Lisa Coxon

I don’t always play by hometown rules

I don’t always play by hometown rules

As I reach for the voice recorder on the desk, the professor asks, casually: “You’ll send me my quotes, right?” I freeze. I’m sitting in an office on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean, finishing up an interview my classmate and I are conducting for a story about legalizing weed.

By Lisa Coxon  As I reach for the voice recorder on the desk, the professor asks, casually: “You’ll send me my quotes, right?” I freeze. I’m sitting in an office on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean, finishing up an interview my classmate and I are conducting for a story about legalizing weed. Trying to […]

 Lisa Coxon

I don’t always play by hometown rules

I don’t always play by hometown rules

As I reach for the voice recorder on the desk, the professor asks, casually: “You’ll send me my quotes, right?” I freeze. I’m sitting in an office on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean, finishing up an interview my classmate and I are conducting for a story about legalizing weed.

As I reach for the voice recorder on the desk, the professor asks, casually: “You’ll send me my quotes, right?” I freeze. I’m sitting in an office on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean, finishing up an interview my classmate and I are conducting for a story about legalizing weed. Trying to be polite, […]

 Lisa Coxon

How Glen McGregor and Stephen Maher broke the robocalls scandal

How Glen McGregor and Stephen Maher broke the robocalls scandal

The journalists who uncovered Elections Canada’s investigation into fraudulent calls that misdirected voters in 2011

This story has been updated from a previous version. By Lisa Coxon After a few glasses of Côtes du Rhônes, Stephen Maher asks if we can turn the recorders off—one faces him; the other, Glen McGregor. We’re on the patio of Métropolitain, a restaurant just below Parliament Hill that’s a popular after-work hangout among political […]

 Lisa Coxon

What we lose when papers give up on beat reporting

What we lose when papers give up on beat reporting

As general assignment becomes the norm in newsrooms, publishers save money while the journalism—and the readers—suffer

By Lisa Coxon When Rod Mickleburgh was a labour reporter for The Vancouver Sun in the 1970s, he worked the night shift. Because that meant no deadlines, he’d sit at his desk, call union leaders at home and have long chats. After more than a decade on the beat, Mickleburgh had the sources and the instincts to […]