An illustration of two people on two phone screens holding microphones.

Word on the Streeter

Our parents taught us not to talk to strangers. But interviewing people on the street is a journalism staple—a practice that continues to make waves on social media.

Dear Journalist Episode 1: A Code of Ethics?

In the first episode of Dear Journalist, Mark Henick interviews Kevin Newman, discussing with co-hosts Hannah Mercanti and Yezua Ho afterwards. Newman is a seasoned journalist with a distinguished career in the field, best known for his role as the former chief anchor of Global National and as host and managing editor of CTV’s W5. He shares insights from his extensive experience, and a valuable lesson he learned early in his journalism career.

How Climate Change Is Changing Travel Writing

Climate change is putting travel journalists in a complicated situation.

Dear Journalist Podcast Trailer

Dear Journalist is a monthly podcast created by the masthead at the Review of Journalism, interviewing established Canadian journalists about lessons they were only able to learn in the field.
Rectangle Reviewed Logo

Reviewed Trailer

This year the Review of Journalism turns forty. Join us for our 40th anniversary podcast, Review-ed Hosts, Mariana, Sahaana and Lidia will review Canada’s “watchdog on the watchdogs.” They’ll revisit past stories and explore how Review alumni, journalism and storytelling has changed. After four decades on assignment, it’s time for the Review to be Review-ed.
Hockey player surrounded by mics in a locker room.

Investigative Sports Journalists Take on Canada’s Toxic Culture

Investigative sports journalism has existed for generations in countries like the United States, given the magnitude of its sports world. In Canada, however, it’s relatively new.
A head of lettuce with googly eyes.

Quit When You’re A Head…of Lettuce

Would Liz Truss resign before a fresh lettuce went mouldy? The Daily Star’s Ed Keeble live streamed a lettuce to find out, turning planned vacation time to a viral sensation on social media.

How not to cover a natural disaster

I’m about to graduate from my journalism degree, despite waning faith in this industry

‘Everybody Could Be a Journalist’

In the wake of consistent layoffs, some small newsrooms are shifting to a co-operative model, and relying on volunteer journalism