comparemela.com

Card image cap

Townhall has been around for about 83 years. We initially started doing events catered to a millennial and young professional audience to make sure everyone is engaged. Tonights topic is on the future of journalism, kind of living in the fake news era and the that arelatforms making journalism evolve all the time. I just wanted to start off with olivia. If you guys, i am just going to go down and say your name, what you do and where you are from. Olivia hello. Thank you so much for having us. Ima and smith and i am a producer with Good Morning America. My team is in new york. I have been with abc news for about four and a half years. My name is fernando hurtado, ima producereditor , if youention or attn recognize that logo. Based in loser angeles on our digital team headquarters. Brianna my name is brianna sacks. I am a reporter with busby news zzeed news on our breaking news team. We are in los angeles, but i am headquartered in new york. Kyle i do want to start off with this question for all of you. What makes for a good story . Olivia when i am looking for a good story, i think, what i read this . What is something that interests me . Just like buying someone a gift, what would you get yourself . One of my favorite ways of finding stories is just talking to people. Some of the best stories i have is just talking to people on an airplane, and i am someone who doesnt really enjoy talking to people on airplanes, but i do it because it leads to good stories. Just getting out there and seeing what other people are interested in. Following trends, may be something that isnt a trend yet but could be. I think you just get that from experience. Fernando i second all of that. Especially with trends. I think it is really exciting to ofon the beginning side trends, like the face app with people posting pictures of how they look old. I think all of us have developed thatnack of spotting before it gets really viral. On another note, i love talking to nonprofits and different orgs through l. A. And throughout the u. S. , because those people are really in tune with constituents and what they are doing with their lives. Are they worried about rent payments, insurance premiums, this closing trend they saw in their neighborhoods . I think that is where you get really awesome and impactful stories. Brianna also i guess the pull factor. For me it is kind of the Emotional Experience of people and what they are going through. Going through that really draws me in. Being in breaking news, we kind of helicopter in a lot of the time and swarm things. I like to make sure i follow up on stories, so six months later with national disasters, id check back in with people and see whats been going on. You find a lot of stories that are undercover. I think that is where a lot of the meat of Good Journalism comes from, is circling back when everyone has kind of moved on. Olivia, i going down, did not know that Good Morning America had a whole other lifestyle platform aside from the tv show on every morning. Can you tell me a little bit about that and what the gma Digital Department does and what your day today looks like . Olivia we launched Good Morning America. Com in 2018, so that is probably why you have not heard of it. We had a platform before, but we launched it to be a new digital brand working on lifestyle content. I had been with abc news previously as a digital reporter. Team,ked me to join their so i joined as a digital producer for them. My day today is really different. Everyone on the. Team can speak to that as a digital producer in the modern era, you are doing everything. Had oneitional outlook reporter reporting it at one writing it, but i do everything. I find this story, i write it, i shoot it, i edit it, i hosted. Oftentimes i am with myself and asking random people to shoot for me. My day today really differs. I think that is one of the cool things about my job. I wanted to go into journalism to have a job where every day is different and the skills i use are also different. What goodmorningamerica. Com does is we continue reporting on the show, but we also expand on that and continue telling stories through our digital platform, so we create content for the instagram consumer. Often i will tell Instagram Stories, spend a full day shooting Instagram Stories for that format, which only exists for 24 hours. Creating stuff for that, facebook, twitter, pinterest. Emmy inu also won an 2016. How did that impact your career . Congratulations, by the way. Olivia that was the first emmy win for abc news digital, so it was very exciting. Joke that we were not going to win, because no one had ever won for digital, that i would wear my prom dress. I had no time to find a new one as i thought i would just be sitting in the audience. But we went on stage and won and it was very cool. A couple of things changed from that. One, any person recognized in your career, you want to keep striving to do better, but it made me happy i was in the digital era area i had previously done broadcast and print but i went to digital because i dont really watch tv anymore or read newspapers. I get all of my content online. Also the company, too, abc news when i joined was investing in digital, so the fact that it paid off and abc news was doing the right thing and investing in it and it was recognized was a really cool was really cool, too. It was a changing for everyone point in that organization. Kyle what are you seeing you also an adjunct professor what kind of trends are you seeing as far as your students work is concerned . There is a lot of criticism that the younger generations are not engaged, not involved in politics or interested in voting. What are you seeing in the future journalists of our country . Olivia i dont think its true. I think young people through history have gotten critiqued by older generations. I think that is just something that happens. Fortunately i think my students are very smart. I think they really grasp journalism and are really interested in it. For them, things are emerging constantly. I remember new platforms like facebook and twitter. For them now, tictoc. All these other things. They are really good at staying on top of it. Sometimes you need to tune out and turn your phone off, but other times i think that staying on top of the trends makes me an even better journalist. My sister is really good at staying on the trends as genzers do. Teaching me all the memes that i need to know. Stories you see being told all the time. The report on politics, economics, they are out there and they are doing good work. Kyle fernando, attention is a company that is described as a media brand, entertainment that also informs, which i think is really great. Talk a little bit about that and what your role in that is. Fernando attention is a new company. We have been around for four and a half years now. It started very much as a Digital Media startup very much in the news game. Over the years, it has been very careful and intentional about kind of rebranding itself as a Media Company, not necessarily a news Media Company. A Media Company that entertains and informs. We want to be very respectful of people that are doing straight down the line journalism, like eed news, and other legacy and nonlegacy outfits. Attention is very transparent about having a pov, a point of view. Given that, that gives us wider breath to do stories with social consequence. There are certain topics that dont have both sides for us. Climate change that not have two sides. Climate change is climate change. There is no side where a person does not deserve equal treatment. I came from a very much news, middleoftheroad background, so it has been interesting for me to be in a space where you. An breathe a little more and producereditor, i am the digital side of the platform. The way it is structured is we have a Branded Content Team that tells powerful narratives and stories. We work very much like a news operation, reaching out to people for stories, interviewing people, writing. We do everything, writing, shooting, editing, color, sound, everything. Even down to distribution. Kyle it seems like millennials zers are more interested in watching content than reading it. You think about breaking down into minute views rather than articles read . Olivia video has seen fernando video has seen huge growth, but they can definitely coexist. Need thee definitely audience who wants to watch stuff. Sometimes i want to read, sometimes i want to watch, sometimes i am down for a 30 minute documentary. They can definitely coexist. I think they will coexist. The New York Times has seen some of its biggest subscription numbers, which is really good. Ironically enough, even though i produce video, most of the content i consume is written content, because there are such huge opportunities to turn that into video. Famousuzzfeed became from the infamous buzzfeed quizzes. Brianna and cat videos. Kyle but in recent years, they have been tackling hard news. Why did you want to be a part of an organization like buzzfeed . Brianna i originally started on their news app team, so i was the person who sent push notifications and message over social media. The driving force of twitter, facebook, instagram. I just really wanted to be a reporter. To me the cool thing about buzzfeeds i didnt have a of reporting experience and they were like, you should apply, do it. I did, and they gave me the job. One of my first big assignments, they were like, if you could get yourself to the u. S. Virgin islands, you can cover the hurricane aftermath. So, like, ok. I just found myself on a military flight and just went by myself. They just give you these opportunities because they trust you. I learned as a young reporter that is very rare. It was a very collaborative environment and they give you a lot of economy and free a lot of autonomy and free reign. One of the coolest experiences i have at buzzfeed is we are on the pulse of the internet. The organizations who unfortunately brought fake news, that term kyle we will get into that later. Brianna we have been watching a lot of these trends, why people are sharing, where is it coming from . The ramifications of what people are talking about on facebook have on real people in small communities across the u. S. And internationally. To answer your question why i wanted to work there, it was because of that understanding and collaborative environment. A good example of this was the parkland shooting. Outlete every other news , were completely devastated. Me and another editor were there late. We stayed to see if there was anything happening. That stuff on twitter, this guy in mississippi had posted about, that the fbi came to his house because he had reported the shooter six months ago. I was like, what . I found this guys Youtube Channel and the parkland shooter had commented on a video, i am going to be a professional school shooter. I found this guys Facebook Page and call them up. This was 2 00 a. M. And he was awake. I was like, hey, i saw your thing. In voicemail the name of the fbi agents who just left his house that day. The voicemail is like 30 minutes after the shooting ended that they called this guy in mississippi. I reached out to the fbi and was like, i am talking to a youtuber who said the parkland shooter said he would be a shooter. I woke up hours later and it was everywhere. The fbi held a press conference, yeah, we missed a tip. Thats a great example of buzzfeed, we know how to Pay Attention. Brianna a digital trend. Kyle a digital trend. Whats cool about buzzfeed is you have a diehard millennial audience. You will see like a picture or meme of donald trump in the oval office and juxtapose it next to a picture of rihanna rolling her eyes. Do you think that kind of tongueincheek reporting about like the tone is different. Brianna we definitely leaned into it recently. A leanerecome operation, so we are recalibrating and leaning into that voice. Especially politics. Our Politics Team is very nichey. I dont know a lot of the stories we publish. I am like, what is this . Recently we have been like, another white democrat dropped out of the race. We have definitely been leaning ne and it is working, i think, to our favor. Kyle i think it brings an accessibility to news. Headlines, very conversational and something you would say to your friends. This guy, because there are 23 of them, he is out. Thats something we are capitalizing on. Kyle part of being a journalist anyone can answer you cant have a bias. You just report facts. Have you guys ever had to report on a story that you may be disagreed with . How do you keep that so you dont have bias when you are reporting on something . Olivia i was recently in alabama for abortion coverage. I think it is just understanding for me it is that you dont really know the whole story. You dont know how people grow up, what they believe in and why. So yes, you have to remind yourself that people are people for a reason and things are a lot more complicated than that. Interviewing these, i think they were 18yearolds protesting outside an Abortion Clinic in montgomery, i think. I was asking them why they were there and what they believed in. It was very hard to hear that day, you know, that their beliefs were very conservative and they believe that a man they were there because a man told them to be there. That if they are married and even if he abuses them, they will stay with them. As a woman, to hear these 18yearolds say that, to not have bias and understand, ok , thats what you believe. I think everyone has a back story. Kyle we are talking a lot about social media. Separate having a personal social Media Presence and having more of a professional voice . Is there a separation . Are they intermingled . Especially if you produce a piece of content, whether a story or a video, and you want to share it . Fernando i had a funky experience that was a wakeup call for me. I had just graduated from college, i was applying for jobs. There was a job with nbc, the last call or something. It was going great and the hiring manager was like, you are noticed, i was going on your twitter and you tweeted something about whitepeople. Can you explain that . Thinking back, i was like, i was tweeting about the white people documentary thats what it was called on mtv. But i realized out of context, it sounded like i was tweeting about whitepeople. That was a realization that other people are reading my tweets, not just my friends. Especially with attention, i think we have way more leeway. We are a very young audience and are very conversational. You always have to walk a fine line with what you are tweeting. What aff i tweet is social media manager would tweet. I am not very revealing. Thats usually the safe way to go and as long as you are adding something to the story. With other stuff, i am very careful about not tweeting i think my first tweet in 2008 was i was eating enchiladas. You guys probably grew up with social media, not as much as jens the, but had facebook in high school. I feel fortunate in that i wanted to be a journalist since i was 15. When you start to tweet and things, you are not so much thinking about it before you get a job. I do think there is a fine line between what is appropriate. I make all my social media rule, am igo by the ok with my mom seeing it, with my boss seeing it . That is important for journalists. Going back to your question, it is important that journalists dont have a bias or an opinion. I think thats very important. At abc news, we believe in straightforward reporting and telling all sides of the story. That also goes into social media , that what you put into the world reflects the company as well. You are super excited to share this awesome story that is breaking or whatever take on it that you have, and it is not seen because it gets buried by the social media algorithm. How do you think that is affecting journalism, because all journalists are using social media to get their stories out . Olivia lets get someone from instagram to answer that question. Changed when facebook its algorithm, that rocked journalism. We suffered greatly from that. We have a great team. Has checksmedia team on when to share things, keywords, tags. So i should be better at knowing the why behind that, but i am really lucky to be at a company where we have a whole team focused on that. A lot of times you dont know why things go viral. We spend so much time trying to figure it out. We will have a story about an gummyseview on weed from 20 that keeps going viral. Every year it goes viral. Who is sharing this . You can plan, but sometimes things resonate at you dont know why. Kyle lets talk about fake news , living in the fake news era. What is it like working in an industry that prides itself on reporting facts but is constantly under criticism for doing the opposite . Olivia i think it makes our job all the more important, to keep asking questions and doing what we are hired to do. Everyone has their own opinions at home. And liens certain ways. It is ourrnalists, job to report on all sides of the story, asking questions and really covering it. Facts are facts and the truth is the truth, and i dont think that is really debatable. Do you think people are finding that the truth is more because they are confused by what is happening . I spend a lot of time , speeches andoups everything. Thati have learned is people believe that the truth is what they believe and that is it. People have their own set of facts. You waste energy trying to challenge that. How i have approached it is i just want to know personally, how has your life changed . You kind of take the personal angle in terms of trying to report on news. Can you give me some examples . You said trump is good for your community. Can you give me examples . How has your life changed for the better . Are you making more money . Our people buying more houses . When they cant answer those questions, you are like, ok. Or if they can, and there are communities that have really grown and gotten better. As the average consumer, how do you spot fake news . I think it is just being consistently informed. And i think spotting fake news is not just your job as a journalist, but as a consumer to know whats going on. You have to read the news every day. You cant just skim the headlines and say that you know the news, because that is not understanding the news. You have to read the story. Multiple stories. It is also understanding the stories, who is reporting them. Do they have a bias . Do they take a side . What is their background . That is a really important thing to understand in order to spot fake news, just staying up on it. Brianna on facebook, a lot of these pages are run by the same people. There is a small group of people who will proliferate. So if you start noticing trends of the same people liking and participating in these massive groups that are sharing articles , and a lot of people just read the headlines and the content is totally made up. We are constantly bothering facebook. Hi, what is this . They will take that page off the platform. Attention to the memes and where they are coming from, it is usually from a very specific group of users. , due,do i think visually in the era of deepfakes and doctored images, it is getting harder to notice it. Bandsa story on pitbull on my previous job, never thought it would end the way it did. All these antipitbull people were circulating this image of me saying that of course my story would be biased toward pitbulls because i had a pitbull. I dont, but they photoshopped a picture and people bought it. It was circulating that i was a pro pitbull guy. I really could not care less. I like dogs, but i dont care this much. It is getting increasingly scary. People are very good at photoshop. Even with climate change, people show a lot of visuals of antarctica when they are talking about iceland that certainly get ingrained in the mind. Brianna every national every Natural Disaster or flood, there is a shark coming through the neighborhood. Things just move really fast. Fear is also a really big motivator of fake news. Kyle yeah. How do you think that is threatening the Overall Institution of journalism . Do you think people are trusting you less . Anything, athink if good amount of people are leaning in to the sources they trust. I think it is also forcing content producers and journalists to show our work. I think it used to be more authoritative. I say this, i did the work, i am telling you. Increasingly more so i think vox did a story about medical bills and they laid out all the bills they looked at and how zed what they did to dues. Treating your reader like appear like a peer is helpful and people are gravitating toward that. Olivia we are so divided right now. People are very much living in camps of where theyre getting content. Some people have massive blinders on. Especially with the altright sites, like breitbart, and when the president tweets something, you can trace it to a fox segment, which is traced to a breitbart article. You can see how it is trained to get 500,000 retweets or something. On the flipside of that, i think people are starting to question and Pay Attention more. Especially for millennials. I think they are much more active and curious and want to know whats going on more than is a glass, so it halffull there. Olivia people have actually talked to me about my reporting, if they dont trust abc news, for example, and want to have the conversation. Storyain how i report a and how we have a Standards Department that is very strict and how they fact check what we say a million times. Most of the time, they are shocked. I am like, how do you think journalism works . I think part of it is educating people on how people report, how journalists report. Kyle we will get to the audience in a second. I just want to see if everyone kind of makes professional mistakes in the workplace. In a newsroom that is constantly evolving, i wonder if you would be comfortable sharing some kind of epic mistake that you made in the past and what you learned from that. Not to put you on the spot. What have you learned as a reporter . Brianna i think especially, as i said, buzzfeed move so fast. I am supposed to talk into the mic, which i have not been doing well. We move fast, which can be an asset but can also be detrimental. We dont have what abc news has. There is no one Fact Checking our stories. We have an editor and a copy editor. In one story, when it was moving quickly, we misidentified the shooter based on what some teens had told us. That kid in that track and field photo. Ok, six people told us this. It was not that kid. That was something i have learned, especially in breaking news and the rush of that and trying to be first, to step back andtake a deep breath verify more. Especially now with the pace of news, it is more important than ever. Olivia when i was reporting for cnn money, i forget what it was, may a sale on flipflops or something silly. The story was published and it came back the town had been wrong. It turned out that the person who edited my story changed it and i didnt catch it. That is an example of something that can happen, multiple people having hands on a story. The advice i would give to journalists after that, when you get your story handed back to you by the editor, read a backward. I dont think you can watch a video backward. But i have done that ever since and it was helpful. ,ernando this is more early on but i did a story on someone who was terminally ill with cancer. I just assumed they were. Why would anyone lie about that . And they were terminally ill, but my editor was like, have you confirmed . I am not going to ask them, prove to me you are terminally ill. No, there is a way to go about it. We want to make sure it is not someone from another organization trying to control the narrative of terminally ill Cancer Patients in america. She loves mom says you, do you fact check that . Kyle now we will send it out to questions from the audience. Trish will come around with the mic. If you would like to ask a question, just raise your hand and speak into the mic. Hi, everyone. First of all, thank you for doing this panel and sharing your insights. I am here with my colleague. My name is jen. I am a career advisor, is overly excited to see you guys here. The question i wanted to ask, i want to hear your thoughts about the issue of a lack of diversity, particularly economic and racial diversity, within journalism. You work for publications based in large cities on the coast. Talk to me more about the future you see, particularly with the decline of local newspapers and how we can bring a more diverse perspective to national and local news. Fernando thats a good question. I have met far too many friends who had to drop journalism because they could not afford it as a major because of all the unpaid internships. A lot of my friends went to school in new york where internships were paid, but for people not in those big cities, it is hard. I had to make sure i had a paid internship because i could not afford to work 20 hours a week unpaid. I would rather work my student job to pay my tuition and start paying my Student Loans ahead of time. , we are proud of diversity we have. It is kind of through wordofmouth. A lot of people who work at attn , it is because they know someone who knows someone. We are a very young company, so i think the median age is 28. I hope that is a trend we are seeing, that our peers have more diverse circles and more Diverse School groups, and i would hope that helps. Involvedd to be very and pulling extra weight to make sure people can afford a career in journalism. Brianna were you asking how we can get young journalists into outlets . Or were you asking about the decline in coverage or the voice from smaller organizations . [inaudible] coastal, people from toptier Journalism Schools. Us, especially with the campaigns and everything, we look to local news for breaking news all the time. A really good example was the the newsroom of shootings in annapolis maryland. That local News Coverage was unparalleled. And so we a lot of the times, especially on social media and stuff, try to follow local news in these breaking news situations and retweeting them and giving them more of a voice on the platform. Go to these cities where trump is having rallies, we spend a lot of time talking to residents there. I dont honestly have an answer. I dont know if there is one. Beneficial in terms of giving local outlets voices, but at the same time, sinclair is buying all these local news stations and no one is really covering that story very well. So i dont really know, to be honest. I think it is helpful to Pay Attention to what local news is doing. For example, Washington Post and West Virginia paper just published this massive report on opioids and how basically we funneled millions of pills into these small communities. Partnershipamazing between the Washington Post and this small West Virginia paper Whose Community was totally torn apart by opioid addiction. I think we should be partnering more with local news, big outlets. That would be something that would be really cool. Olivia breanna mentioned this briefly. I think attention could be the answer to both, news organizations paying attention to diversity. At abc we have fellowships, paid internships, and are in touch with different schools throughout the country. In terms of your second part of the question, how do we cover the entire country instead of just the big cities . That wewe are lucky in have affiliates across the country and stringers and reporters everywhere. Other companies who dont have that should Pay Attention and start relationships with other outlets and have the pulse on the local news. There are news outlets doing this, like pro public and npr affiliates. Crazy,ica is hiring like hiring four local reporters in more underserved, voiceless communities, seeking out people in those spaces and getting more funding because people are getting freaked out by how journalism is declining. Hopefully we will see more of that. Each of you touched on how resources impact what youre doing, whether you are doing everything, shooting, writing, all of that onsite, you have to find out in 24 hours how to get somewhere. How are you dealing with the lack of resources and investment in an industry that we rely on to help educate people to be informed about their communities, the country, the way things work, about our democracy and power and what they are able to do . What role our resources or the lack thereof playing in your ability to do your job . Olivia it is important to be honest, what can i handle . Every journalist should know that, so if i am expected to write the surety, write the story, shoot it, can i make the deadline . If not, i need to move it or get help. I think it is being honest with your supervisor and your team. I am lucky that i trust my team and have a Great Foundation and can rely on other people to have my back. I am on slack, can you help me with this or that . I am lucky that i have that support, but if you dont, that could affect your reporting and the story, because if you are expected to do it all and you dont have the support, the story may not be told right or may be told inaccurately or you are missing part of the story. It is your duty you can do a story well with the resources you have and if you cant, hold off on the story until you can. Brianna gas station coffee. No, i am getting, but not really. I think journalists, you just have to expect that you are operating at 150 for a while and asking for the time and space after that when you need it. I have covered the past five wildfires, just me. A lot of times i am in a rental car, an old toyota corolla. Nbc will have like five black suburbans lined up with cameras and it is me and my cell phone. Understanding, being able to move really fast, and a lot of the time, paying attention is an amazing resource. And trusting yourself. A lot of them dont need as much as you think. Delivered so much access and resources. The thing is trusting what you are able to do in the field. Yes, i am very adaptable. If you are not adaptable as a journalist, it is not going to work. Olivia as a digital journalist, i have also been in that situation where it is me in my car and my phone. Your car smells like smoke and you smell like smoke for days. Take an extra phone or a charger with your. It is also going out and being prepared. Do i have the food that i need, do i have an extra phone charger . Can i borrow someones phone . Being where of what you are getting into. Brianna being very resourceful and also leaning on people who are in the field and a lot of the time. Rust is the biggest thing slacking your teammate. You dont sleep a lot. Everyone is in it together. We love researchers. A lot of the time they think the story comes out better because it is raw, lien. You have more of a hand in it than usual. Your answer about providing coverage with scarce resources, we cant compete with cnn, New York Times, buzzfeed, abc, so we call it second our stories. We are late to a story, so we are not going to do redundant work that has already been done better by them. Where can we add value to the conversation . I had to cover the San Bernardino shooting. I am not going to get the victims as fast as cnn or av, so let me focus on the security angle right away as a oneman band. Kyle i think we have time for one more. Very interesting perspectives. How do you feel about hate that surrounds these stories you report on . And reporting on hate speech itself in the current environment . Brianna i will start. , we get a lot of it. I usually reply and i say, thank you for your email, have a great day. I get a lot of insane emails. A lot of the times, the people reply and they will apologize. Thiswill launch into longwinded email of why they felt this way. People forget there is a person on the others of the screen that they are attacking. I try and engage and ask questions and be like, where is this coming from . That deflates the hate speech, not all the time, but i think we are just not really having conversations. That is something i have started doing, being tongueincheek about it, but a lot of times it opens up a dialogue. In terms of reporting on it, i think we could be doing a lot more about it. Airing the Richard Spencer right . Divisive moment in media, cnn giving a huge platform to this white nationalists. A lot of reporters who cover hate speech were very upset about it. It is about being conscientious in how you are covering it. It should open a larger conversation. Should we report on it, how . That is something we have not really figured out yet. Fernando i think people were inclined to cover things because it would perform well, people want to see it. But if you are not adding anything to the narrative and are just giving a platform, there is better uses of your time. If you are giving someone a platform, there better be good value, because that might be the way it is and we are just reflecting society, but when people see things over and over, you are a little desensitized to it. Olivia i completely agree with that. I think the internet makes it kind of a dangerous place sometimes because it opens up a door for people who might not say those things in public or to your face. But i like the approach of thank, have a nice day. I usually dont respond, but i might try that. I think it is a very frustrating question because hate speech is normal now. It is like, how do you cover that . I think it is remiss to ignore it,nd not Pay Attention to because then it will breed. But also, i dont know, its really hard. [inaudible] there was a time when a few graduates of Journalism Schools got into a lead jobs into elite jobs. [inaudible] olivia my first job was at my local town newspaper. That was important to learn local reporting and to learn traditional media. I went to school for traditional media as well. I did not get into digital until a few years ago when i joined abc. Skills the basis of my since i was 15. I think Community Reporting is extremely important. I think it will always be there. I think people need to. Now you have different ti ers and we report on national scales, but i know many people in my town turns the local newspaper. Brianna local papers are changing as well. They are digitized. They are newspapers, but they have social media. Stories an of ton of stories from local media. There could be more internships. Unfortunately this industry is really screwed up in terms of how we pay people. Thats why they are lacking a voice. But they have adapted. If you look at some of them, their homepages and the way they are telling stories is changing. It is on a smaller scale. Kyle thank you guys very much. If you have any other questions, feel free to go up and ask for the next 15 minutes or so. Thank you so much for coming at we really appreciate it. [captions Copyright National cable satellite corp. 2019] [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy. Visit ncicap. Org] announcer cspans washington journal, live every day with news and policy issues that impact your. Sunday morning, the brookings institutions Michael Ohanlon discusses a possible u. S. Troop withdrawal from afghanistan. Then a former new York Police Department officer discusses policing in america today. And a universal basic income advocate discusses the economic and social theory behind the proposal. Watch cspans washington journal, live at 7 00 eastern sunday morning. Join the discussion. Announcer watch book tv for live coverage of the National Book festival, saturday, august 31 starting at 10 00 a. M. Eastern. Our coverage includes author interviews with justice ruth troyer,nsburg, david sharon robinson. Atkinson, author of the british are coming, and thomas malone, founding director of the m. I. T. Center for collective intelligence, discusses his book super mines. Liveational book festival, saturday, august 31, at 10 00 eastern on book tv on cspan two. Announcer in the wake of the recent shootings in el paso and dayton, the House Judiciary Committee will return early from summer recess to mark up three gun violence prevention bills, which include banning highcapacity ammunition magazines, restricting firearms from those deemed by a court to be a risk to themselves, and convicted individuals of misdemeanor hate crimes from purchasing a gun. Toyou are on the go, listen live coverage using the free cspan radio app. National public radio reports trade and economic tensions loom over the g7 summit in france. President trump and french president macron met in a seaside town. Later, President Trump tweeted, just had lunch with french president emmanuel macron. Many good things are happening for both of our countries. Big weekend with other world leaders. And here, the president and first lady arrived at a white house a light house for dinner with g7 leaders. Formal talks are set to begin sunday morning

© 2024 Vimarsana

comparemela.com © 2020. All Rights Reserved.