POPULARITY
How safe is our food? On this episode of Speaking Broadly, host Dana Cowin talks to one of the foremost investigative reporters of food crimes in America, Christine Haughney. For six months as a Boston Globe Spotlight Fellow, she researched a deadly e coli outbreak in leafy greens, embedded with an affected family, and published her alarming findings. Christine shares what she learned about the food system through her reporting, including her pieces for Rotten, the show she created, now on Netflix. Find out what foods you should avoid at all cost, and Haughney's recommendations for how to create a safer and more reliable food supply.Want to stay up to date on the latest Speaking Broadly episodes? To hear more conversations with Dana Cowin and her fierce guests, subscribe to Speaking Broadly (it’s free!) on iTunes or Stitcher. If you like what you hear, please take a moment to rate + review us on Apple’s podcast store and follow Dana on Instagram @speakingbroadly and @fwscout. Thanks for tuning in!Speaking Broadly is powered by Simplecast.
Christine Haughney, food and agriculture writer at Politico, joins the show to talk about her work as the investigative reporter of Rotten, Netflix’s new food crime docu-series. ROTTEN covers some of the “greatest hits” in food crime and fraud and shines a light on the pervasive greed and misconduct behind some of the world’s biggest corporations and the global food production industry. From honey to chicken to cod, this series will surprise and shock you, and hopefully encourage you to become more informed consumers. Eating Matters is powered by Simplecast
Politico food policy reporter Christine Haughney, who was the lead researcher on the Netflix documentary series 'Rotten,' talks about the series. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/consumed/support
From elaborate cheddar heists to a Serbian donkey cheese scandal to the most sacred grilled cheese ever (#blessed), Will and Mango dive headlong into dairy to praise cheeses. Featuring Rotten’s Christine Haughney. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
Encore Broadcast: Master thespian Sir Ian McKellen with etiquette advice and real talk about his least favorite co-stars… supermodel Cindy Crawford recalls her photo shoot with a 40-pound python… Investigative journalist Christine Haughney on why in wine, there’s not always truth… Will Toledo — of lo-fi indie rock band Car Seat Headrest — DJs your […]
Master thespian Sir Ian McKellen with etiquette advice and real talk about his least favorite co-stars… supermodel Cindy Crawford recalls her photo shoot with a 40-pound python… Investigative journalist Christine Haughney on why in wine, there’s not always truth… Will Toledo — of lo-fi indie rock band Car Seat Headrest — DJs your laid-back dinner […]
On today's episode of THE FOOD SEEN, we're joined by Christine Haughney, Senior Investigations Editor for Zero Point Zero Production, and her hard hitting online video series, FOOD CRIMES. After years as a news reporter for The New York Times and Washington Post, Christine brought her skills and empirical research to Food Republic. In “The Hunt for Illegal Seafood” she brings a South African fish smuggler to justice, “Mad About Saffron” speaks to the politics behind a controversial spice of the ages and it's possible terrorist ties, and “PB & Jail” pins blame on a CEO's inexcusable apathy towards the release of a food-borne pathogen into everyday food supply. From these cases, good arises, with new governing acts and laws put in place for protocol and safety, and a greater sense of how much food really effects the world.
It's All Journalism producers Michael O'Connell and Julia O'Donoghue discuss some of the big stories that have been in the news lately about the state of journalism. Here is a list of the stories referenced in our discussion. Obama’s Orwellian Image Control by Santiago Lyon, The New York Times, Dec. 11, 2013 The Obama Administration and the Press by Leonard Downie Jr. and Sara Rafsky, Committee to Protect Journalists, Oct. 10, 2013 Bloomberg News Suspends Reporter Whose Article on China Was Not Published, by Edward Wong and Christine Haughney, The New York Times, Nov. 17, 2013 Against 'Long-Form Journalism' by James Bennet, The Atlantic, Dec. 12, 2013 The Guardian experiments with a robot-generated newspaper with The Long Good Read by Justin Ellis, Nieman Journalism Lab, Dec. 3, 2013 Â