The network’s top-rated host and its president were forced out following ethical lapses, an office romance and a letter from a lawyer for “Jane Doe.”Jeff Zucker’s abrupt departure has thrown the future of CNN into chaos.Credit...Mike Coppola/Getty ImagesBy and Late in the day on Nov.
I didn't expect Allison would be able to stay on. This suggests there was worse to come in terms of editorial principles, breaches, and the relationship with Andrew Cuomo. More to come I fear and it will cut to the core at CNN. I have said it before here but in my own view Chris Cuomo was an over-promoted bobblehead who added nothing to the network.
Allison Gollust and former CNN boss Jeff Zucker have said they failed to disclose a consensual romantic relationship to the company Resume Subscription
The company has seen subscriptions surge in recent months amid efforts to expand globally outside of the U.K.
Amazing work by the FT built on a focus on journalism and how to interact with subscribers. All its metrics are driven by that intersection between what subscribers read and their propensity to engage and subscribe.
A large focus will be to add reporters that are dedicated to the intersection of climate with the economy.
Interesting to see the impact of James Murdoch's foundation here. Also good in a sense that it went to the AP since the content will be spread far and wide and the organisation has the reach to do the reporting.
In an unusual decision ahead of the jury vote Monday, Judge Jed S. Rakoff, said Palin failed to prove the New York Times acted with "actual malice."
Worth reading some of these stories to get an idea how difficult it is for a public figure to win a defamation case in the US. The whole issue of "actual malice" which was the subject of an OK Sally Field movie years ago. Having said that, the opinion editor seems to have been a palooka who more or less injected the error and failed to address it quickly.
The case from former Alaska governor Sarah Palin is the first libel lawsuit against the New York Times to go to trial in nearly two decades.
A state appeals court said a judge’s order preventing publication of the documents would not be enforced until a formal appeal could be heard.The New York Times can publish certain documents and will not have to turn over or destroy any copies of the documents in its possession, a court ruled.
Veritas is not a journalism organisation and uses methods no journo would. They are right-wing ratbags.
Caroline Kean, who represented Catherine Belton when she was sued by Russian billionaires, says libel actions are an existential threat
The chance of MPs doing anything that shows guts in this area are nil I fear. They are in the thrall to overseas, particularly Russian, money and are quite happy to see news organisations and book publishers -- and even individual authors and journalists -- face this kind of attack.
Contested ‘anti-Semitism’ case highlights Germany’s difficult relationship with Palestinian-Israeli politics.
Quite an interesting case and it would be interesting to see how DW behaved and why.
The summer of 2020 forced a reckoning for the country, Philadelphia, and its newspaper. But after perpetuating inequality for generations, can The Inquirer really become an anti-racist institution?
Latest in self-criticism from a US publication, some time after the entire company and all newspapers in the Stuff group in New Zealand apologised to Maori for more than 150-years of negative or insensitive reporting.
Print and online journalists worldwide can apply for an award. The Kurt Schork Memorial Fund, in partnership with the Thomson Reuters Foundation, organizes the Kurt Schork Awards in International Journalism, honoring the work of freelance journalists and of local reporters and fixers in developing countries or nations in transition who often otherwise receive little recognition.
As the pandemic has reduced opportunities to meet and share knowledge with senior peers, Journalism.co.uk decided to launch a mentoring programme that will pair experienced industry professionals with local and regional journalists in the UK who are passionate about innovation in their newsroom.
About an hour into the Oscar-nominated documentary Writing With Fire, a young man—slim, bearded, dressed in a saffron-colored pajama set—flicks his hair and smiles. Then he unsheathes a sword, a metallic echo lingering several seconds after it is drawn.
In the next decade, Amy Webb predicts that synthetic biology will be as common as artificial intelligence.