Inviting Viewers to Enter the Newsroom By Forrest Carr• Journalist’s Trade• June 15, 2001 With its Viewers’ Bill of Rights, KGUN9-TV in Arizona broke new ground. Read more
Investigative Journalism Can Still Thrive at Newspapers By Loretta Tofani• Features• June 15, 2001 It requires fierce determination, hard work, some guerrilla tactics, and thick skin. Read more
In Crisis, Journalists Relinquish Independence By Ying Chan• Journalist’s Trade• June 15, 2001 ‘Ideological biases can overtake the desire to be independent.’ Read more
Determining the Line Between Fact and Fiction By Olive Talley• Journalist’s Trade• June 15, 2001 In broadcast news, compelling TV and good journalism can coexist. Read more
Accuracy Must Be Our Journalistic Grail By Michele McLellan• Journalist’s Trade• June 15, 2001 Editors at The Oregonian make writers pause and verify before publication. Read more
The Borderlands of Journalism By Antonio López• Opinion• June 15, 2001 Typical story assignments underscore the difficulty of defeating stereotypes. Read more
Why Has Journalism Abandoned Its Observer’s Role? By Jon Franklin• Features• June 15, 2001 ‘The mirrorer was viewed as fat to be trimmed, and was.’ Read more
The Absence of Memory Hurts Journalism By Philip Meyer• Features• June 15, 2001 Short-term investors stifle investment in long-term and necessary research. Read more
Refusing to Take the Easier Route By Mark G. Chavunduka• Features• June 15, 2001 Journalists have an important social contract to uphold. Read more
Journalists Need Help With Ethical Decisions By Carol Marin• Features• June 15, 2001 In today’s newsrooms, there are plenty to be made. Read more