The Journal's series "Camp Swamp Road" is a Pulitzer finalist!!!
This is the first time @wsj has been a finalist in the audio category, which is very cool. I'm so happy that the reporting of @vbauerlein and the work of our team has been recognized.
https://t.co/gt1Ijz5May
Very, very (very, very, very) cool to see "Camp Swamp Road" on The New Yorker's best podcasts of 2025!
If you haven't yet, listen to this remarkable series here: https://t.co/gxS3tz5gC1
Some of the all-time best podcasts ended this year, but a crop of new contenders is keeping meaningful audio alive. Sarah Larson picks the best podcasts of 2025. https://t.co/8U4uNlx7G8
The road-rage killing looked like an open-and-shut case of self-defense. But the victim’s sister was full of questions: “Something’s not right.”
WSJ’s Valerie Bauerlein reconstructs that night. 🎧 Listen to part one of the podcast series: https://t.co/ty8dTnhLYX
"9-1-1, what's your emergency?"
"He's pointing a gun at me… if he keeps this up, I'm gonna shoot him"
A Stand Your Ground killing. A family's hunt for answers. Hear the tape, follow the twists. Listen to #CampSwampRoad from The Journal: https://t.co/4LJOBwykgi #CampSwampRoad
Stein-Erik Soelberg became increasingly paranoid this spring and he shared suspicions with ChatGPT about a surveillance campaign being carried out against him. At almost every turn, his chatbot agreed with him.
https://t.co/kEhbbHBxOx
If you recently felt a disturbance in the Force, it's that I'm pivoting to video.
Re-launching Friday: Our interview show, with the bold-named experts & leaders who appear in the pages of the @WSJ -- with co-host @timkhiggins:
🎧 Listen: In today's episode of The Journal podcast, WSJ's @benfritz on whether Superman can be the savior that DC Studios and its newly slimmed-down parent company, Warner Bros., are hoping for https://t.co/oBNdGB7A2X
I am so proud of my brave, brilliant colleagues @khadeeja_safdar and @joe_palazzolo, proud to live in a country where the founders put freedom of speech in the very first amendment, and proud to work at The Wall Street Journal.
https://t.co/eDlrvs4sKa via @WSJ
🎧 Listen: Around 19% of health insurance claims are denied annually, and few people appeal. In today's episode of The Journal podcast, we speak to WSJ's @littlewern and a family who fought their insurance denial successfully. https://t.co/NctBQMxuwa
Congratulations to the Television and Audio finalists for the 31st Annual #NIHCMAwards in Journalism! We are delighted to recognize their outstanding work. Read the webpage for more: https://t.co/MZQGXYHLXG
So honored that our three-part audio investigation, "The Missing Minister." won the runner-up citation for @opcofamerica's The Lowell Thomas Award for best audio coverage of international affairs. Thanks & congrats to our ace team @kate_linebaugh@byrnemaria@ardzes@annieminoff
@99piorg Popova wrote that Dillard argues for presence over productivity, always. Moses, of course, was a master of productivity. I'm someone who wants to generally be more productive **and** more present... I'm not sure who I should look to? Robert Caro?
https://t.co/F5yjTUVOtB
I was reading these at the same time, and was almost done with both before I realized they were both published the same year, won a pulitzer the same year, and celebrated their 50th anniversary last year… (cc @99piorg )
@99piorg I can’t think of a better chaser to Caro’s story of the folly of one man’s ambition than Dillard’s quietly revolutionary work on nature. The two seem like they’re from different universes, not the same year.