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June 27, 2022

Top stories

■ Fox News analyst expresses disbelief after younger brother shot dead in Chicago (The Hill) 


■ Alex Wagner to succeed Rachel Maddow at MSNBC; ‘Ms. Wagner is the only Asian American to host a prime-time cable news program.’ (New York Times) / ‘MSNBC says Alex Wagner is the only Asian American to anchor a primetime hour on cable news, but Joie Chen co-anchored CNN's "The World Today" with Wolf Blitzer and Jim Moret in the late 90s and early 2000s’ (Brian Steinberg)


■ CNN anchor Christi Paul announces exit on air (The Wrap) 


■ ‘The pending acquisition of TEGNA by Standard General would create the nation’s largest minority owned, women-led broadcasting company.’ (Forbes)


■ Ethnic media was devastated by Covid. Now publishers are struggling to self-fund. (NBC News) 


■ ‘The Mount Olive Tribune recorded history, informed and entertained readers and kept a watch on officials and tax dollars for 118 years. Our long watch ends with our last edition on June 29, 2022’ (Hendersonville Times-News) / 175 years of the Chicago Tribune: How the newsroom — and city — has evolved since June 10, 1847 (Chicago Tribune)


■ A Minnesota publisher just gave away his newspaper to fight in Ukraine (Washington Post) 


■ The Tributary, covering Florida's largest city, will be a worker-directed nonprofit (Nieman Journalism Lab) / 'He became the paper': For Tampa Bay Times' Paul Tash, a legacy of change (Tampa Bay Times) / 'The newspaper that serves the Villages retirement community in Central Florida is now among the top 25 papers in print circulation nationwide -- and the only one to show growth (again, in print) over the past year.' (Bill Grueskin) 


■ I left my husband for the most hated man in America: Martin Shkreli was the reviled ‘pharma bro’ hedge funder who inflated the price of life-saving drugs and was jailed for fraud. Christie Smythe was the reporter who quit her marriage and job for him. Why?' (Sunday Times Magazine)  


■ Twitter is the go-to social media site for U.S. journalists, but not for the public (Pew Research Center) / Meet Keffals, the trans Twitch streamer delivering news to LGBTQ teens (Washington Post) / In France, YouTubers deliver political news to young audiences (New York Times) 


Press freedom 


■ LAPD treatment of journalists denounced, again, after abortion rights protest downtown (Los Angeles Times) / ‘Here’s the stunning moment an LAPD officer grabbed and shoved female journalist @TinaDesireeBerg to the ground while she was recording an arrest at an abortion rights protest in Los Angeles this weekend. Absolutely outrageous.’ (Kate Cagle) / 'A journalist in LA clubbed in the stomach by an LAPD officer, knocking him to the ground. Another journalist shoved by a different officer.' (Tyler Valeska) 


■ Action needed on Austin Tice, says family of US journalist missing in Syria (VOA) 


■ Supreme Court declines to revisit landmark First Amendment decision, leaving higher bar for libel in place (CNN) / Clarence Thomas signals interest in making it easier to sue media (The Hill) 


■ Partner of killed Ukrainian journalist explains why she wanted to see photo of his body (CNN) / Dom Phillips family bids farewell to British journalist murdered in the Amazon (Reuters via New York Post)

"You probably uncovered thousands of facts in your research. But you can’t throw them all at the reader. When we tell our friends something that happened to us, we don’t just recite every single fact. We pick the most relevant ones, tell them in order and explain what they mean. One of the most important parts of storytelling is being selective — each fact needs to be there for a reason, and you have to explain that reason to your audience. It’s not a failure to use only 5 percent of what you found."


-- Olga Simanovych, regional editor at Global Investigative Journalism Network, "Want people to read your investigation? Make sure you tell a good story"

Manager's Minute: What are your top 3 habits for managers?

Jill Geisler, Bill Plante Chair in Leadership & Media Integrity at Loyola University Chicago and Freedom Forum Fellow in Women’s Leadership, on the values that guide successful leaders and help build good habits.

Manager's Minute: What are your top 3 habits for managers?

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