February 23, 2023

Top stories

Dylan Lyons, a 24-year-old TV journalist, was killed while reporting on a shooting (NPR) / ‘We are deeply saddened by the loss of our colleague and the other lives senselessly taken today’ (Spectrum News 13) / Remembering Spectrum News 13 reporter Dylan Lyons (Spectrum News 13) / ‘If you knew Dylan, you knew he embodied journalism. Integrity. Passion. Ethics. Speed. He meant so much to so many people. …’ (Megan Turner) / A Florida TV station offered viewers raw, emotional coverage of the shooting of its own journalists (CNN Business


I lost one of my best friends, Dylan yesterday. I was shot and now I’ve had surgery and I am OK thank you all so much for your well wishes. … I’m very lucky to be alive.’ (Jesse Walden) / New details emerge in killing of reporter, woman and 9-year-old (New York Times)


This is every newsperson’s worst nightmare. My heart goes out to the people living it and grieving it and reporting on it at the same time.’ (Emily Lawler) / ‘It is deeply disturbing that a journalist was killed while covering the gun violence that has become a sickening reality of living in the United States. Reporters must be able to cover the news without having to fear for their lives.’ (CPJ) / Among journalists, shock at Dylan Lyons’ murder is coupled with a strong sense of ‘what if?’ (Poynter) / ‘I do hope some local TV news managers are thinking seriously today about when and how often they need to send their staff to crime scenes.’ (Ryan Famuliner) / National Press Club Statement on shooting of Florida TV journalists (NPC)


Incredibly damning:’ Fox News documents stun some legal experts (Washington Post


McCarthy says he ‘promised’ to release Jan. 6 tapes (The Hill) / In sharing video with Fox host, McCarthy hits rewind on Jan. 6 (New York Times) 


Gannett posts fourth-quarter profit after cost-cutting; passes 2 million digital subscriptions (USA Today) 


Amid the Don Lemon drama, sources knock down CNN sale rumors (Vanity Fair) / Does CNN have a Don Lemon problem? (Poynter) 


Harvey Weinstein sentenced to 16 years after rape conviction, putting former movie mogul behind bars for life (Variety)


Section 230 gets its day in court (Columbia Journalism Review) 


Changes coming to Al Día Dallas cause ire, heartbreak. Leadership insists commitment to audience remains unchanged. (Poynter)


How Gen Z gets its news: TikTok is becoming Gen Z's Google (Morning Consult) 


ICYMI: Three years into COVID, we still don’t know how to talk about it (New York Times) 


Press freedom 


DeSantis wants to roll back press freedoms — with an eye toward overturning Supreme Court ruling (POLITICO) 


Today is Student Press Freedom Day (SPLC) / Why student journalism matters (Washington Post) / Student reporters in US find challenges, opportunities (VOA) 


Google blocks news in some Canadian searches, in response to proposed media law (Nieman Journalism Lab)


The Russian state TV journalist who dared challenge the war (Financial Times) / ‘Faithful to my profession to the end’: Russian journalists endure under Putin’s onslaught (The Guardian)

Living Under Threat: Ukraine, Russian journalists share struggles of wartime reporting

One year into Russia’s full-scale war of aggression against Ukraine, journalists in both countries have responded valiantly in insisting on their right to provide independent, accurate, and piercing news coverage that serves the public’s interests. 


Join the National Press Club’s Press Freedom Committee and the National Press Club Journalism Institute at 11 a.m. ET on Thursday, March 2, for a virtual discussion with Russian and Ukrainian journalists to discuss the ongoing challenges to their work.

Register now

Confirmed speakers include:


Elizaveta Kirpanova, who worked as a special reporter of the Russian independent newspaper “Novaya Gazeta” for the past five years. In her articles, she covered problems in health care, education system, charity, and immigration. The Russian government recently revoked the newspaper’s media license for its position on the war in Ukraine.


Olga Rudenko, the editor in chief of The Kyiv Independent. Prior to 2022, she was the Managing Editor of The Kyiv Post.


Anastasia Tishchenko, a human rights reporter and news presenter with Radio Svoboda, RFE/RL’s Russian Service based in Prague since 2021. She joined RFE/RL in Moscow in 2017 as a reporter covering the deteriorating rights situation in Russia. She also has spent significant time in Ukraine. 


Jessica Jerreat, who leads Voice of America’s award-winning press freedom coverage, will moderate the discussion. With a background in press freedom and international news, Jerreat has worked for organizations including the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists and The Times of London. She has a master’s degree in War, Media, and Society from the University of Kent at Canterbury, with a focus on propaganda, the press, and conflict.

“Worry has a function. It prepares us for the worst-case scenario. Problems arise if we’re catastrophizing over the ‘what ifs’, or if we’re ruminating, going over the same thoughts again, and again, and again. So look at what you can control and what you can’t. What you can control might be something like planning the assignment. What you can’t control is the unexpected.


"If you are a boss, think about how you are going to manage your staff in the days before the assignment, during the assignment, and then after, and ask them what they’d like and what would be most helpful for them. And if you’re a member of staff and you notice that your colleagues have come back from a traumatic assignment, check in on them. Ask them if they’re OK. Make sure, though, it’s at the right time, in the right place, and, preferably, with your phones off.”


-- Dr. Sian Williams, a practicing NHS psychologist, “Covering traumatic breaking news stories: A guide for journalists and newsrooms

Resources

This newsletter is written & edited by the National Press Club Journalism Institute staff: Beth Francesco and Holly Butcher Grant. Send us your questions and suggestions for topics to cover.


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The National Press Club Journalism Institute promotes an engaged global citizenry through an independent and free press, and equips journalists with skills and standards to inform the public in ways that inspire a more representative democracy. As the non-profit affiliate of the National Press Club, the Institute powers journalism in the public interest.