How are you covering stories around the fire if you trust your journalist with football yes im the guy the more i think that if theres a Movie Theater on stage or not its the Mining Industry one i like least ground. 0 like im battle story. Hello im richard disparate and youre watching a special edition of the listening post when journalists talk about the most dangerous beats in the News Business they talk about war zones are trying to cover drug cartels in mexico however environmental reporting is not far behind according to the new york based committee to protect journalists in the past decade 13 reporters doing environmentally related work have been killed another 16 such deaths are currently under investigation the environment beat is perilous because it often involves exposing the abuses taking place as more and more minerals are extracted lucrative minerals and when theres enough money involved there will be those who are willing to kill for their share of it still those stories
Drug cartels in mexico however environmental reporting is not far behind according to the new york based committee to protect journalists in the past decade 13 reporters doing environmentally related work have been killed another 16 such deaths are currently under investigation the environment beat is perilous because it often involves exposing the abuses taking place as more and more minerals are extracted lucrative minerals and when theres enough money involved there will be those who are willing to kill for their share of it still those stories keep coming out especially when the reporters involved thinking about safety in numbers joined forces later in this program well hear from George Monbiot a journalist and climate campaigner who has spent the past 3 decades crusading against the practices of the fossil fuel industry the inertia of the Political Class and the complicity of the Corporate News outlets that have failed to give environmental stories adequate coverage but 1st the li
Jazeera. How hes covering stories around the fire because you trust your journalist wait for yes im the guy the more i think that if you give them anything that the most dangerous part of the Mining Industry want to put their lives around killing folks like current battle story. Hello im richard disparate and youre watching a special edition of the listening post when journalists talk about the most dangerous beats in the News Business they talk about war zones are trying to cover drug cartels in mexico however environmental reporting is not far behind according to the new york based committee to protect journalists in the past decade 13 reporters doing environmentally related work have been killed another 16 such deaths are currently under investigation the environment beat is perilous because it often involves exposing the abuses taking place as more and more minerals are extracted lucrative minerals and when theres enough money involved there will be those who are willing to kill fo
To the new york based committee to protect journalists in the past decade 13 reporters doing environmentally related work have been killed another 16 such deaths are currently under investigation the environment beat is perilous because it often involves exposing the abuses taking place as more and more minerals are extracted lucrative minerals and when theres enough money involved there will be those who are willing to kill for their share of it still those stories keep coming out especially when the reporters involved thinking about safety in numbers joined forces later in this program well hear from George Monbiot a journalist and climate campaigner who has spent the past 3 decades crusading against the practices of the fossil fuel industry the inertia of the Political Class and the complicity of the Corporate News outlets that have failed to give environmental stories adequate coverage but 1st the listening posts Nick Moorehead on the dangers of that kind of journalism and. A new m
Manchester center, vermont in 2009. Its wonderful for us to be here in a state where we feel the spirit of woodstock still lives, and we know there is a woodstock here too. I have to say, i kind of fit all three of the criteria you mentioned about people interested in the book. I was definitely interested in the topic from a historical, musical perspective for a long time. I wish i had been there, but i was 12 years old, living in North Carolina the time, so didnt get to go. Now, i feel like i was there because of getting to spend so much time with michael and working on the book and all the incredible people that weve i have gotten to meet that worked on woodstock with michael, whose stories are also part of the book. Tonight, what we are going to do is talk a little bit amongst ourselves for you guys to listen in. Be thinking of questions because we will have time for questions at the end, after we chat for a little while. Im going to go through a little bit of back story with michae