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Journalists Are My Heroes
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Content provided by Kyle Munson. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Kyle Munson or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ro.player.fm/legal.
A podcast dedicated to conversations with real journalists at work in their communities. Kyle Munson, who spent 24 years in daily news, interviews the reporters, storytellers and media craftspeople of all kinds who help deliver not just information but meaning to our lives. Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/journalistsaremyheroes/support
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20 episoade
Marcați toate (ne)redate ...
Manage series 3114049
Content provided by Kyle Munson. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Kyle Munson or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ro.player.fm/legal.
A podcast dedicated to conversations with real journalists at work in their communities. Kyle Munson, who spent 24 years in daily news, interviews the reporters, storytellers and media craftspeople of all kinds who help deliver not just information but meaning to our lives. Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/journalistsaremyheroes/support
…
continue reading
20 episoade
Alle afleveringen
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Journalists Are My Heroes

1 Billionaires Alone Can't Save Journalism, with Matthew Hansen 41:16
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This finale for Season 1 of Journalists Are My Heroes finds me looking in the mirror: Matthew Hansen recently wrapped his tenure as metro columnist at the Omaha World-Herald. Like me, he's a child of the rural Midwest who ended up working as a columnist in his native state's largest newsroom. Also like me, he recently stepped out of journalism to flex his skills in the world of content marketing; he's now managing editor for the Buffett Early Childhood Institute. Like any good journalist given plenty of leash, Hansen in his 16 years at the World-Herald followed his whims far and wide -- including reporting trips to Afghanistan and Cuba. He also had a front-row seat to Omaha billionaire Warren Buffett's purchase of his hometown newspaper and the diminishing prospects that Buffett now sees for the financial viability of local news. This conversation runs the gamut: Hansen talks about how the journalism crisis cut his newsroom in half, but we also discuss the goofy origin of his @redcloud_scribe Twitter handle. I ask Hansen about one of his epic stories where he discovered that the most famous photo in American history essentially was a big lie. He also talks about some of his new outlets for writing, including online magazine Between Coasts. We even explore Hansen's feelings about the heart attack that he survived this summer (and wrote about, of course). Get to know a journalist who says he has "an overactive sense of justice, like every metro columnist in the country." --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/journalistsaremyheroes/support…
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Journalists Are My Heroes

1 Indigenous Journalism with a Capital 'I' and Graham Lee Brewer 42:05
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Graham Lee Brewer, "a reporter covering criminal justice, the death penalty, and Indian Country," grew up listening to National Public Radio in the back of his parents' car. Today he's a working journalist in Oklahoma with a distinguished resume that blends experience on the radio and in the traditional print headquarters of the Oklahoman, among many other highlights. Brewer, also a board member of the Native American Journalists Association (NAJA), currently is contributing editor on the tribal affairs desk of High Country News, a nonprofit news org dedicated to covering the American West. Brewer spends some of his time helping to train other newsrooms nationwide in the ethics of covering Indigenous peoples. Our conversation includes Brewer's work with NAJA, his own Cherokee roots (as the Cherokee Nation currently campaigns to add its own representative to the U.S. House, based on an 1835 treaty), his chronicling of the executions of death-row inmates, and many other journalism topics. Thanks for listening and for spending a little time getting to know another working journalist. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/journalistsaremyheroes/support…
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Journalists Are My Heroes

1 Inside the Partisan Digital Warfare Reshaping Journalism 42:32
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In this episode I talk to Laura Dawn , chief creative officer of recently launched news aggregator FrontPageLive.com . The shorthand description is that it's a progressive response to the massively popular Druge Report . But it goes much deeper than that, as you'll hear from our interview. Among the team that launched the site is none other than former Fox News political reporter Carl Cameron . Dawn isn't a journalist by the traditional definition. She's an activist who for years has been a writer, director, strategist, and producer of social justice campaigns. She was the seventh employee of MoveOn.org. She runs her own agency, Art Not War , with her partner, Daron. She talks in this interview about how she was among those targeted by Cambridge Analytica in the final months of the 2016 presidential election. The way the political battles now rage online, with such sophisticated and micro-targeted information campaigns, makes it harder than ever to sort the propagandists from the activists from the journalists. And it's the journalists who seem to be struggling most of all to hold their line. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/journalistsaremyheroes/support…
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Journalists Are My Heroes

1 Caught in the Viral News Vortex With Larrison Campbell of Mississippi Today 40:10
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Larrison Campbell is a political reporter whose coverage for nonprofit news org Mississippi Today has an emphasis on public health. Her summer, meanwhile, has had an emphasis on viral news. That's because a married male gubernatorial candidate in Mississippi denied her a ride-along to cover him on the campaign trail unless Campbell and her editor agreed to send a male reporter as chaperone; the candidate feared that political opponents might exploit images of the two of them together for attack ads. That sparked a firestorm of debate over gender equity, "the Billy Graham rule," the #metoo movement, and a host of other issues. But that's hardly the totality of Campbell as a journalist. She has had a long and varied career across the country--including a long stint working behind the scenes for daytime TV and Hollywood. She joined Mississippi Today in 2016, the week before its official launch. Her work with the statewide news nonprofit includes its own podcast, "The Other Side." Here we talk about everything from the gender politics of political coverage to nonprofit news to "As the World Turns." Spend a little time getting to know @thisislarrison , a working journalist providing real news for her local community. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/journalistsaremyheroes/support…
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Journalists Are My Heroes

1 From Kansas City to the Iowa Cornfields with Ty Rushing 43:19
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"I actually enjoy covering public meetings," says Ty Rushing , managing editor for Iowa Information Inc. , a family news operation that serves numerous communities in northwest Iowa and whose flagship newspaper is the N'West Iowa Review in the town of Sheldon, pop. 5,100. Rushing, who began his first full-time journalism job in 2013 in Newton, Iowa, grew up reading the Kansas City Star and dreaming of a career covering sports. But he has come to cherish his role and responsibility in a land where "just about any food item (can) be turned into a taco or pizza variation, including soups and burgers." He has seen how his dedicated reporting on city council meetings and other public affairs -- both in his news stories and in his lively Twitter feed -- helps give his readers a voice and protect their interests. Local officials who meet in secret or a town of 125 threatened with losing its emergency medical services are issues that affect Rushing's friends and neighbors. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/journalistsaremyheroes/support…
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Journalists Are My Heroes

1 Local News, Politics, Rural America, and the 2020 Campaign With Doug Burns 54:39
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Our latest guest is dedicated veteran journalist Doug Burns, co-owner and editor of a family newspaper that has delivered quality local news for nearly a century. With the Carroll Times Herald and affiliated newspapers in western Iowa, Burns manages to cover everything from colorful local characters to feisty national politics. (He even has his own interviews and issues podcast on Anchor, Iowa Political Mercury .) This conversation ranges all over the media landscape: the challenges facing modern community newspapers; Burns' new digital media marketing firm intended to claw back a little revenue from Facebook and Google; his nasty recent libel lawsuit; how to revive rural Main streets in the Amazon era; the enduring controversies around Iowa Rep. Steve King; the 2020 Iowa caucuses and presidential campaign; and many more topics. As always, thanks for listening. And please subscribe to and support the sources of local news that you rely on. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/journalistsaremyheroes/support…
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Journalists Are My Heroes

1 Small-Town Sports Roots of Nick Nurse of the Toronto Raptors 33:17
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Nick Nurse, head coach of NBA's Toronto Raptors , began his sports career as a Catholic-school basketball star in the small town (population < 10,000) of Carroll, Iowa. That hometown connection has given Brandon Hurley, assistant sports editor of the Carroll Times Herald and sports editor of two other affiliated newspapers ( Jefferson Herald and Guthrie County Times Vedette ), consistent access to Nurse as the Raptors make their impressive run in the NBA playoffs. "Sports is the best reality show there is," says Hurley, who provides deep background on Nurse in this episode as well as his analysis of what the Raptors must do to win the title. We take a rare detour into sports journalism for this unique angle on how the only Canadian NBA team qualifies as "local" coverage for a rural Iowa newsroom. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/journalistsaremyheroes/support…
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Journalists Are My Heroes

1 What It Feels Like to Win a Pulitzer Prize, With Art Cullen 11:33
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The new batch of Pulitzer Prize winners was announced today, with journalists awarded for deep reporting on coverage of presidential finances and mass shootings, among an array of other topics. This year's Pulitzer for Editorial Writing went to Brent Staples of the New York Times -- breaking a two-year streak in which the award was won by Iowa writers. Art Cullen of the Storm Lake Times won in 2017. I happened to share a panel discussion with him last weekend, thanks to an invitation from fellow newsman Harry Smith of NBC. The three of us spent 90 minutes waxing poetic on the topic of storytelling at the Iowa Broadcast News Association 's annual convention. As part of that, Cullen told the tale of winning the Pulitzer -- the reporting that led up to it and the exuberance of clinching the win. As a tip of the hat to all Pulitzer winners past and present, here's that colorful story from the convention. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/journalistsaremyheroes/support…
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Journalists Are My Heroes

1 People Pay This Public Radio Station to Learn How Journalism Works 29:25
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One of the undercurrents of this podcast has been that the relationship between the press and the public has gotten so fractured that it's almost as if we need to get reporters and audiences into a classroom to study the problem and find a new consensus on how journalism even works. Well, guess what? St. Louis Public Radio is doing just that with its new " Mini J School ." People have paid STLPR good money to "explore the craft of journalism" -- not just for an evening but in an extensive six-week course. These two-hour sessions feature not only public-radio journalists but media professional from newsrooms (print, digital, TV, etc.) across the St. Louis metro. Mini J School seemed to speak to the core sensibility -- if not nagging dread -- that convinced me to launch this podcast. So I had to reach out to Maria Altman ( @radioaltman ), STLPR's newscast editor, to learn all about it. Please subscribe to, rate, and review Journalists Are My Heroes wherever you prefer to listen to podcasts. And share it with a friend who appreciates the fine wine of real news. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/journalistsaremyheroes/support…
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Journalists Are My Heroes

1 An American Journalist's Year in the China Daily Newsroom 30:40
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Tyler O'Neil now lives in Austin, Texas, where he's a content marketing entrepreneur with yourbikergang.com and leads people on adventures throughout the city. But here we talk mostly about his year spent in the newsroom of the English-language China Daily in Beijing. O'Neil, who studied journalism and international relations at Drake University in Des Moines, talks about how he ended up at China Daily and his role in helping train his Chinese colleagues. He also shares what it was like to experience the 2016 American presidential election from his Chinese home and newsroom. You can hear and see more about O'Neil's time in China through some of his video work: a report from "Tofu Town," a story on workers who must commute for hours to their jobs in Beijing, and the famous culinary tourist trap of Wangfujing . In this episode I also mention two other podcasts that definitely are worth your time: "Just Go Bike" explores the fun side of bicycling culture, and "Sinica" is the leading English-language podcast on all things China, including U.S.-China relations. Please subscribe to "Journalists Are My Heroes" wherever you prefer to listen to podcasts. Rate and review us. And please considering supporting us through the Anchor platform. And be sure to subscribe to and stay actively engaged with your sources of local news. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/journalistsaremyheroes/support…
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Journalists Are My Heroes

1 2020 Campaign Coverage (Blizzards and All) With Politico's Chris Cadelago 37:06
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It was inevitable with this podcast that I would begin to spend a little more time talking with journalists as they stream through Iowa, the site of the first-in-the-nation presidential caucuses, on the 2020 campaign trail. Christopher Cadelago of Politico popped up on my radar after he filed a surprise story from the depths of a furious blizzard that stranded him in the middle of rural Iowa: " My bone-chilling adventure trying to cover Kamala Harris in Iowa ." Suffice it to say that Cadelago was lucky to share the Oscars telecast and goulash with Mike and Janet Shock after they rescued the Californian from his snowbound rental car in nothing more than a paper-thin jacket. But this isn't an interview about road safety. Cadelago and I dove into numerous issues of modern political coverage, including the climate for reporters (where they get both booed and pestered for autographs) and how the rise of new partisan media affects his job. Thanks for listening to Journalists Are My Heroes, the podcast that talks to working journalists and journalism advocates everywhere. Because a healthy news environment helps build a shared sense of community, especially on the local level. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/journalistsaremyheroes/support…
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Journalists Are My Heroes

1 Hyperlocal Nonprofit Journalism With Stephanie Lulay of Block Club Chicago 38:17
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When billionaire Joe Ricketts of TD Ameritrade and Chicago Cubs fame in 2017 shut down digital news network DNAInfo, Stephanie Lulay and two of her colleagues didn't scatter to other industries. They co-founded Block Club Chicago , a hyperlocal nonprofit news site dedicated to granular coverage of the Windy City's storied neighborhoods. The site launched in summer 2018 after a record-setting Kickstarter campaign that raised $183,000 from 3,000 backers. Lulay, managing editor, trusts her reporters to live and embed themselves in their neighborhoods and largely set the agenda for what they cover. One crucial component: Block Club doesn't focus only on crime and other sensationalism. The site's stories span everything from potholes to serious police misconduct. Block Club Chicago is published on the Civil platform, a digital news network on the blockchain. In this episode of Journalists Are My Heroes, Stephanie talks about her career path into hyperlocal news, how her site approaches coverage, and the newsroom's prospects for long-term sustainability. Please subscribe, rate and review us wherever you listen to podcasts. And find and support us on the Anchor network . --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/journalistsaremyheroes/support…
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Journalists Are My Heroes

1 Collaborative Journalism With Sara Konrad Baranowski 31:51
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Collaborative journalism has become more of a trend in recent years. Newsrooms, struggling to remain ambitious as they cope with a sour media economy, are launching all manner of projects in which they're colleagues rather than competitors. The Center for Cooperative Media at Montclair State University has tracked some 180 such projects in the last year. For this episode we focus on one collaborative series that investigated how some communities across Iowa have been left with scant if any options for child care. It involved four different newsrooms, including the Iowa Fall Times-Citizen and Editor Sara Konrad Baranowski. Please subscribe to this podcast, rate and review us, support us on the Anchor platform, and follow @JournalismHero on Twitter and Instagram . --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/journalistsaremyheroes/support…
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Journalists Are My Heroes

1 Immigration and Immersive Journalism with Sam Quinones of 'Dreamland' 40:44
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Veteran journalist Sam Quinones is a self-described "immersive journalist" with the heart of a punk rocker. He began his career as a crime reporter in Stockton, Calif. In the decades since he has roamed around the U.S. and Mexico. He has been a full-time staffer for newspapers such as the L.A. Times but today prefers the life of a freelancer -- without a boss breathing down his neck so that he can spend the proper time investigating each story. The approach has worked out for him, considering his 2015 nonfiction blockbuster "Dreamland," a deeply reported and richly detailed book on America's opiate epidemic, won numerous awards and is working its way through Hollywood. And now Sam is writing a sequel. As the nation sees more fierce and familiar partisan battles over immigration and a border wall, Sam is a good voice for a gut check: Here's a tireless journalist who has spent decades on the front lines of these monumental issues. As always, please subscribe to this podcast wherever you prefer to listen. And find us on Instagram and Twitter, @JournalismHero. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/journalistsaremyheroes/support…
I was rummaging through my basement this weekend and found early mementos from my journalism career, including copies of my first publication, "6th Grade News Flash." That got me thinking about (1) what gets journalists hooked on this business in the first place, and (2) why they stick around to gut it out despite all challenges. Those are two different things. This quick interlude of a not-really-an-episode roams from "Knight Rider" to Lionel Richie to journalism ethics and, finally, to the struggle to support objective news orgs in the digital economy. This is an impromptu appetizer on the way to many more full-length interviews to be dished up in the days ahead. Please follow, rate and review the podcast. To my listeners: Please support your local news providers. To my brothers and sisters in media: Do the stories that make you proud. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/journalistsaremyheroes/support…
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