A Secretive Hedge Fund Is Gutting Newsrooms
Inside Alden Global Capital.
Inside Alden Global Capital.
McKay Coppins The Atlantic Oct 2021 Permalink
A history of the New York Times Styles section.
Jacqui Shine The Awl Nov 2014 45min Permalink
Growing old at the Playboy Mansion.
Chris Jones Esquire Apr 2013 40min Permalink
On navigating the New York media world as a young journalist.
Nora Ephron Elle Nov 2010 15min Permalink
A profile of Jimmy Breslin.
Ambrose Clancy GQ Nov 1987 20min Permalink
How New York Times is clawing its way into the future:
The main goal is... to transform the Times’ digital subscriptions into the main engine of a billion-dollar business, one that could pay to put reporters on the ground in 174 countries even if (OK, when) the printing presses stop forever. To hit that mark, the Times is embarking on an ambitious plan inspired by the strategies of Netflix, Spotify, and HBO: invest heavily in a core offering... while continuously adding new online services and features... so that a subscription becomes indispensable to the lives of its existing subscribers and more attractive to future ones.
Gabriel Snyder Wired Feb 2017 20min Permalink
The demise of a once-great newspaper.
Robert Sanchez 5280 Sep 2016 25min Permalink
Fifty years ago, Rona Barrett forged a Hollywood gossip empire. Then she left it all behind, her innovations attributed to others, her legacy almost entirely overlooked.
Anne Helen Petersen Buzzfeed May 2016 25min Permalink
The post-newsroom lives of veteran newspaper reporters who have lost their jobs.
Dale Mahardige The Nation Mar 2016 Permalink
A profile of New York Times obituary writer Alden Whitman.
Gay Talese Esquire Feb 1966 20min Permalink
Joan Didion versus the boys on the bus:
American reporters “like” covering a presidential campaign (it gets them out on the road, it has balloons, it has music, it is viewed as a big story, one that leads to the respect of one’s peers, to the Sunday shows, to lecture fees and often to Washington), which is one reason why there has developed among those who do it so arresting an enthusiasm for overlooking the contradictions inherent in reporting that which occurs only in order to be reported.
Joan Didion New York Review of Books Oct 1988 40min Permalink
David Simon and Richard Price, two of the greatest crime storytellers of our time, talk about their craft.
David Simon, Richard Price Guernica Apr 2015 25min Permalink
Joseph Mitchell used composites in his non-fiction, invented characters and added flourishes to his facts. Does it matter?
Janet Malcolm New York Review of Books Apr 2015 20min Permalink
The article that kept the New Yorker alive was written by a debutante. Who happened to be married to Irving Berlin.
Ian Frazier New Yorker Feb 2015 25min Permalink
They’re still printing it on paper.
Reeves Wiedeman Popular Mechanics Feb 2015 Permalink
David Carr, the New York Times media reporter and a friend, died Thursday night in the newsroom.
Here are some of our favorite pieces from his archive.
“Journalists are the most craven recognition freaks on the planet. We make our mistakes in public because we want our innermost thoughts pasted on the refrigerator of American consciousness.”
David Carr Washington City Paper Apr 1999 10min
“Even people who used to say horrible things about [Ruth] Shalit at anonymous remove loved seeing her at parties, a cerebral confection of a person — you never knew what might pop out of those oddly colored lips.”
David Carr Washington City Paper Apr 1999
“What remains is still a neighborhood of people with hopes of mobility, but Chancellor Avenue, the heart of the Weequahic neighborhood, no longer has any commercial viability. Turn down the wrong block, some locals say, and commerce of another sort, furtive and transitory, is under way.”
David Carr New York Times Oct 2004
“I always thought that people who spent endless amounts of time drilling into their personal histories are fundamentally unhappy in their lives, and I’m not. I’m ecstatic in my own dark, morbid way and subscribe to a theory of the past that allows the future to unfold: We all did the best we could.”
David Carr New York Times Magazine Jul 2008 30min
“Behind the collapse of the Tribune deal and the bankruptcy is a classic example of financial hubris. Mr. Zell, a hard-charging real estate mogul with virtually no experience in the newspaper business, decided that a deal financed with heavy borrowing and followed with aggressive cost-cutting could succeed where the longtime Tribune executives he derided as bureaucrats had failed.”
David Carr New York Times Oct 2010 15min
“I mean, I live in New Jersey, which has a very good local paper called The Star-Ledger, but they’re about half as big as they used to be, and this place is a game-preserve of corruption—we needed three buses to haul away the mayors and various city council members the last time the FBI came in. I can’t help but think that the absence of high-level, sustained-accountability journalism had something to do with that.”
Aaron Sorkin Interview May 2011 10min
Apr 1999 – May 2011 Permalink
What does satire do? What should we expect of it? Is it crucial to Western culture that we be free to produce it?
Tim Parks New York Review of Books Jan 2015 10min Permalink
How a reporter’s assistant got into trouble with Beijing security.
Angela Köckritz Die Zeit Jan 2015 25min Permalink
What it was like to edit The New Republic at its most contentious.
One of the little tweaks I made the first time I got the job was to change the slogan on the table of contents from “A Journal of Politics and the Arts” back to the original: “A Weekly Journal of Opinion.” All the fine reporting notwithstanding, what The New Republic did best, had always done best, was opinion. Its politics were polemical, its art was the art of argument.
Hendrik Hertzberg New Republic Nov 2014 10min Permalink
“I was in the visiting clubhouse waiting to interview one of the Oakland A’s this year when one of the players called, ‘Here, pussy’—as though he were calling a cat. But of course, he hadn’t lost Fluffy; he’d found a woman in his locker room.”
Jennifer Briggs Dallas Observer Jun 1992 35min Permalink
Sixteen years after he was exposed as the most fraudulent journalist of his generation, Stephen Glass is confronted by an old friend.
Hanna Rosin The New Republic Nov 2014 25min Permalink
Ben Bradlee’s nagging concerns about Deep Throat.
Jeff Himmelman New York Apr 2012 20min Permalink
A journalist’s memories of covering the great Baltimore fire of 1904.
H.L. Mencken Newspaper Days Jan 1941 30min Permalink
Woodward and Bernstein’s other anonymous sources.
Max Holland Newsweek Oct 2014 Permalink
Marital advice columns from the past.
Rebecca Onion Aeon Sep 2014 15min Permalink