NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

USA Conversation

The Conversation USA

The Conversation USA

Journalism has become ground zero for the vocation crisis

  • Written by Matthew Powers, Associate Professor of Communication, University of Washington
imageJournalist Barbara Walters works at her desk at her home in New York in 1966.Rowland Scherman/Getty Images

This year has been a grim one for journalism, with layoffs at the Los Angeles Times, Time magazine, NBC News, Forbes, National Geographic, Business Insider and Sports Illustrated. Further cuts loom in newsrooms across the U.S.

Growing numbers...

Read more: Journalism has become ground zero for the vocation crisis

More Articles ...

  1. Lead water pipes created a health disaster in Flint, but replacing them with cheaper plastic − as some cities are doing − carries hidden costs
  2. When people are under economic stress, their pets suffer too – we found parts of Detroit that are animal welfare deserts
  3. Kidneys from Black donors are more likely to be thrown away − a bioethicist explains why
  4. Genetic testing cannot reveal the gender of your baby − two genetic counselors explain the complexities of sex and gender
  5. US charitable giving dipped to $557B in 2023, but outlook is getting brighter
  6. Escalating Israel-Hezbollah clashes threaten to spark regional war and force US into conflict with Iran
  7. ‘I love this work, but it’s killing me’: The unique toll of being a spiritual leader today
  8. Rocks on Rapa Nui tell the story of a small, resilient population − countering the notion of a doomed overpopulated island
  9. Making art is a uniquely human act, and one that provides a wellspring of health benefits
  10. Boost your immune system with this centuries-old health hack: Vaccines
  11. Paying reparations for slavery is possible – based on a study of federal compensation to farmers, fishermen, coal miners, radiation victims and 70 other groups
  12. Philly has highest STI rates in the country – improving sex ed in schools and access to at-home testing could lower rates
  13. Southern Baptists may have rejected a constitutional amendment opposing female pastors, but that does not mean they are changing their views on women’s leadership in church
  14. Elder fraud has reached epidemic proportions – a geriatrician explains what older Americans need to know
  15. Is Earth really getting too hot for people to survive? A scientist explains extreme heat and the role of climate change
  16. What Frederick Douglass learned from an Irish antislavery activist: ‘Agitate, agitate, agitate’
  17. Central banks face threats to their independence − and that isn’t good news for sound economic stewardship (or battling inflation)
  18. Calls to US poison centers spiked after ‘magic mushrooms’ were decriminalized
  19. From glowing corals to vomiting shrimp, animals have used bioluminescence to communicate for millions of years – here’s what scientists still don’t know about it
  20. Supreme Court unanimously concludes that anti-abortion groups have no standing to challenge access to mifepristone – but the drug likely faces more court challenges
  21. Supreme Court sides with Starbucks in labor case that could hinder government’s ability to intervene in some unionization disputes
  22. An homage to the dad joke, one of the great traditions of fatherhood
  23. The US is losing wetlands at an accelerating rate − here’s how the private sector can help protect these valuable resources
  24. Supreme Court justices secretly recorded – the legal issues and what they mean for the rest of us
  25. Space weather forecasting needs an upgrade to protect future Artemis astronauts
  26. Ukraine’s draft woes leave the West facing pressure to make up for the troop shortfall
  27. People ambivalent about political issues support violence more than those with clear opinions
  28. Civil rights leader James Lawson, who learned from Gandhi, used nonviolent resistance and the ‘power of love’ to challenge injustice
  29. Philadelphia’s 200-year-old disability records show welfare reform movement’s early shift toward rationing care and punishing poor people
  30. Cities with empty commercial space and housing shortages are converting office buildings into apartments – here’s what they’re learning
  31. Spikes, seat dividers, even ‘Baby Shark’ − camping bans like the one under review at SCOTUS are part of broader strategies that push out homeless people
  32. Inflation is cooling, but not fast enough for the Fed: Policymakers now expect only one rate cut in 2024
  33. Microrobots made of algae carry chemo directly to lung tumors, improving cancer treatment
  34. Columbia Law Review article critical of Israel sparks battle between student editors and their board − highlighting fragility of academic freedom
  35. American womanhood is not what it used to be − understanding the backlash to Dobbs v. Jackson
  36. There’s a strange history of white journalists trying to better understand the Black experience by ‘becoming’ Black
  37. ‘Fiddler on the Roof’ may be many Americans’ image of Judaism – but American Jews’ heritage is stunningly diverse
  38. Politics is still both local and personal – but only for independents, not for Democrats or Republicans
  39. Wastewater surveillance reveals pathogens in Detroit’s population, helping monitor and predict disease outbreaks since 2017
  40. Paris 2024 Olympics to debut high-level breakdancing – and physics in action
  41. Food has a climate problem: Nitrous oxide emissions are accelerating with growing demand for fertilizer and meat – but there are solutions
  42. African elephants address one another with name-like calls − similar to humans
  43. 8 fun questions about The Conversation
  44. How reciting the Pledge of Allegiance became a sacred, patriotic ritual
  45. PFAS are toxic ‘forever chemicals’ that linger in our air, water, soil and bodies – here’s how to keep them out of your drinking water
  46. Summertime can be germy: A microbiologist explains how to avoid getting sick at the barbecue, in the pool or on the trail
  47. Independent voters are few in number, influential in close elections – and hard for campaigns to reach
  48. Losing winter ice is changing the Great Lakes food web – here’s how light is shaping life underwater
  49. Are older adults more vulnerable to scams? What psychologists have learned about who’s most susceptible, and when
  50. Complaints are different when customers think a company cares