Our podcast: Digital News Report 2024. Episode 2. Public attitudes about AI and journalism |
In this episode of our Digital News Report 2024 series, we explore what people think about the use of AI in journalism. |
Amy Ross Arguedas, Federica Cherubini |
24 June, 2024 |
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Our podcast. Digital News Report 2024. Episode 1. What you need to know |
In this opening episode of our series, we’ll explore the key findings from our Digital News Report 2024, the most comprehensive study of news consumption worldwide. |
Nic Newman, Rasmus Nielsen, Federica Cherubini |
13 June, 2024 |
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Why class still matters in UK newsrooms |
In this episode of our podcast we look at how class divisions impact newsrooms and the journalism they produce. |
Caithlin Mercer, Robyn Vinter |
25 May, 2022 |
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From COVID to cancer to GM crops: helping journalists understand science |
Fiona Fox of the Science Media Centre discusses how her organisation works to improve the relationship between scientists and journalists to ensure accurate, evidence-based information around topical scientific issues reaches the public. |
Fiona Fox, Rasmus Nielsen |
9 May, 2022 |
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World Press Freedom Day from Chile to Kenya: why institutions and innovation matter |
On 3 May each year, the world marks Press Freedom Day to show support for journalists whose ability to report freely is curtailed through harassment and intimidation, physical and online threats, financial and legal pressures. |
Maurice Oniang'o, Meera Selva, Paula Molina |
29 April, 2022 |
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What should we expect for journalism in 2022? |
In this episode of Future of Journalism, we speak to the author of our recent annual Trends and Predictions report to see what is driving the news industry forward in the near term and what opportunities exist on the horizon. |
Federica Cherubini, Nic Newman |
17 January, 2022 |
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How 2021 changed journalism |
In this episode of our Future of Journalism podcast we look at how events of 2021 and other trends in society and politics have affected how journalism is practised and consumed and how newsrooms are addressing these challenges. |
Eduardo Suárez, Rasmus Nielsen, Meera Selva, Federica Cherubini, Richard Fletcher |
17 December, 2021 |
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Why are women experts missing from the news media in Ghana? |
In this episode of our podcast, we explore how well women's voices are represented in the Ghanaian news media compared to those of men, based on a research project led by a prominent broadcaster and former Journalist Fellow at the Reuters Institute. |
Nana Ama Agyemang Asante, Eduardo Suárez |
15 November, 2021 |
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Digital News Report 2021. Episode 3: Perceptions of fair news coverage among different groups |
This episode focuses on findings around perceptions of fairness among different groups including demographic characteristics and political leaning. |
Federica Cherubini, Richard Fletcher |
5 July, 2021 |
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Digital News Report 2021. Episode 2: How and why do consumers access news on social media? |
This episode focuses on how people get news about climate change and how this differs across different countries, age brackets and attitudes towards the issue. |
Simge Andi, Federica Cherubini |
28 June, 2021 |
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Digital News Report 2021. Episode 1: What you need to know |
Authors of the Digital News Report, the most comprehensive study of news consumption trends worldwide, discuss the key findings from this year's report. |
Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, Nic Newman, Frederica Cherubini |
21 June, 2021 |
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How to use metrics to understand your audience and sell subscriptions |
In this podcast we look at how one of the world's leading newsrooms uses data to inform various steps of the newsmaking process in order to engage with audiences and drive subscriptions. |
Sophie Ho, Federica Cherubini |
3 June, 2021 |
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How press freedom is threatened in Hungary and Poland |
For World Press Freedom Day we look at the pressures on independent journalism in two EU countries |
Meera Selva, Peter Erdelyi, Jakub Krupa |
29 April, 2021 |
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Diversity of voices in journalism |
In this episode of our 'Future of Journalism' podcast, we speak to Nikki Usher about journalism's challenges around equity, diversity and sustainability |
Nikki Usher |
13 April, 2021 |
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How can we amplify women's voices in journalism? |
In this episode we speak to to three women journalists from Kyrgyzstan, India and Indonesia discuss female representation in the news media, why they got into journalism, and how to ensure women’s voices and interests are heard. |
Meera Selva, Bermet Talant, Ipsita Chakravarty, Christine Franciska |
4 March, 2021 |
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How to build a successful value-driven membership model |
In this episode of our 'Future of Journalism' podcast, we look at the values that drive a thriving membership model at an Argentinean news site |
Federica Cherubini, Chani Guyot |
26 February, 2021 |
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What should we expect for journalism in 2021? |
In this episode of our podcast we delve into our survey of 234 digital leaders in 43 countries to look at the major trends that will influence journalism in the year ahead. |
Frederica Cherubini, Nic Newman |
21 January, 2021 |
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Should platforms have the power to ban leaders like Donald Trump? |
Following the suspension or barring of Donald Trump by many of the largest social media and tech platforms, after his supporters stormed the Capitol building in January 2021, we explore the issues surrounding these decisions. |
Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, Nikhil Pahwa |
15 January, 2021 |
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How 2020 changed journalism |
In this final Future of Journalism podcast of the year, members of our senior leadership team reflect on this momentous year for journalism and what we can perhaps look forward to next year |
Eduardo Suárez, Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, Meera Selva, Federica Cherubini |
18 December, 2020 |
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How premium lifestyle journalism sells subscriptions |
Journalists from some of Scandinavia's leading news publishers discuss their organisations' premium news strategies, the value of lifestyle news and the false dichotomy of hard/soft news, and the role of gender. |
Meera Selva, Jenni Kangasniemi, Evelyn Jones |
10 December, 2020 |
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What drives trust in news and what can be done to rebuild it |
Two authors of the first report from our Trust in News Project discuss how partisanship, transparency and other factors may contribute to trust in news, and what outstanding questions need exploring. |
Frederica Cherubini, Camila Mont Alverne, Benjamin Toff |
10 December, 2020 |
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Alan Rusbridger discusses his new book and how to rebuild trust in news |
In a chat with Rasmus Nielsen, Alan Rusbridger, former Editor-in-Chief of the Guardian, argues journalists should be more transparent and rethink their relationship with their audience |
Alan Rusbridger, Rasmus Kleis Nielsen |
4 December, 2020 |
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The impact of COVID-19 on daily news podcasts |
Author of a new report into the trends around news podcasts during the COVID-19 pandemic Nic Newman discusses his findings. How successful are these podcasts? What different formats exist? What do news outlets need to consider? |
Frederica Cherubini, Nic Newman |
30 November, 2020 |
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How 2020 is changing newsrooms around the world |
Rasmus Nielsen speaks to Federica Cherubini about her report looking at the central challenges facing news organisations in 2020 according to a survey of 136 newsroom leaders from around the world |
Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, Frederica Cherubini |
9 November, 2020 |
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How to engage with your audience: why public editors still matter |
Kathy English, former public editor of the Toronto Star, discusses what public editors do, their role in ensuring accountability to readers, and how reader engagement via public editors has changed over the years. |
Meera Selva, Kathy English |
9 November, 2020 |
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How the BBC addresses the challenge of disinformation worldwide |
Rebecca Skippage, leader of the BBC’s Disinformation Team, discusses it's efforts to address mis/disinformation, its decisions about weighing in on misleading or false information and the disinformation unit’s relations with the rest of the BBC |
Meera Selva, Rebecca Skippage |
9 November, 2020 |
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Who are most vulnerable to misinformation about the pandemic |
Federica Cherubini speaks with Rasmus Nielsen and Richard Fletcher, two of the authors of a recent report about the coronavirus communication crisis in the UK. |
Frederica Cherubini, Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, Richard Fletcher |
27 October, 2020 |
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Holding power to account |
Matthew Caruana Galizia shares an incredibly moving account of his family's campaign to investigate his mother's murder |
Matthew Caruana Galizia |
3 August, 2020 |
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Digital News Report 2020. Episode 5: How People Access News about Climate Change |
This episode focuses on the how people get news about climate change and how this differs across different countries, age brackets and attitudes towards the issue. |
Frederica Cherubini, Simge Andi |
10 July, 2020 |
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Digital News Report 2020. Episode 6. How should journalists cover politics? |
In this episode we look at what people think when it comes to the news media covering politics. |
Frederica Cherubini, Richard Fletcher |
25 June, 2020 |
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Digital News Report 2020. Episode 4. Newsletters and podcasts: how to create news habits in your audience |
In this episode we look at ongoing changes to news habits and how outlets can reach and engage audiences to develop sustainable news habits. |
Frederica Cherubini, Nic Newman |
25 June, 2020 |
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Digital News Report 2020. Episode 3: Who will pay for the news? |
This episode focuses on the public's willingness to pay for news, what motivates them and what could persuade them. |
Frederica Cherubini, Richard Fletcher |
25 June, 2020 |
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Digital News Report 2020. Episode 2: The future of local news |
Authors of the Digital News Report, the most comprehensive study of news consumption trends worldwide, discuss the key findings from this year's report. This episode focuses on our findings on the state and future of local news. |
Federica Cherubini, Anne Schulz |
15 June, 2020 |
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Digital News Report 2020. Episode 1: What you need to know |
Authors of the Digital News Report, the most comprehensive study of news consumption trends worldwide, discuss the key findings from this year's report |
Federica Cherubini, Nic Newman, Rasmus Kleis Nielsen |
15 June, 2020 |
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The role of the Today programme in a national crisis |
Sarah Sands, editor of the Today programme, on the role of the BBC flagship radio news show |
Sarah Sands |
9 June, 2020 |
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Fact checking a global story |
Clara Jiménez Cruz is co-founder and head of Maldita.es, a Spanish non-profit news organisation focused on stopping disinformation through fact-checking and data journalism |
Clara Jiménez Cruz |
9 June, 2020 |
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What I learned by watching the American press try to cover Donald Trump |
Journalism lecturer and prominent media critic Jay Rosen outlines his thoughts on the US press's coverage of President Trump |
Jay Rosen |
9 June, 2020 |
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Reporting pandemics: Measles and Coronavirus in the Pacific Islands |
Lagipoiva Cherelle Jackson, investigative reporter from Samoa speaks about reporting on the twin pandemics in the Pacific Islands |
Lagipoiva Cherelle Jackson |
9 June, 2020 |
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Buliding a global media brand |
Senior Editor at the Atlantic Prashant Rao discusses broadening the reach of the publication beyond the US |
Prashant Rao |
9 June, 2020 |
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Brexit in a time of crisis |
Anand Menon discusses whether the coronavirus pandemic has distracted attention from the Brexit negotiations |
Anand Menon |
9 June, 2020 |
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A new wave: female editors and new audiences |
Meera Selva and Simge Andi of the Reuters Institute discuss the implications of their research on the numbers of women leading newsrooms around the world |
Meera Selva, Simge Andi |
16 March, 2020 |
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Political gossip and how it drives everything |
Political writer Marie Le Conte on how Westminster gossip is intrinsic to politics reporting |
Marie Le Conte |
11 March, 2020 |
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A dangerous moment: reporting Hong Kong's protests |
Emily Tsang, reporter at South China Morning Post and Wei Du, international correspondent at Channel News Asia, describe the difficulties of covering the protests against the controversial extradition law |
Emily Tsang, Wei Du |
24 February, 2020 |
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Misinformation and propaganda wars in Ukraine and Russia |
Maryana Drach, RFE/RL's Ukrainian Service director, and Gulmira Amangalieva, reporter at Freenews-Volga, Russia outine the threats to journalism in their countries. |
Maryana Drach, Gulmira Amangalieva |
14 February, 2020 |
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Leading Digital Transformation |
Inga Thordar, Execuive Editor of CNN Digital International, talks about her career and her championing of digital news output at one of the world's leading news outlets. |
Inga Thordar |
31 January, 2020 |
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The truth behind filter bubbles |
Is the concern around filter bubbles in news use warranted? Richard Fletcher outlines the evidence. |
Richard Fletcher |
24 January, 2020 |
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Press freedom and media censorship |
Rasmus Nielsen discusses what he believes the European Commission and EU member states can do to protect press freedom. |
Rasmus Kleis Nielsen |
13 January, 2020 |
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Putting the audience at the heart of journalism |
Federica Cherubini, Engagement Manager at Hearken, on tried and tested methods of audience engagement in journalism |
Federica Cherubini |
4 December, 2019 |
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Virtual Reality News: the post-hype reality in 2019 |
Zillah Watson, Commissioning Editor of the BBC's VR Hub discusses the potential for engaging news audiences through virtual reality |
Zillah Watson |
22 November, 2019 |
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The 50:50 Project: increasing women's representation in the BBC's journalism |
Ros Atkins of BBC News talks about how the 50:50 project led to a significant increase in the number of women appearing across the BBC's journalism. |
Ros Atkins |
11 November, 2019 |
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Journalism under assault |
Meera Selva, Director of the RISJ Journalist Fellowship Programme, discusses attacks on journalists and the media in central and eastern Europe. |
Meera Selva |
5 November, 2019 |
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The State of Journalism |
Head of News and Current Affairs at Channel 4 |
Dorothy Byrne |
5 November, 2019 |
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Social media, democracy and dissent in Sri Lanka |
Meera Selva, Director of the Reuters Institute Journalism Fellowship Programme, addresses our closing seminar of the term with a presentation on the media situation in Sri Lanka. |
Meera Selva |
24 June, 2019 |
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Protecting newsrooms from political pressures |
Bobby Ghosh, editorial board member at Bloomberg Opinion, explains how traditional revenue models in India make it challenging to resist external pressures on reporting – but there is a still way through it. |
Bobby Ghosh |
17 June, 2019 |
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The failure of political journalism |
In this seminar, Helen describes the seductive power of the collective narrative as being one of the most distorting forces in modern political journalism. |
Helen Lewis |
31 May, 2019 |
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Reputation, trust and keeping watch |
Inga Thordar, executive editor of CNN Digital International, talks about industry best practice in fact-checking standards, and the idea of telling the truth now constituting activism. |
Inga Thordar |
24 May, 2019 |
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Networked News, Racial Divides: How Power and Privilege Shape Public Discourse |
Sue Robinson, Professor of Journalism in UW-Madison’s School of Journalism and Mass Communication, explores the relationship between race, power and privilege in American journalism, in this seminar. |
Sue Robinson |
17 May, 2019 |
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British media and populism, and Brexit |
Trevor Kavanagh, political columnist at The Sun, talks us through the evolution of his newspaper’s editorial stance on Brexit over the decades, from the early Common Market to the ERM, ECU and EU referendum. |
Trevor Kavanagh |
10 May, 2019 |
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Why don’t we take women as seriously as men? |
Mary Ann Sieghart, Visiting Fellow at All Souls College, Oxford, shares with us anecdotal and statistical evidence in this talk highlighting gender-respect inequality in the newsroom and other settings. |
Mary Ann Sieghart |
7 May, 2019 |
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From victims to suspects - representations of Muslim women |
Dr Shakira Hussein is a writer and researcher at the University of Melbourne's National Centre for Excellence in Islamic Studies. In this talk she looks at how Muslim women are represented in the media from Australia to the UK. |
Shakira Hussein |
29 April, 2019 |
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Should the state pay for journalism? |
Polly Curtis considers how journalism has become unsustainable and what role the state should play in making it widely available |
Polly Curtis |
5 March, 2019 |
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Diving Deep. Slow News and Reader Engagement |
Chris Cook of 'slow news' start-up Tortoise on providing an alternative to the 24/7 news cycle |
Chris Cook |
18 February, 2019 |
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India's Social Media Elections |
Dr Vidya Narayanan of the Oxford Internet Institute on how India's 2019 general elections will be affected by the influence of social media |
Vidya Narayanan |
18 February, 2019 |
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Short and strong: Making the Economist Espresso |
Lane Greene, language columnist and editor of the Economist's daily briefing, Espresso, on creating the ultra-concise news app and email |
Lane Greene |
5 February, 2019 |
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The Coldest Story Ever Told: Kanye and the Up Next Algorithm |
Caithlin Mercer, Managing Editor, Yahoo!, uses the hip-hop star as an example of how social media's algorithms can enforce biased perspectives |
Caithlin Mercer |
1 February, 2019 |
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Voice, podcasts and the future of audio |
How are news organisations embracing voice-activated technology as smart speakers and other devices become more commonplace? Nic Newman, lead author of the groundbreaking study, the Future of Voice, discusses his research. |
Nic Newman |
13 December, 2018 |
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Behind the lens: The impact and implications of visual storytelling |
Award-winning photojournalist and documentary maker Hazel Thompson talks about shedding light on marginalised communities around the world. |
Hazel Thompson |
10 December, 2018 |
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Empowered: Popular Feminism and Popular Misogyny |
Is popular feminism adequate for tackling partriarchy and misogyny in society? Sarah Banet-Weiser, Head of the Department of Media and Communication, LSE, discusses this in light of the Weinstein allegations, the MeToo movement, 'incel' attacks and more. |
Sarah Banet-Weiser |
20 November, 2018 |
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Networked solidarity in the age of Trump |
Gina Neff of the Oxford Internet Institute, and author of book 'Trump and the Media', discusses the fracturing of society's bonds and the media's role in creating networks of solidarity. |
Gina Neff |
20 November, 2018 |
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Transformations in news organisations |
Anita Zielina, former Chief Product Officer of the Austrian Neue Zürcher Zeitung Media Group, and Visiting Fellow at the Reuters Institute, talks about how to implement change in news organisations. |
Anita Zielina |
8 November, 2018 |
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Breaking News: The Remaking of Journalism |
Alan Rusbridger, former editor of the Guardian, talks about the newspaper industry, what makes good journalism, the role of social media and tech giants and the future of journalism. |
Alan Rusbridger |
2 November, 2018 |
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Protecting whistleblowers and sources in the digital age |
Julie Posetti, Senior Research Fellow at the Reuters Institute, talks about the threats to journalists using confidential sources, and practical steps and evolving frameworks to protect journalists and whistleblowers. |
Julie Posetti |
18 October, 2018 |
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How The Economist uses newsletters to drive engagement and subscription |
Sunnie Huang, Newsletters Editor of the Economist talks about the strategy behind the publication's newsletters |
Sunnie Huang |
12 October, 2018 |
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Political actors and the manipulation of social media audience groups through the use of junk news and other forms of automation |
Vidya Narayanan (Director of Research, Computational Propaganda Project, Oxford Internet Institute) delivers a lecture for The Business and Practice of Journalism Seminar Series. |
Vidya Narayanan |
8 May, 2018 |
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The King of Whoppers and political factchecking in the 2016 US presidential race |
The Business and Practice of Journalism Seminar Series. Lucas Graves (Senior Research Fellow, Reuters Institute, Oxford University) delivers a lecture for the Business and Practice of Journalism seminar series. |
Lucas Graves |
21 March, 2018 |
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The Business and Practice of Journalism Seminar Series - ‘Reporting Africa: New storytellers, new stories?’ |
Melanie Bunce, senior lecturer in Journalism, City University, co-editor of Africa's Media Image in the 21st Century gives a talk for the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism. |
Melanie Bunce |
15 February, 2017 |
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Digital transformation - the organisation challenges |
Introduction by Richard Sambrook |
Lucy Küng |
9 February, 2017 |
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Is censorship stifling China's media? |
Introduction by Richard Sambrook |
Vincent Ni |
9 February, 2017 |
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Strength in numbers - how journalists cracked the Panama Papers |
Holly Watt, investigations correspondent, at the Guardian talks about how journalists cracked the Panama Papers. Introduction by Richard Sambrook. |
Holly Watt |
14 November, 2016 |
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The Business and Practice of Journalism seminar series - How Buzzfeed Covers News |
Jim Waterson, Deputy Editor, Buzzfeed UK gives a talk for the Business and Practice of Journalism seminar series. Introduction by Richard Sambrook. Videos used in the seminar, so sound may be slightly distorted. |
Jim Waterson |
3 March, 2016 |
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The Challenges of Reporting Europe |
Bill Emmott, ex-editor of the Economist and international newspaper columnist delivers a Reuters Institute Business and Practice of Journalism seminar. |
Bill Emmott |
30 November, 2015 |
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Cross-border journalism – a new method of collaborative reporting |
A Reuters podcast given by Brigitte Alfter, journalist, lecturer and author of handbook on cross-border journalism. |
Brigette Alfter |
12 June, 2015 |
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How to make serious magazine journalism pay |
Bronwen Maddox (editor, Prospect magazine) delivers a talk for the Reuters Institute Business and Practice of Journalism seminar series. |
Bronwen Maddox |
4 June, 2015 |
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Making News for Young Adults? |
A Reuters podcast given by by Anna Doble, assistant editor, Newsbeat, BBC Radio 1. |
Anna Doble |
28 May, 2015 |
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The spread of news in the age of social media |
RISJ seminar by Jonathan Bright, research fellow, Oxford Internet Institute. |
Jonathan Bright |
8 May, 2015 |
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New publishing models for a modern world: a legacy brand re-invents itself |
Reuters Institute Business and Practice of Journalism seminar by Laurie Benson, Chief Executive of Upnexxt. We apologise for the interference in this recording. |
Laurie Benson |
7 May, 2015 |
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The Future of Television News |
Richard Sambrook, Former Visiting Fellow, gives a talk on what's next for news on television. |
Richard Sambrook |
19 February, 2015 |
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Innovation in News Media - a look at the latest innovations shaping the future of news |
A seminar given by Juan Señor, a former visiting fellow for the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism. |
Juan Seńor |
19 February, 2015 |
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A little piracy can be a good thing: what the press can learn from Hollywood |
Tom Thomson will begin by giving the context on the Scottish media landscape, followed by Grant Gibson speaking about digital strategies and paywalls. |
Tom Thomson, Grant Gibson |
12 February, 2015 |
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How New Media Became Now Media |
Carla Buzasi, founding editor of The Huffington Post UK, and current Global Chief Content Officer at trend forecasters WGSN gives a talk for RISJ. |
Carla Buzasi |
11 November, 2014 |
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Ten years that shook the media world [2013] |
Rasmus Kleis Nielsen gives a talk for the Reuters seminar series. |
Rasmus Kleis Nielsen |
22 October, 2013 |
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Moral Maze, Arijit Sen |
Arijit Sen, CNN-IBN gives his opinion on the debates premise 'Journalism coarsens, simplifies and distorts politics (and the new journalism won't be any better)'. As part of the 30th Anniversary Reunion of the Journalism Fellow Programme. |
Arijit Sen, Jean Seaton, Michael Parks, Paul Taylor, Nick Fraser, John Lloyd |
19 September, 2013 |
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Plenary panel debate: The Future of Journalism |
Panel debate at the 30th Anniversary Reunion of the Journalism Fellow Programme. |
Mark Thompson, Natalie Nougayrède, Peter Barron, John Stackhouse, Nic Newman |
17 September, 2013 |
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Paying the Piper: Rethinking the Economics of Newspaper Journalism |
Reuters Memorial Lecture 2013 - by Mark Thompson, President and Chief Executive of the New York Times Company. |
Mark Thompson, David Levy, John Lloyd |
17 September, 2013 |
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The Future of Journalism - Natalie Nougayrède (Le Monde) |
Natalie Nougayrède, Executive Editor of Le Monde talks at the 30th Anniversary Reunion of the Journalism Fellow Programme. |
Natalie Nougayrède |
17 September, 2013 |
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The Future of Journalism - Nic Newman (RISJ Research Associate) |
Nic Newman, Digital Media Strategist and RISJ Research Associate, talks at the 30th Anniversary Reunion of the Journalism Fellow Programme. |
Nic Newman |
17 September, 2013 |
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The Future of Journalism - John Stackhouse (Editor-in-chief, Globe and Mail, Toronto). |
John Stackhouse, Editor-in-Chief of The Globe and Mail, Toronto, talking at the 30th Anniversary Reunion of the Journalism Fellow Programme. |
John Stackhouse |
17 September, 2013 |
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The Future of Journalism - Peter Barron (Google) |
Peter Barron, Peter Barron, Director of Communications and Public Affairs for EMEA, Google, talks at the 30th Anniversary Reunion of the Journalism Fellow Programme. |
Peter Barron |
17 September, 2013 |
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How Technology can help to Democratise the Media |
Shu Chaudhary gives a talk for the Reuters School of Journalism, Seminar series. |
Shu Chardhary |
11 March, 2013 |
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More News is Good News: Democracy and Media in India |
Prannoy Roy, director of New Delhi Television, gives a lecture on the history of NDTV and Indian television and the part democracy and rulership has played it's development. |
Prannoy Roy, John Lloyd, Daya Thussu, Geert Linnebank |
29 November, 2012 |
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