Peter Bale - Cuomo, ethics, much more: curated media, journalism, and related item
I never liked Chris on air. He gives the impression of his hair being on fire at all times, plus ants in his pants. I can understand him helping his brother but his and CNN's lack of transparency about that is the problem, especially when they had a nauseating love in on air.
Another bleat when the newspapers killed their own advertising or failed to change fast enough. Harsh but true.
Not sure I knew sensor journalism was a really a thing but I did really like this idea of using a Tile or Apple Tag to track movement for a story.
Quite a good analysis of what really happens when we restrict ads.
This seems eminently sensible and defensible. When I have had to deal with this I drew -- or tried to draw -- a similar boundary around things that are human rights that are entrenched in civilised countries: freedom of speech, freedom of orientation, freedom from racism. I used to be much more conservative on this and mostly still wouldn't protest myself -- other than for free speech -- but it's impossible to restrict the rights of staff.
The interesting thing here is not the alleged attempt to stifle free speech and certainly not ghastly-but-clever Piers' rights. It is the idea that the column isn't separated ethically from the comments.
This person is such an interesting choice for one of the two or three most important journalism jobs in the world, especially since she hasn't worked as a journalist herself. She seems admirable.
CEO Cam Wallace has "unreservedly apologised" and committed to creating long-term change.
So often the roots of this sort of fiasco is how "talent" is regarded in organisations, the freedom it is given, and also a culture where men have historically been the leaders and been more forgiving of other men.
Keeping up with this in order to honour the work of Daphne and also her sons and family in refusing to let the story ever lie. She was killed in a vast conspiracy that permeates all of political and business life in Malta.
The intersection of work and life made staying difficult.
Not sure about this. I love the Texas Tribune and these jobs are really hard. She has also clearly made a big contribution each time. I know people with similar pressures who cope or have developed coping strategies but of course no one can second guess how any individual deals with situations. She's right about trying not to rage quit. It never does good for the quiter.
Quite an extraordinarily large fund to get this form of storytelling out.