Carine Abouseif

Snapchat: From the home to the newsroom

Snapchat: From the home to the newsroom

In the second of RRJ's two-part series on "Journalism via Snapchat," Carine Abouseif looks at how Canadian journalists are using the app to create news stories

The little ghosts of Snapchat have been taking over my Twitter feed this last month. We’ve talked about how Snapchat is being used for a kind of citizen journalism. But not much has been said about how professional journalists and news outlets are using the app—at least not in Canada. These little white ghosts on […]

 Fatima Syed

A look back at the news coverage of the Ottawa shooting

A look back at the news coverage of the Ottawa shooting

How live multimedia journalism successfully reported, recorded and retold the events of the day

On October 22, 2014, news of the Ottawa shooting began with a misspelled tweet and a cellphone video by Globe and Mail reporter Josh Wingrove. At the same time, veteran CBC cameraman Jean Brousseau quietly rolled his camera and collected raw footage that would later tell a full insider story while Bruce Arthur, sports columnist for the Toronto […]

 Katrina Eschner

Much ado about endorsements

Much ado about endorsements

RRJ does a round-up of the newspaper endorsements for #elxn42

Election day is finally, finally upon us, but the longest campaign in Canadian history since 1872 didn’t end quietly for the country’s print newspapers. If anything, it ended nonsensically. Questions of who controls newspapers’ editorial voice haunted the final week of #elxn42 as print media outlets published their editorial board’s federal election choices. Some internet […]

 Davide Mastracci

Stop talking about the niqab

Stop talking about the niqab

Amira Elghawaby, from the National Council of Canadian Muslims, calls for Canadian journalists to focus on important matters

Journalists have been enthralled with the niqab debate over the last few weeks. In order to get a better sense of what to make of the niqab coverage, I spoke to the communications director at the National Council of Canadian Muslims, Amira Elghawaby. Elghawaby’s most pressing critique of niqab journalism is simply that there’s too […]

 Arielle Piat-Sauve

Tongue-Tied

Tongue-Tied

My ears were buzzing from the latest news: two female protesters had interrupted the annual anti-abortion March for Life on Parliament Hill—topless. The senior producer at CBC News Network’s Power & Politics with Evan Solomon wanted me to get both women, who were part of the feminist group FEMEN, in the studio as soon as possible. […]

 Alanna Kelly

Prize Fighters

Prize Fighters

Sports sections are on the ropes, but columnists with distinctive voices are still throwing punches

Sports sections are on the ropes, but columnists with distinctive voices are still throwing punches

 Allison Elkin

The High Road

The High Road

Journalists are heading to the streets to give audiences the real deal on drugs

Journalists are heading to the streets to give audiences the real deal on drugs

 Aimee O'Connor

Where the Wild Things Are

Where the Wild Things Are

Cute clickbait may still dominate our newsfeeds, but serious animal journalism is rising to the surface

Cute clickbait may still dominate our newsfeeds, but serious animal journalism is rising to the surface

 Cormac McGee

Game On!

Game On!

Since Sportsnet won the bid for national hockey rights, can TSN’s reporters keep their broadcasting lead?

Since Sportsnet won the bid for national hockey rights, can TSN’s reporters keep their broadcasting lead?

 Alanna Kelly

TEASER: Prize Fighters

TEASER: Prize Fighters

Here is a sneak peek at one story from our Spring 2015 issue of the Ryerson Review of Journalism magazine.