Breaking News
On The Media
The Breaking News Consumer's Handbook
Friday, August 01, 2014
In September of 2013 we created a list of best practices that will help you, the media consumer, weed out bad information reported by the media in the wake of mass shootings. Why? Because the news after such events is invariably wrong in key respects.
You can see our print version of the Breaking News Consumer's Handbook by following this link, or you can print it out as a PDF the next time there's a breaking news event.
On The Media
The Most Popular Satire Show in Israel
Friday, July 25, 2014
It’s been a violent, sad week. Sometimes the only way to wring anything positive out of it all is through the transformative power of comedy. Brooke talks with Sharon Taicher, a writer at Eretz Nehederet, a satire show watched by 1 out of 8 Israelis.
On The Media
Silliness and Moral Indignation
Friday, July 25, 2014
Brooke examines how comedians like Jon Stewart, John Oliver, and Stephen Colbert make us laugh by combining silliness and moral indignation.
On The Media
Breaking News Consumer's Handbook: Airline Edition
Friday, July 25, 2014
When a commercial plane goes down, media speculation ensues. With the help of The Atlantic's James Fallows, we give you some tips that can help you comb through the coverage.
On The Media
A New Narrative on Israel-Palestine
Friday, July 11, 2014
The latest surge of violence in the Gaza Strip and Israel was fueled by a horrific series of events involving Israeli and Palestinian teenagers. Brooke talks with Philip Weiss, co-editor of Mondoweiss, about coverage of these recent events, and how the view of the conflict is shifting in the media.
On The Media
ISIS's Media Offensive, Online Death Threats, and What NPR Is (and Isn't)
Friday, June 20, 2014
ISIS's Twitter and television offensive, the effects of language on your morals, and what NPR is and what it isn't.
On The Media
The Bergdahl Controversy, The Slenderman Panic, and a Cantor Narrative
Friday, June 13, 2014
This week On the Media analyzes the Bowe Bergdahl controversy - the story of a prisoner exchange that has quickly become a partisan issue. Plus, a conversation with the creator of Slender Man - the online horror meme at the center of at least two deadly assaults.
On The Media
Courting the Young Invincibles
Friday, March 28, 2014
With the official enrollment deadline for the Affordable Care Act approaching, the Obama Administration is trying every which way to get the message out. This effort ranges from ordinary TV ads, to quirkier celeb-filled spoofs, to testimonials from YouTube celebrities. Bob speaks to Joe Rospars, CEO and Co-Founder of Blue State Digital, who served as the principal digital strategist for both of Obama’s campaigns, about capturing the attention of the ever-elusive “young invincibles.”
On The Media
News and the Novel
Friday, March 21, 2014
For the past four years novelist David Bezmozgis has been writing a book set in Crimea. His forthcoming novel, The Betrayers, was intended to be set in August 2014, but that isn't possible now. Brooke speaks with Bezmozgis, as he sits between manuscript lock and book release, about trying to adjust his fictional story set in a fraught, factual place.
On The Media
The Crisis in Crimea, Dissent on Russia Today, Streaming Media and More
Friday, March 07, 2014
The effort to preserve journalistic freedom during the Crimean crisis. Plus, Bob Garfield issues a special report on the streaming video revolution.
On The Media
RT Anchor Breaks The Rules
Friday, March 07, 2014
Abby Martin, an anchor for the Kremlin-funded news channel Russia Today, launched herself into the headlines this week by sternly denouncing Russia’s military intervention in Ukraine. On her show Breaking The Set, she said: “Just because I work here, for RT, doesn't mean I don't have editorial independence and I can't stress enough how strongly I am against any state intervention in sovereign nations' affairs. What Russia did is wrong.” Given that RT is widely regarded as a 24-hour propaganda machine engineered to polish Russia’s image abroad, Martin shocked many with her outburst. Bob talks with Martin about why she wasn't afraid to speak out.
On The Media
Protests in Ukraine
Friday, February 21, 2014
Before an agreement was brokered Friday, the standoff in Kiev between Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych’s government and the loose coalition of anti-government forces was bloody and telegenic. Bob examines what those gripping images tell us, and what they don't.
On The Media
Protests in Ukraine, A Broadband Behemoth, and A Vile Rat
Friday, February 21, 2014
Remarkable images from protests in Kiev, a Pentagon Vietnam War commemoration website, and the proposed Comcast -Time Warner merger.
On The Media
No, US Press Freedom Is Not In Dire Decline
Friday, February 14, 2014
This week, the advocacy group Reporters Without Borders released its annual World Press Freedom Index, ranking the media environment of nearly every nation on earth from most free to least. The United States landed, embarrassingly, in 46th place, a 13-place drop from last year. The rank -- below Lithuania, El Salvador and Botswana -- has set off a panic-stricken (and in some instances, gleeful) barrage of media coverage declaring that press freedom in the US is “plunging,” “plummeting,” and “profoundly eroding.” Bob talks with Washington Post foreign affairs blogger Max Fisher about why he's suspicious of these headlines.
On The Media
Stephen Glass Can't Be a Lawyer
Friday, January 31, 2014
Earlier this week the California Supreme Court ruled that Stephen Glass could not become a lawyer in the state. Bob considers whether that was the right decision.
On The Media
Hypothetical Candidates
Friday, November 15, 2013
Chris Christie. Hillary Clinton. Rand Paul. Ted Cruz. Elizabeth Warren. This week saw a sharp spike in speculation for who would be President in 2017. Bob talks with the New York Times Magazine's Mark Leibovich about the media's fascination with hypothetical primaries three years away.
Young Marble Giants - Final Day
On The Media
The Breaking News Consumer's Handbook
Friday, September 20, 2013
By Alex Goldman
This week's shooting at the DC Navy Yard was the latest in a long string of breaking news reporting to get many of the essential facts wrong.
In fact, the rampant misreporting that follows shootings like this is so predictable that OTM has unintentionally developed a formula for covering them. We look at how all the bad information came out. We suggest ways that the news media could better report breaking news. This time, we're doing something different.
This is our Breaking News Consumer's Handbook. Rather than counting on news outlets to get it right, we're looking at the other end. Below are some tips for how, in the wake of a big, tragic story, you can sort good information from bad. We've even made a handy, printable PDF that you can tape to your wall the next time you encounter a big news event.
On The Media
The Breaking News Consumer's Handbook
Friday, September 20, 2013
We've decided to bring you a list of best practices that will help you, the media consumer, weed out bad information the next time an event like this takes place.
On The Media
Breaking News Consumer's Handbook, Detainment at US Borders, and More
Friday, September 20, 2013
Brooke looks at ways for news consumers to filter bad information during big events, producer Sarah Abdurrahman talks about being detained at the US border as a US citizen without explanation, and Clive Thompson talks about his new book Smarter Than You Think.
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- A Modest Election Finance Reform Proposal (That Might Actually Work)
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- Grabbing the Gavel
- The Mystery of Childish Gambino
- Sanity on Ebola, Money and Midterms, & #GamerGate
- Breaking News Consumer's Handbook: Infectious Disease Edition
- Condemning #GamerGate
- Unveiling CitizenFour, Inside Ferguson, and Protesting Outside SCOTUS
- The Mystery of Childish Gambino
- A Modest Election Finance Reform Proposal (That Might Actually Work)
- Don't Blame the Naked Celebrities
- Grabbing the Gavel
- Ask Leah
- Ebola in Liberia, Outbreak Narratives, and Covering Israel-Palestine
- Breaking News Consumer's Handbook: Infectious Disease Edition
- Condemning #GamerGate
- A Modest Election Finance Reform Proposal (That Might Actually Work)
- Remembering Legendary Editor Ben Bradlee
- Grabbing the Gavel
- Gary Webb and the CIA
- The Making of CitizenFour
- #12 - Hunting For YouTube's Saddest Comments
- Why One Journalist Unfollowed All Men On Twitter
- Don't Blame the Naked Celebrities