Media Matters
In an interview with Joe Strupp about the Times’ political coverage, Executive Editor Jill Abramson criticizes some news outlets’ — she doesn’t say which ones — emphasis on campaign minutiae: “My word for some of that news is ‘scooplets.’ … They are kind of evanescent.” However, she praises political coverage in general. She believes she’s the first executive editor not to go to the afternoon news meeting, opting instead for the morning meeting at which that day’s home page and the next day’s front page are discussed. She leaves the afternoon session to Managing Editor Dean Baquet, whom she’s given “broad authority over the daily news report.” || Ironically, a scooplet? The Washington Post’s Erik Wemple notes this line in a New Hampshire Union Leader story about Republican presidential candidate Jon Hunstman Jr. moving his headquarters to New Hampshire: “Ironically, though, the first media outlet the Huntsman campaign informed of its move to New Hampshire and renewed focus on New Hampshire was The New York Times.” || Related: Gawker’s Hamilton Nolan writes that Abramson will continue the Q&A sessions held by her predecessor Bill Keller. Keller called them “Throw things at Bill.” The new name? Grill Jill.
Uncategorized
Jill Abramson isn’t interested in political ‘scooplets’
More News
Q&A: Jane Lytvynenko on disinformation and how journalists can navigate an increasingly cloudy social media landscape
The pioneering reporter in the disinformation space will host a webinar about investigating Telegram on April 4.
March 28, 2024
What’s next for Plandemic? A musical.
‘It was a good reminder that there is a very strong amount of financial support for even the wackiest far-right, anti-vax ideas’
March 28, 2024
Opinion | Now NBC News must deal with the Ronna McDaniel fallout
Questions linger about whether this could impact how viewers see NBC News’ political coverage
March 28, 2024
Opinion | How fact-checkers can use AI wisely
AI is already saving hundreds of hours of work by automating repetitive tasks. More collaboration among fact-checkers is the next step.
March 28, 2024
Opinion | Yes, you can fact-check on TikTok
Fact-checkers in Turkey have found a space amidst dance videos and humor
March 28, 2024