The untimely end to my T.V. career
Broadcaster Mark Hebscher recalls the last day at CHCH news, when staff found out they were being fired.
Broadcaster Mark Hebscher recalls the last day at CHCH news, when staff found out they were being fired.
The volume of copy published is rising but the number of mistakes is actually down.
Refugees to Canada do not get more government funds than do our senior citizens. That is an urban myth that originated with a mistake in a 2004 Toronto Star letter to the editor – and repeated in a recent reader letter.
Mike Landry’s just-completed series on intimate partner violence in New Brunswick has shone a bright light on one of this community’s poorly understood and costly secrets.
Canadian Association of Journalists sends letter to Vista Radio encouraging company to come up with a policy that encourages editorial independence.
It’s the duty of all journalists to hold politicians to account for the things they say and do.
Ottawa public interest researcher Ken Rubin will receive inaugural investigative award from Canadian Journalists for Free Expression.
By Sylvia Stead for the Globe and Mail What’s in a word? More than it may seem. Journalists are constantly reminded that their audience cares greatly about how stories are told. For example, there was a flurry on social media after intelligence officials referred to Abdelhamid Abaaoud as the “mastermind” of the Paris attacks. People…
Why is the media inconsistent in naming the terror group that attacked Paris?
Some readers were offended with the front page of Saturday’s Globe and Mail, but their children saw it in a different perspective