With so many news outlets available today, I’m often asked how to judge their reliability. Who can we trust? My response: Look for news organizations that follow traditional objective reporting ...
Being objective “means doing stories that will make your friends mad when appropriate and not doing stories that are actually hit jobs or propaganda masquerading as journalism,” according to ...
The Center for Integrity in News Reporting held its first awards dinner honoring impartial reporting at the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C. The organization, citing declining public confidence ...
Most Americans can’t name an objective news source, and the 44 percent who do are less likely to cite NPR than Fox or CNN. That’s according to “American Views: Trust, Media and Democracy,” a ...
Is there such a thing as objective reporting? Which values, and whose, should inform a journalist’s writing? How do current political conditions affect the nature of coverage? What if any limits ...
In debates over journalistic ethics, objectivity is in the eye of the beholder. As reporters and editors have quarreled over the merits of “objective” journalism in recent years, conflicting ...
In his April 28 op-ed “Journalists, what side of history are you on?”, Gabe Hawkins wrote that journalistic objectivity was “drilled into” his skull during his first year at Medill. I’m glad to hear ...
What’s most amazing about this isn’t just that people like Temple-Raston think that uncritically airing, amplifying and repeating the government-subservient views of a few homogeneous former U.S.
Walter Jacobson expresses his views on the importance of objective reporting by the media, especially when discussing Donald Trump Jr meeting with a Russian lawyer.
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