Journalism was in crisis well before COVID, the recent uprisings against racism, and the deep recession. Now, we are facing a blank-slate moment. Much is being lost, but that also means there are huge opportunities to think fresh and rebuild the news industry from scratch. What should we keep and what should we ditch? Who should tell our stories and what should those stories be? How can we hold our media institutions accountable?
Join us for a series of conversations to tackle these questions. We‘ll hear from some of the most urgent voices in media to talk about where journalism goes next.
Speakers include:
- Emily Bell, founding director of the Tow Center for Digital Journalism
- Maria Bustillos, founding editor, Popula
- Sewell Chan, editorial page editor, The Los Angeles Times
- Susan Chira, editor in chief, The Marshall Project
- Jelani Cobb, staff writer, The New Yorker, Ira A. Lipman Professor of Journalism at Columbia University
- Steve Coll, dean, Columbia Graduate School of Journalism
- Bill Grueskin, professor, Columbia Graduate School of Journalism
- Cierra Hinton, publisher, Scalawag
- Ashton Lattimore, editor in chief, Prism
- Kyle Pope, editor and publisher, Columbia Journalism Review
- Ben Smith, media columnist, The New York Times
- Susan Smith Richardson, chief executive officer, Center for Public Integrity
- Duy Linh Tu, documentarian, Columbia Graduate School of Journalism
- Ethan Zuckerman, professor, co-founder Global Voices
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