• J-Source

    Legal system erects barriers to open justice

    CommentaryNo one disputes that open courts are a hallmark of a democratic society. But media lawyer Alan Shanoff, writing the June 14, 2008 edition of the Law Times, says it’s time to stop paying lip service to this principle and to rethink the many roadblocks the legal system throws in the way of openness.

  • J-Source

    No simple task

    As a newly appointed Canwest VP of digital media, Kenneth Maclean has been tasked with growing the online versions of three newspapers. Our advice: take three aspirins and visit J-Source in the morning. Here are some recent posts on the tangled and often uneasy relationship between print media and the Internet. Blogs shut down at…

  • J-Source

    Bush spokesman Tony Snow dead

    Tony Snow, best-known as a one-time White House spokesman for U.S. President George W. Bush and also a conservative editorialist, commentator and a host on a Fox cable show in the U.S., has died of cancer, age 53. Excerpts from an Associated Press story in the Globe and Mail: Said Bush, “It was a joy…

  • J-Source

    Murdoch-Fox/NY Times

    A Globe and Mail piece by Sinclair Stewart summarizes the kerfuffle involving Fox News vs the New York Times, which has been making American media news lately. The focus is on photographs of two Times reporters allegedly doctored by Fox. As  Stewart said, they “have stirred a froth about journalistic ethics in media circles here,…

  • J-Source

    China’s broken promise: PEN’s report

    A one-year report card from PEN (the pdf is here) noted that seven months ago, the freedom of expression group called on the Chinese government to: • release all writers and journalists currently imprisoned and stop detaining, harassing, and censoring writers and journalists in China;   • end Internet censorship and reform laws used to imprison…

  • J-Source

    Wikileaks: Saving journalism?

    The title of a Wired piece revealed the ambition of Wikileaks, the document-leaking site: “Immune to Critics, Secret-Spilling Wikileaks Plans to Save Journalism … and the World” Said Editor’s Weblog: “Julian Assange, founder of Wikileaks, says his document-leaking site is helping journalists change the world … “For investigative journalists, this powerful new resource has the…

  • J-Source

    Words of solace

    I expect  journalists have always felt like ink-stained wretches at times — and especially now, with the Internet having devoured not only tens of thousands of our jobs, our hopes for financial security, and even the ink. The Poynter Institute’s Butch Ward offers some words of solace: “Remember how talented you are: You can write.…

  • J-Source

    Did naming source make him “marked man?”

    Critics of a New York Times investigative story about a CIA interrogator, whom it named, say it “has made him a marked man.” Scott Shane, the reporter, and his editors said that using the name was necessary for credibility. The Times’ Public Editor Clark Hoyt weighs the issues, and concludes: “I understand how readers can…

  • J-Source

    Investigative … torture

    Christopher Hitchens, a Washington-based journalist known for his support of the Iraq war and the U.S. war on terror, has subjected himself to waterboarding. The experiment was done in answer to critics who challenged him to try it after he defended U.S. treatment of Muslim prisoners, reported CBC News, which interviewed Hitchens about his upcoming…

  • J-Source

    Brauchli new boss at Washington Post

    Former Wall Street Journal editor Marcus Brauchli has been named executive editor of The Washington Post, stepping into the large shoes of the legendary Leonard Downie, Jr. Brauchli was briefly the managing editor of the Wall Street Journal, but resigned shortly after Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. bought WSJ owner Dow Jones. Brauchli’s resignation — and…