Editors in the country are here with their new years resolutions. But lets begin with media shake ups, take dondowns, and ar that seemed like it lasted a decade. As the ball was dropping back on january 1st, i bet you had not heard of Stormy Daniels yesterday or Christine Blasey ford or alexandria ocasiocortez. You might not have known the name jamal khashoggi, either. Or the name of the newspaper in annapolis, the Capital Gazette. So now at the end of a year of so much news and frankly so much bad news, you might have news fatigue. If you do, youre not alone. Yes, news fatigue. Most americans feel worn out by the sheer amount of news these days, which means they need trusted newsrooms as guides, as curators. So have we helped . Have journalists done enough to cut through the confusion and lies and propaganda and actually put facts first . You know, right now, our country feels consumed by politics. Thats how it feels in america. From fire and fury the very first start of the year, a b
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we ve learned in that case those journalists have been released. this is another example of why it is a dangerous time to be a journalist in many parts of the globe. take a look at this data from the committee to protect journalists. it shows you back from 1992 up until 2018. the number of journalists either killed or imprisoned or missing. you d like to see the graph trending downward. instead, it s trending upward. 2016, 2017, 2018 being three of the most dangerous years. it s not just measured that way. you can also look at journalists who are denied access to government events. there are lots of different examples of the press being limited. and lots of different ways. and that s something that cpj tracks every day. right now i m joined by the executive director and kathleen carol, the current board chair. they were in a meeting this week with vice president pence. let s start there. i know you ve been seeking this
op-ed of the year. while big papers like the times are thriving, local papers continue to close up shop. and some digital start-ups are flailing, too. the media business is in a state of revolution. and that s partly because tech giants like facebook and google control so much of the media environment right now. it s also partly because you are choosing to consume news in new ways. that makes it an incredible and stressful time for my panelists. joining me now, kathleen carol. she s the board chair at the committee to protect journalists. matt murray, the editor in chief of the wall street journal, and sally buzbee, the executive editor of the associated press. thanks, everybody, for being here. thanks for having us. sally, as the editor of the world s biggest news organization, what changed this year? what was different about 2018? i think there has been a lot of focus this year on the safety and security of journalists. some of that has been very naval gazing, but a lot of
are joining me. kathleen, you have time off now. what are your new year s resolutions? spend some time with sights and news organizations that i haven t been able to learn more about how other people are dealing with the issues that we ve discussed here and conversations going back and forth and how they are dealing with the rises of populism and the great societal shifts taking place in so many places in the world. and personally, i hope to sleep more and have some more red wine. in just a couple of minutes, we can get to that. michael, how about you? so i am determined and committed and so are many of my colleagues to devote a lot of time to rebuilding local journalism. you know, there s a lot of great local journalism in this country but also places in this country that the university of north caroli caroline has described as new
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