Jeffrey Goldberg is exactly who needs to be representing journalism right now.
I worked in journalism alongside many “Jeffrey Goldbergs,” and people like him with strong ethics, respect, patriotism, thoughtfulness, and care for this country and the stories they tell.
There are so many incredible journalists that toil and get the job done quietly, without focusing attention on themselves, but on the function of their journalism, which is to be a part of our democracy, to make the powerful accountable and inform our voting public.
@BenMullin Gannett will need to hire many more photographers or really build up their freelance network. Because unlike reporters that can have a byline from a hundred miles away, photographers need to physically be at news events.
"His name also surfaced in alphabetical order, near Emilio Segrè, the Nobel Prize-winning physicist, in now-unclassified logs and a phone book for the original facility," writes photojournalist @joshtrujillo about his great-grandfather, Grandpa Jake.
https://t.co/Nw4Q3WQSZ4
Oppenheimer and the Manhattan Project are part of his family history: Seattle photojournalist @joshtrujillo discovers that his electrician great-grandfather was connected to the ‘X group’ and the genesis of the nuclear bomb in Los Alamos, N.M. @Crosscut https://t.co/bYhONF3sHR
@Crosscut_Union @CascadePubMedia The “pivot to video” thing again, huh. Countless other media orgs have tried this only to dismantle the initiative later. BTW, engaging video is an expensive medium to produce and skilled video people can make lots more money outside of journalism.