Dear Journalist Episode 2: For Photojournalists, Practise Makes Progress

*DISCLAIMER: THIS EPISODE CONTAINS GRAPHIC IMAGERY OF ANIMAL CRUELTY.* Yezua Ho interviews…

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.

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.

Sophi’s Choice

The Globe’s newsroom leaders are making decisions using AI—and they’re not the only ones

Good Vibes Only

Audiences are sick of bad news. Can a rising tide of optimistic news outlets fight compassion fatigue?

Covering North Korea

News coverage of the “Hermit Kingdom” is sensationalist and reductive. Is Kim Jong Un more important than the country’s 25 million citizens?

Rage Against the Machines

The “Freedom Convoy” overtook downtown Ottawa last year. On the fly, reporters sorted fact from misinformation while the protestors called them liars

Into the Deep

Amid the onslaught of daily news, four in-depth podcasts are taking their time—and getting the story right

Whether We Like it or Not

Inside the strange symbiosis of journalism and public relations