism is becoming a viable media system —or whether it remains a fragile, under-supported space. Liz brings nearly 30 years of journalism experience, including leadership roles at AOL, The Washington Post, USA Today, Gannett, and Vox. In this conversation, she traces how talented journalists began leaving legacy institutions to build newsletters, YouTube channels, podcasts, and platform-native ventures not because journalism was dying, but because distribution, autonomy, and audience relationships were changing. The episode focuses on the infrastructure gap: funding, business models, platform dependency, credibility standards, creator support systems, IP ownership, AI transparency, and the need for funders and institutions to recognize creator journalists as part of the future of public-interest media. Liz defines independent creator journalism as acts of journalism distributed across platforms like TikTok, YouTube, Substack, Beehiiv, Twitch, Reddit, and others, outside the umbrella of legacy news brands. Guest BioLiz Kelly Nelson is a journalist, educator, media strategist, founder of Project C, and co-founder of The Independent Journalism Atlas. Her work focuses on building sustainable infrastructure for independent, creator-led journalism. Project C describes itself as a research hub, community, and strategic home for journalists building audience-driven media ventures outside traditional institutions. The Independent Journalism Atlas identifies Nelson as co-founder and founder of Project C, with experience leading teams at Vox, USA Today, Gannett, and AOL. Key ThemesCreator journalism as infrastructure The business model problem Why funders are interested but risk-averse The Independent Journalism Atlas Sustainability, standards, and credibility AI use, disclosure, and audience trust LinksProject C: https://projectc.biz/ The Independent Journalism Atlas: https://journalismatlas.com/ Project C Newsletter: https://newsletter.projectc.biz/ Ethics & Transparency This episode is part of Media in the Margins, a public-facing research and journalism project. We treat journalism as an evolving process built through dialogue, transparency, and revision. Editorial control remains with the host and production team, and any corrections, updates, ethics notes, or source links will be documented in the show notes: https://bleepbleepproductions.start.page

    48 min
  6. The Neighborhood Muckraker: When Transparency Becomes a Fight for Democratic Power

    May 6

    The Neighborhood Muckraker: When Transparency Becomes a Fight for Democratic Power

    In Episode 3 of Media in the Margins, Becky Beamer speaks with Ben Camacho, an investigative journalist, documentary photographer, and producer whose work focuses on state-sanctioned violence, public records, and communities affected by police and state power. This episode asks: What does independent investigative journalism look like when it is built outside legacy institutions — and when the government pushes back? Ben discusses the lawsuit brought against him by the City of Los Angeles after he pursued public records connected to LAPD officer photographs. He explains why access to public records matters, how independent journalists can face institutional pressure, and why his outlet Inadvertent draws from the muckraking tradition. The conversation also explores collaboration among independent journalists, documentary work, surveillance reporting, and the importance of trusting one’s judgment when working outside traditional newsroom structures. Guest BioBen Camacho is a multi-award-winning investigative journalist, documentary photographer, and producer. His reporting focuses on state violence, public records, policing, and communities affected by state power. He founded Inadvertent, an independent investigative outlet; co-founded West Side Storytellers, an independent documentary production team; co-founded The Southlander; and has chaired the legal committee of the IWW Freelance Journalists Union. Public bios also identify him as the founder of Inadvertent and co-founder of West Side Storytellers. Key ThemesIndependent investigative reporting Public records and police transparency Muckraking as a living journalistic tradition Government pressure on local reporters Collaboration among independent journalists Documentary photography and written investigation Links Ben Camacho — official site: https://bencamacho.com/ Inadvertent: https://www.inadvertent.news/ West Side Storytellers: https://westsidestorytellers.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bencamach0/ IWW Freelance Journalists Union: https://freelancejournalistsunion.org Ethics & Transparency This episode is part of Media in the Margins, a public-facing research and journalism project. We treat journalism as an evolving process built through dialogue, transparency, and revision. Editorial control remains with the host and production team, and any corrections, updates, ethics notes, or source links will be documented in the show notes: https://bleepbleepproductions.start.page

    51 min
  7. The Outsider: Building Trust Where the Audience Already Is

    May 5

    The Outsider: Building Trust Where the Audience Already Is

    In Episode 2 of Media in the Margins, Becky Beamer talks with V Spehar, creator of Under the Desk News, about what happens when journalism is built directly for TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, and short-form video culture. V explains how creator journalism mirrors traditional media with reporters, commentators, specialists, explainers, and public voices but removes the old gatekeeping structure. Instead of relying on a masthead to carry authority, independent journalists must build trust through storytelling, transparency, consistency, and direct accountability to audiences. The conversation moves from platform-native news to ethics, mentorship, transparency statements, public values, and what it means to “perform the news” without turning journalism into empty performance. V also discusses why publishing ethics, funding information, mission statements, and red lines are not optional extras for creator journalists — they are part of becoming trustworthy. Guest BioV Spehar is an award-winning digital journalist, podcaster, and creator of Under the Desk News, a platform-native news project known for making current events more accessible, emotionally aware, and human. V has built a following of more than 4.7 million and has appeared across legacy outlets including CNN, NPR, and PBS. Their official site describes Under the Desk News as a project that makes news more human and accessible. They go live daily, Mon-Thurs from 10-11:30am ET. Additionally, if you could link their Substack, that would be amazing! Please find the links to each below: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC4e3Gm46D6hWqVyjwkgS33g https://underthedesknews.substack.com/  Key ThemesPlatform-native journalism Peer-to-peer authority rather than institutional authority Why young audiences distrust traditional news formats Transparency statements and public ethics News as performance and its risks Creator journalism as an ecosystem, not a single category Links Under the Desk News: https://underthedesknews.com/ V Spehar / Under the Desk News Substack: https://underthedesknews.substack.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/underthedesknews/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@underthedesknews Ethics & Transparency This episode is part of Media in the Margins, a public-facing research and journalism project. We treat journalism as an evolving process built through dialogue, transparency, and revision. Editorial control remains with the host and production team, and any corrections, updates, ethics notes, or source links will be documented in the show notes: https://bleepbleepproductions.start.page

    57 min
  8. The Relationalist: Earning Trust When Journalists Move From Institutions to Influencers

    May 4

    The Relationalist: Earning Trust When Journalists Move From Institutions to Influencers

    In the first episode of Media in the Margins, Becky Beamer speaks with Salla-Rosa Gröhn, a Finnish media professional specializing in social media journalism, audience engagement, and youth-focused platform-native storytelling. This conversation asks a deceptively simple question: Can journalists learn from influencers without losing journalistic integrity? Salla-Rosa discusses how journalism is changing on social media, what it takes to reach audiences who are not engaging with traditional news outlets, and why credible public-interest media cannot afford to abandon the platforms where people spend much of their daily lives. The episode also explores language barriers, AI translation, platform censorship, ethical self-regulation, and the need for trustworthy journalism to become more visible, accessible, and human online. Salla-Rosa’s work includes the 2022 Polis / LSE report “Can Journalists Be Influencers?”, which examines how journalists can adapt influencer-style communication to reach hard-to-reach audiences while maintaining independence and authority. Her public profile also notes her work with Yle Kioski and her focus on social media storytelling for young and hard-to-reach audiences. Key ThemesTrust on social platforms Journalists as public-facing personalities Influencer methods without influencer ethics drift AI translation and language barriers Why credible journalism must be present where audiences already are Platform censorship and the limits of big-tech distribution LinksSalla-Rosa Gröhn — personal site: https://www.sallarosa.com/about Reuters Institute profile: https://reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/people/salla-rosa-grohn LSE report — Can Journalists Be Influencers?: https://blogsmedia.lse.ac.uk/blogs.dir/19/files/2022/06/22_0295-POLIS-Report-Journo-Influencers-V4.pdf Ethics & Transparency This episode is part of Media in the Margins, a public-facing research and journalism project. We treat journalism as an evolving process built through dialogue, transparency, and revision. Editorial control remains with the host and production team, and any corrections, updates, ethics notes, or source links will be documented in the show notes: https://bleepbleepproductions.start.page

    44 min

Trailers

About

What happens to journalism when trust is broken? Through interviews and critical commentary, the podcast explores legacy and independent media, creator-journalists, democratic accountability, and the cultural and political conditions shaping how truth is produced, performed, and tested today.  Hosted by academic researcher and documentarian BEcky BEamer, it asks what democratic media can become when built from the margins. For transparency, each episode includes show notes with relevant sources, disclosures, and ethical context: https://bleepbleepproductions.start.page