國際傳媒:2020/08/14~2020/08/20

✅NEW YORK TIMES|20200812

🔗The Daily News Is Now a Newspaper Without a Newsroom

Newspapers across the country have been struggling for more than a decade because of punishing industry trends like the move away from revenue-generating print products and the nationalization of news. The pandemic, which has sharply squeezed advertising revenue, has added to the publications’ woes.

✅POYNTER|20200817

🔗How the pandemic is throwing international reporting into crisis

The coronavirus has created a devastating cocktail of economic turmoil and heightened risks that throw the fate of foreign reporting into jeopardy.

✅COLUMBIA JOURNALISM REVIEW|20200817

🔗Successful Pitches shows freelancers the way

Successful Pitches is the latest in a growing movement to create a more transparent, equitable journalism industry. It also comes at a time when furloughs and layoffs have pushed even more staffers into the freelance ranks.

✅News.Com.Au|20200817

🔗Australian audiences are let down by TV networks’ lack of diversity

Australian TV news and current affairs is failing the audiences it’s supposed to serve, and the worst offender is Channel 9.

✅THE WASHINGTON POST|20200818

🔗The newsroom was the beating heart of a local newspaper. What’s lost when the owner shuts it down?

Like office workers across the United States, journalists have been pushed by the coronavirus to retreat from communal spaces and into remote work. Now some are confronting the very real possibility that they may never again work in a physical newsroom — a touchstone of journalism — and what that could mean for the future of their profession.

✅journalism.co.uk|20200818

🔗New mobile journalism learning tool is set to win hearts

Want to try your hand at smartphone storytelling techniques? With this deck of cards, you will always have a MoJo trick up your sleeve.

✅Pew Research Center |20200819

🔗55% of U.S. social media users say they are ‘worn out’ by political posts and discussions

Some 55% of adult social media users say they feel “worn out” by how many political posts and discussions they see on social media, according to a Pew Research Center survey of U.S. adults conducted July 13-19. 

整理:朱弘川╱編輯:鄭凱榕