Year / 2010

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  • J-Source

    Jean Charest à Tout le monde en parle

    Alors que sa cote d’amour est au plus bas, le Premier ministre Jean Charest était hier soir à Tout le monde en parle (TLMP) à Radio-Canada. Il n’y avait cependant pas de journalistes sur le plateau de l’émission de variétés,…
  • J-Source

    Le Buzz: la fin de l’omerta?

    Chaque vendredi, «le Buzz» revient sur les trois textes ou sujet qui ont attiré le plus votre attention selon nos statistiques. En cette semaine post congrès de la Fédération professionnelle des journalistes (FPJQ), les articles qui ont attiré le plus…
  • J-Source

    They’re just words

    Apparently this posting on the Canadian Association of Journalists list-serv has prompted more attention than it likely deserves. I’ve been ignoring it, chalking it up to too many people with too much time on their hands over-analyzing and over-parsing the…
  • J-Source

    Table rase sur le Conseil de presse

    Près de 40 ans après sa fondation, le Conseil de presse du Québec (CPQ) est à la croisée des chemins. En mai 2009, le président et le vice-président du conseil, Raymond Corriveau et Denis Plamondon, en claquaient la porte, incapables…
  • J-Source

    Quebecor crie au règlement de compte

    Accusée lors du congrès de la Fédération professionnelle des journalistes du Québec (FPJQ) d’avoir dicté un texte à la défense de son patron Pierre-Karl Péladeau, la directrice de la section Arts et Culture du Journal de Montréal, Michelle Coudé-Lord, s’insurge:…
  • J-Source

    After the explosion, injured photographer keeps shooting

    The New York Times has posted on its site today photographs taken in Afghanistan by Joao Silva right up to when he stepped on a landmine and lost both his legs in the subsequent explosion. There’s a gap when the…
  • J-Source

    Journalist on the run

    The vast majority of Mexicans who apply for refugee status in Canada are rejected. Luis Horacio Najera is an exception. He spent years as an investigative reporter in the badlands along the Mexico-U.S. border, writing stories on the drug trade…
  • J-Source

    J-students go hyperlocal with smartphones

    “If we want to tell and share our stories,” writes Wayne MacPhail, “we should learn to use and master the devices more and more people are using to consume and create. If you want to explore community-level hyperlocal journalism, smartphones…
  • J-Source

    Trauma journalism competition

    North American journalists are invited to a competition for stories about the impact of violence, crime, disaster and other traumatic events on individuals, families and communities. This is open to all media: newspaper, magazine, online, radio, TV, video and multimedia.…
  • J-Source

    WikiLeaks turns on the taps

    WikiLeaks has placed the first batch of 251,287 U.S. embassy cables in the public domain, and government reactions range from outrage to an offer of asylum for Julian Assange. Meanwhile, J-Source contributors ask: is it transparency or treason?…