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Rated true: The internet’s oldest dedicated fact-checking organization officially has a union.
Coverage of the All-Star Game’s return to Atlanta fails to mention a voter suppression law that prompted the game’s leaving in 2021.
Colleen Grablick and Abigail Higgins, two of the D.C. newsroom’s six co-founders, on building a worker-led newsroom cooperative, filling coverage gaps, and D.C. pride. The logo of The 51st overlaid ...
Inserted between the pages of the Texas Observer’ s Nov./Dec. edition, mailed to readers two months late, was a letter explaining that delivery had been delayed to put together a special, ...
Courtesy of Brent Stirton/Getty Images. Get The Objective in your inbox every week. In January 2023, 34-year-old Sarah Beth Clendaniel obtained a driver’s license for the first time. Allegedly next on ...
On Tuesday, 153 of the most prominent journalists, authors, and writers, including J. K. Rowling, Malcolm Gladwell, and David Brooks, published an open call for civility in Harper’s Magazine. They ...
A majority of eligible staffers support union representation. They're organizing around greater transparency, pay equity, and ...
Objectivity in journalism is a rickety thing. When arguing about it — against or for it — the definition and the way it’s implemented is always shifting. Many of the conversations about objectivity ...
Jesse Hardman on divesting from the “news desert” framework by listening to and supporting locally-grown civic media makers and projects to help them thrive long-term.
A growing list of journalists have been silenced for criticizing Israel’s military campaign and highlighting its deadly impact on Palestinians.
Fifteen years into the cratering of the local commercial newspaper business, a burgeoning noncommercial media movement is developing.
Staffers of color say the investigative journalism nonprofit undervalues non-white reporters and is resistant to changing its ways.
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