When I attended the first Op/Ed meeting for the Massachusetts Daily Collegian, my main feeling was one of rapt anticipation. I’ve always wanted my writing to be read by a wider audience, and the ...
Nothing quite compares to the feeling of picking up a copy of your local paper from a newsstand around town. The grittiness of the paper between your fingers and the ink residue left on your hands ...
Broadcast journalism plays a huge role in how we form our opinions about the world around us. Forty-one percent of surveyed U.S. adults prefer TV compared to 23% who prefer digital news websites and ...
Whether you’re studying broadcast or print journalism, the one thing that journalism students are guaranteed to learn during their first week of college is how necessary a pen and paper are. As a ...
While a print-free world might not be in the immediate future, journalism students are still seeing value in reading print editions. It’s a familiar trend in the newspaper business: financial ...
Recent reporting shows that as newspapers in Wisconsin begin to fade, some radio stations are beginning to take their place, according to Wisconsin Public Radio. In areas where local newspapers are ...
To the editor: Having been a regular reader of the Los Angeles Times since the 1960s, I have nothing but empathy for owner Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong as he tirelessly does what seems ever more impossible ...
Given the perilous position of printed investigative journalism in our culture, Starbucks’ decision to take newspapers out of their stores is shameful. They claim that Starbucks has heard and realized ...
To the editor: In decades to come, Marisa Gerber’s superb report on an L.A. newsstand may function as a historical artifact that illustrates what our society lost with the demise of print journalism.
Now there's another very symbolic sign of how numbered the days seem to be for much of the "print" media: The University of Maryland's American Journalism Review "will end production of its print ...
Virtually all the predictions about the death of old media have assumed a comfortingly long time frame for the end of print—the moment when, amid a panoply of flashing lights, press conferences, and ...