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 Davide Mastracci

Headlines on the suicide bombing in Beirut are dehumanizing

Headlines on the suicide bombing in Beirut are dehumanizing

The New York Times has since corrected its headline, but some Canadian publications haven't

At least 43 people were killed by a double suicide bombing in a residential area of Beirut yesterday, an attack for which ISIL has since claimed responsibility. The New York Times initially reported the story with this headline, causing an uproar on Twitter. Reuters also ran with a similar headline. ISIS blows up crowd of […]

 Katrina Eschner

Chatelaine Rejoins the Fray

Chatelaine Rejoins the Fray

Can new editor Lianne George recapture the magazine’s former glory by bringing smart journalism and feminist values back to the mix?

Heather McIntosh was cleaning out her grandmother’s house when she found some pages from an old issue of Chatelaine that had been used to seal a painting into its frame. The University of Ottawa master’s student was captivated. McIntosh says while it’s easy to label the magazine as exclusively recipes and cosmetics, these pages from […]

 Sydney Hamilton

Monocle magazine: “Only old people think print is dead”

Monocle magazine: “Only old people think print is dead”

While the majority of magazines are shifting to digital, Monocle is thriving as a print magazine

Tyler Brûlé and Andrew Tuck launched Monocle in 2007 as a global, general interest print magazine. Many people were skeptical of a magazine going against the tide–launching print in the alleged digital age. But Monocle’s circulation numbers continue to grow at a fast pace. “As circulations were in decline for a number of magazines, we […]

 Davide Mastracci

The McGill Daily acknowledges its location on unceded indigenous territory

The McGill Daily acknowledges its location on unceded indigenous territory

Student newspapers often lead the way in crafting ethical journalism

The McGill Daily, a student newspaper at McGill University, has taken a commendable step toward acknowledging the role journalism institutions in Canada have played in perpetuating discrimination against indigenous people. A land acknowledgement, reading “The McGill Daily is located on unceded Kanien’Keha:Ka territory” is prominently displayed on the top-left corner of the Daily’s homepage, under the […]

 Blair Mlotek

Everybody’s Got a Story that’ll Break Your Heart

Everybody’s Got a Story that’ll Break Your Heart

First-person journalism can bring out the critics, but that hasn’t stopped online publications from using it as a powerful tool to connect with readers

Leigh Stein’s boyfriend Jason threw her against the refrigerator and didn’t believe she was hurt until she showed him the bruises. They had moved to New Mexico together so she could write her book while he worked—it was the most romantic plan she had ever heard. She recounted her relationship in a BuzzFeed story about […]

 Anda Zeng

How to be a one-man newsroom

How to be a one-man newsroom

For 10 weeks, Peter Lozinski produced a newspaper averaging 44 pages, ran its website and built its social media presence

For his 23rd birthday, Peter Lozinski received a newspaper. The Cold Lake Sun, to be exact. To be even more specific, the responsibility of single-handedly producing a weekly paper that serves a population of 15,000. For 10 brutal weeks this year, Lozinski was running a one-man newsroom. Lozinski was hired as a reporter for the […]

 Fatima Syed

Is Viceland the future of television journalism?

Is Viceland the future of television journalism?

Vice Media is re-imagining the nature of broadcasting and television advertising for the millennials in a risky endeavor

Coming soon to a television near you: drugs, multicultural robots and foreign places. A year ago, Rogers announced a three-year $100 million content, studio and distribution partnership with Vice Media to produce daily news and long-form content like documentaries on food, fashion, technology and sports. Yesterday, this become a reality as the official trailer for the 24-hour specialty […]

 Erin Sylvester

Vignette Journalism: Storytelling for the Social Media Age

Vignette Journalism: Storytelling for the Social Media Age

How news outlets engage readers and audiences with tales of unsung people doing extraordinary things

I sat in a heart surgeon’s office, waiting to ask what it’s like to touch a beating heart. It’s not every day that you get to put such questions to people, even as a journalist. But this summer at the Calgary Herald, my editor assigned me to a project called What’s it Like? The idea […]

 Viviane Fairbank

Offleash podcast: Fact checking

Offleash podcast: Fact checking

Offleash is the Ryerson Review of Journalism‘s first-ever regular podcast, published on RRJ.ca every second Wednesday at 3:33 p.m. In this second episode, hosts Viviane, Eternity, and Allison speak to Rudy Lee, a freelance fact checker in New York, and Veronica Maddocks, head of research at Toronto Life, about the current state of fact checking in […]

 Davide Mastracci

Scaachi Koul faced some legitimate criticism that shouldn’t be ignored

Scaachi Koul faced some legitimate criticism that shouldn’t be ignored

Fatima Syed's blog post lacks the level of nuance needed when discussing race and representation

My fellow blog editor Fatima Syed wrote an important blog post yesterday responding to the Twitter debate regarding BuzzFeed Canada senior writer Scaachi Koul’s appearance on The National. I agree with the main argument put across in Syed’s post: we need to fight for newsroom diversity in order to allow more women of colour to […]

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