second trump term. plus, it s not just gaza. the west bank is in flames as israeli attacks escalate. my conversation with palestinian policy decision and why a pack is raising money to try to get rid of the squad. the man who literally look wrote the book on them, ryan grim, will join me live. nearly three years ago, in february, 2021, i launched the show an msnbc right here, live on a sunday night, with a warning about how donald trump and the maga gop were threatening our democracy and how journalists needed to wake up to that threat. speak out about that threat. watch. people sometimes say journalists shouldn t be biased. no, journalists should have a bias. a bias towards democracy. we should be proudly pro democracy and proud to call ourselves democrats. small d democrats. nearly three years later, i worry that too many journalists, too many pundits, to many in our media have yet to take that mission statement urgently or seriously enough. even as a disgraced, defea
Daily editorials, striving to not piss off anyone, have achieved 'terminal neutrality' Who or what killed the great American editorial? Wasn't there a time when great newspaper editorials regularly thundered and whispered, sighed and screamed, were outraged or outraged others? Paul Greenberg, the editorial-page editor of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette and a 1969 Pulitzer…
Here are the journalists chosen for Poynter's 2023 Power of Diverse Voices Seminar poynter.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from poynter.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
wasn t being considered by people at the top ranks of fox, again and again, as people were promoting or amplifying these clearly false, clearly in the moment discredited claims, tells you what they viewed their brand. there s the question of trust and integrity were raised by people saying, we have to have the trust of our audience, they have to feel that we have integrity. but they re finding integrity in a way that is 180 degrees distant from the ways most journalists would concede even most respected journalists who are opinion journalists. you have to start with the facts. everything radiates from that. the truth is the only thing that matters, harry, this just begs the question, i don t understand why fox let this go to trial instead of agreeing to settle this case? we re only having this discussion now because of the facts that were presented in the filing. why did they do this? totally true, big defendants
to square with your audience, then you re really not in the news business. and i think the idea that that wasn t being considered by people at the top ranks of fox, again and again, as people were promoting or amplifying these clearly false, clearly in the moment discredited claims, tells you what they viewed their brand. there s the question of trust and integrity were raised by people saying, we have to have the trust of our audience, they have to feel that we have integrity. but they re finding integrity in a way that is 180 degrees distant from the ways most journalists would concede even most respected journalists who are opinion journalists. you have to start with the facts. everything radiates from that. the truth is the only thing that matters, harry, this just begs the question, i don t understand why fox let this go to trial instead of agreeing to settle this case? we re only having this discussion now because of the