MEDIA & ETHICS / TRENDS

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TRENDS

Media Move to Prioritize Balance Over Bias

Media owners are coming to recognize that their reporters have been writing with bias for years—and are taking action to correct their publications.

TRENDS

BBC and Reporter Issue Self-Congratulations for Finding a Story

What used to be considered Journalism 101—find and tell a story—has become so rare that it results in a first-person victory lap by a BBC reporter. Media consolidation has broken journalism.

TRENDS

Wikipedia Under Fire for Editing Bias and Lack of Accountability

On the anniversary of the passing of Ben Bradlee, here’s a look at the antithesis of the level of objectivity he championed.

TRENDS

As Election Season Unfolds, Americans Struggle with the Media’s New Hyperbole

Trust in media is at an all-time low in an era when facts are “out” and objectivity is “relative.” It turns out that integrity matters, and a return to actual journalism is the only solution.  

TRENDS

Trust in Media Plummets, Prompting Journalism “Bloodbath”

Media companies are reeling in the wake of plummeting public trust and vanishing profits, prompting what has been called a journalism bloodbath.

TRENDS

Will Diversity Initiatives in Media Bring Real Change?

How America sees itself against the background of its tumultuous history is arguably one of the most urgent issues in media studies today.

TRENDS

Addicted to Distraction: How Reality TV Has Us Hooked

Author Marshall McLuhan published his book about the human condition in 1968. Half a century later, it is abundantly clear that much of what passes for “entertainment” is inflammatory and morally decrepit reality TV.

FROM THE MAGAZINE

TRENDS

Is This Any Way to Vote?

Yes, it’s time for the quadrennial morality play called “Presidential Election.” Like the uplifting thespians of a half millennium ago, today’s actors, called “politicians,” symbolize abstract values—“competency,” “toughness,” “honesty,” “frugality” and more.