Description
Is the media too powerful and too invasive? Do those who work to keep the powerful in check, really need to check themselves? And does the pursuit of tears by television journalists demean both journalism and the talent?
These are questions UK journalist John Lloyd, with five decades of journalism, editing and book writing under his belt, wrestles with. In 2004 he published 'What the Media Are Doing to Our Politics' and in 2017 'The Power and the Story'. In 2006 he co-founded the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism at the University of Oxford. More recently, John joined the International Advisory Council at the Judith Nielsen Institute for Journalism and Ideas.
#journalist #journalism #auspol #abcnews #Nine #News (The #FutureofJournalism interviews are created by the Alliance for Journalists' Freedom in Australia. Catch the podcast series on Spotify and the video-series on the AJF website and YouTube)
Media outlets are experimenting with ways to attract younger audiences, as the under 35s snack instead of grazing on smartphones across their multiple networks for news. They also have the lowest trust in media, according to a Reuters Institute report.
How can media gain the trust of younger...
Published 08/22/22
John Cook created Cranky Uncle to fight misinformation. He’s a scientist and reporting those complexities is not easy. Take climate change. How might journalists have covered climate change in a more nuanced way – without giving so much weight to a tiny contrarian minority? What lessons can be...
Published 08/15/22