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On Monday, Carlos Watson, the founder of Ozy Media, was sentenced to nearly 10 years – 116 months – in prison for fraud. Today, in Ben's first extensive conversation about it since Watson's arrest, he and Nayeema discuss Ozy, the scandal, and what it reveals about the broader digital media and advertising business. They bring on Madison and Wall analyst and former GroupM Global President for Business Intelligence, Brian Wieser, to talk about why marketers and investors were duped by Watson, what changed in the aftermath, and what the next digital media scam might be. After the conversation, Max Tani joins them to debrief. If you want more on the Ozy story, check out the three-part series, “The Unraveling of Ozy Media” from CJR's The Kicker. And for more from Brian Wieser, check out Madison and Wall's podcast and newsletter. NOTE: We'll be off next week – but stay tuned for our next episode (and some exciting news) on January 3rd, 2025. If you have a tip or a comment, please email us mixedsignals@semafor.com Find us on X: @semaforben, @nayeema, @maxwelltani or on instagram.com/nayeemaraza Sign up for Semafor Media's Sunday newsletter: https://www.semafor.com/newsletters/media
Pokémon Go is more than a worldwide craze that inhttps://www.patreon.com/QAAspired millions to hunt Zigzagoons through smartphone-enabled alternate reality. According to intelligence officials in several countries, it's also an information security threat. Since the game's release by game developer Niantic in 2016, people have pondered the potential uses of the data that's collected by aspiring PokéMasters as they meander outside and scan virtual PokéStops. Travis, Jake, Julian, and Liv dive into why a children's game about collecting fighting pets has inspired such paranoia. Including how Niantic's startup ancestor Keyhole, Inc. was saved from bankruptcy by the CIA, how Niantic's former parent company Google committed one of the worst data privacy violations in history through the “Wi-Spy” scandal, and Niantic's recent announcement that Pokemon Go data is being used to produce an artificial intelligence system they call a Large Geospatial Model (LGM). Gotta Catch ‘Em All! And by “Em All” we mean “massive amounts of data from everyone's smartphones for undisclosed purposes.” Subscribe for $5 a month to get all the premium episodes: https://www.patreon.com/qaa Editing by Corey Klotz. Theme by Nick Sena. Additional music by Pontus Berghe. Theme Vocals by THEY/LIVE (https://instagram.com/theyylivve / https://sptfy.com/QrDm). Cover Art by Pedro Correa: (https://pedrocorrea.com) https://qaapodcast.com QAA was known as the QAnon Anonymous podcast. REFERENCES Consumer Watchdog. Lost In The Cloud: Google And the US Government https://insidegoogle.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/GOOGGovfinal012411.pdf Gawker. Pokemon Go Is A Government Surveillance Psyop Conspiracy https://web.archive.org/web/20160712023458/http://blackbag.gawker.com/pokemon-go-is-a-government-surveillance-psyop-conspirac-1783461240 Pando. Oakland emails give another glimpse into the Google-Military-Surveillance Complex https://web.archive.org/web/20150819032041/https://pando.com/2014/03/07/the-google-military-surveillance-complex/ Financial Times. Lunch with the FT: Pokémon Go creator John Hanke https://www-ft-com.ezp-prod1.hul.harvard.edu/content/596ec790-afe8-11e6-9c37-5787335499a0 Dalton, Craig M. "Sovereigns, spooks, and hackers: An early history of Google geo services and map mashups." Cartographica: The International Journal for Geographic Information and Geovisualization 48.4 (2013): 261-274. Kilday, Bill. Never lost again: The Google mapping revolution that sparked new industries and augmented our reality. Harper Business, 2018. Wes's Blog. My Personal Journey On Google Earth https://westhierry.blogspot.com/2008/07/my-personal-journey-on-google-earth.html Intercept. Privacy Scandal Haunts Pokemon Go CEO https://theintercept.com/2016/08/09/privacy-scandal-haunts-pokemon-gos-ceo/ CJR. Poor coverage of Google's Street View scandal settlement https://www.cjr.org/the_audit/misleading_coverage_of_street.php RFI. Pokemon Go to jail - Frenchman nabbed hunting Pokemon on Indonesian military base. https://www.rfi.fr/en/asia-pacific/20160719-pokemon-go-jail-frenchman-nabbed-hunting-pokemon-indonesian-military-base CIA Office of Security. Are you At An Agency Facility? Pokemon NO! https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/docs/are%20you%20at%20an%20agency%20faci%5B15210727%5D.pdf Foreign Policy. The Great Pokemon Go Spy Panic. https://foreignpolicy.com/2024/11/29/pokemongo-cia-nsa-intelligence-spying/ Niantic Labs. Building a Large Geospatial Model to Achieve Spatial Intelligence https://nianticlabs.com/news/largegeospatialmodel
Welcome to the 2024 edition of the Canadian Motocross Unfiltered Podcast, brought to you by RACE TECH and Charlie Johnston Racing. Today the boys dig into the the Canadian contingent racing and doing well in AMA SX; Julien Benek joins Gauldy for a quick check-in after a great ride; some sincere St. Cyr appreciation; Cole Thompson representing Canadian Moto as he always does with solid results; and last but not least another epic Gauldy rant. As always the best way to support us is to support our great sponsors and today, the best sponsor to support is RACE TECH and our favourite Race Tech service centre, Charlie Johnston Racing out of Calgary. If you're in western Canada, look to CJR and Race Tech to take your 2024 moto campaign to the next level.
A moins de vivre dans une grotte, tout le monde a entendu parler au cours des deux dernières années de la donc désormais célèbre Cour de justice de la République ou CJR. Mais en avoir entendu parler et comprendre son rôle, son fonctionnement, sont deux choses différentes. La Cour de justice de la République est une institution créée par la révision constitutionnelle de 1993. Elle remplace alors la compétence de la Haute Cour de justice et elle juge les membres du gouvernement pour les actes délictueux ou criminels commis dans l'exercice de leur fonction. Plusieurs fois décriée par son laxisme et sa complaisance envers les personnes poursuivies devant elle, la Cour est accusée d'être une justice d'exception, sa suppression a été plusieurs fois envisagée. Pourtant, sa création était déjà la manifestation d'une normalisation du statut des ministres afin de renforcer la crédibilité et la transparence de leur action politique. Pour rappel, leur responsabilité politique est mise en œuvre par l'Assemblée nationale. Devant la CJR, les membres du Gouvernement doivent rendre compte des infractions qu'ils pourraient commettre dans le cadre de leur fonction. A l'heure de l'exigence d'une plus grande transparence, de la crise de la représentativité et de la confiance dans les institutions politiques, cette juridiction se justifie-t-elle encore ? Pour répondre à ces questions importantes d'un point de vue sociétal comme juridique, nous recevons Laurent Malka, enseignant au sein de la Prépa ISP
Cliquez ici pour accéder gratuitement aux articles lus de Mediapart : https://m.audiomeans.fr/s/P-UmoTbNLs Le garde des Sceaux a matériellement commis le délit de prise illégale d'intérêts, mais en l'absence d'élément intentionnel, l'infraction n'est pas constituée, a décidé la Cour de justice de la République. Côté majorité, certains considèrent que cette décision marque la reprise en main du politique sur le « pouvoir des juges ». Un article de Michel Deléan et Ellen Salvi publié le mercredi 29 novembre 2023 lu par Jérémy Zylberberg.
Le jugement de la cour de justice de la république dans l'affaire Dupont-Moretti -Bruno Cautrès, Politologue, Chercheur CNRS au Cevipof -Florence Rouas, Avocate pénaliste au barreau de Paris -Daïc Auduit, éditorialiste politique France Info TV Le viol, arme de guerre le 7 octobre ? -Frédéric Joli, porte-parole du CICR -Céline Bardet, Juriste et enquêtrice criminelle internationale, fondatrice et directrice de l'ONG "We are Not Weapons of War" -Agnès Vahramian, correspondante de France Télévisions en Israël
La Cour de Justice de la République en questions, après l'affaire Dupont-Moretti -Bruno Cautrès, Politologue, Chercheur CNRS au Cevipof - Daïc Audouit , éditorialiste politique France Info TV La police, une institution en crise? -Frédéric Ploquin, Spécialiste du grand banditisme, auteur de "Les réseaux secrets de la police: Loges, influence et corruption" aux éditions « Nouveau Monde »
C dans l'air du 29 novembre 2023 - La relaxe de Dupond-Moretti, le retour de Cahuzac... Le verdict était très attendu. Eric Dupond-Moretti a été relaxé ce mercredi après-midi par la Cour de justice de la République, seule juridiction compétente pour juger des délits et crimes des membres du gouvernement dans l'exercice de leur fonction. Après deux semaines de suspens, la juridiction composée à majorité d'élus politiques de tous horizons a rendu sa décision, à laquelle le garde des Sceaux – qui a toujours contesté les faits reprochés – savait son avenir politique suspendu. Un an de prison avec sursis avait été requis par le ministère public. Il lui était reproché, dans deux affaires distinctes, d'avoir usé de sa fonction de ministre pour régler ses comptes avec quatre magistrats, un ex-juge d'instruction à Monaco et trois membres du Parquet national financier (PNF), avec lesquels il avait eu un contentieux du temps où il portait la robe. "Aucun élément ne permet de dire qu'il est passé outre à la situation de conflit d'intérêt qui n'avait pas été portée à sa connaissance", a expliqué le président de la CJR. "C'est ce que l'on espérait, c'est ce que le droit dictait", a réagi Jacqueline Laffont, l'une des avocates d'Eric Dupond-Moretti. C'était la première fois qu'un ministre de la Justice en exercice était jugé et depuis quinze jours, les pronostics sur le sort du garde des Sceaux allaient bon train. Compte tenu de cette relaxe, l'ancien ténor des assises, chouchou d'Emmanuel Macron, devenu pilier du gouvernement, devrait donc poursuivre son mandat place Vendôme. Il sera reçu dans l'après-midi par le président de la République a indiqué son entourage. Mais quelle trace ce procès du garde des Sceaux laissera-t-il ? Qu'est-ce que la Cour de justice de la République (CJR) ? Comment un ministre est-il jugé ? Enfin une personnalité éclaboussée par un scandale peut-elle revenir en politique ? L'ex-ministre Jérôme Cahuzac, condamné en 2018 pour fraude fiscale, a déclaré ce lundi sur France Inter ne "rien s'interdire" quant à un éventuel retour en politique, via un mandat d'élu. Mais qu'en pensent les Français ? LES EXPERTS : - CHRISTOPHE BARBIER - Éditorialiste politique, conseiller de la rédaction - Franc-Tireur - MATHIEU DELAHOUSSE - Grand reporter - L'Obs - AUDREY GOUTARD - Grand reporter spécialisée dans les faits de société - France Télévisions - BRICE TEINTURIER - Directeur général délégué - Institut de sondages Ipsos
durée : 00:19:16 - Journal de 18h - Les juges de la CJR ont estimé que le ministre de la Justice n'avait pas eu l'intention de commettre le délit de prise illégale d'intérêts pour lequel il était jugé. Eric Dupond-Moretti va pouvoir rester au gouvernement, s'est aussitôt réjouie la Première ministre Elisabeth Borne.
durée : 00:19:16 - Journal de 18h - Les juges de la CJR ont estimé que le ministre de la Justice n'avait pas eu l'intention de commettre le délit de prise illégale d'intérêts pour lequel il était jugé. Eric Dupond-Moretti va pouvoir rester au gouvernement, s'est aussitôt réjouie la Première ministre Elisabeth Borne.
Dans ce deuxième épisode, vous entendrez en première partie l'avocat au barreau de Paris, ancien vice-bâtonnier du Barreau de Paris et ancien Président de l'Association des avocats pénalistes de France Jean-Yves Le Borgne, qui partage son analyse sur le procès du garde des Sceaux en exercice Éric Dupond-Moretti devant la décriée Cour de Justice de la République (CJR).En seconde partie, Laurent Neumann interroge Aurélia Devos, première vice-présidente adjointe et présidente de la 5ème chambre correctionnelle du tribunal judiciaire de Lille, qui présente son ouvrage « Crimes contre l'humanité : le combat d'une procureure », paru aux éditions Calmann Lévy. Elle y fait le récit de son passionnant parcours au sein du pôle « Crimes contre l'humanité, crimes et délits de guerre » du parquet de Paris. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Cliquez ici pour accéder gratuitement aux articles lus de Mediapart : https://m.audiomeans.fr/s/P-UmoTbNLs Sévère en paroles, le procureur général Rémy Heitz n'a cependant réclamé qu'une peine d'un an de prison avec sursis contre Éric Dupond-Moretti, ce mercredi à la Cour de justice de la République. Un article de Michel Deléan publié le 15 novembre 2023 lu par Jérémy Zylberberg.
durée : 00:04:13 - À la source - par : Mattéo Caranta - Des politiques peuvent-ils juger des politiques ? Comment faire la différence entre la faute politique et la responsabilité pénale ? Depuis sa création, la Cour de Justice de la République pose question, retour à la source !
Cliquez ici pour accéder gratuitement aux articles lus de Mediapart : https://m.audiomeans.fr/s/P-UmoTbNLs À l'ouverture des débats devant la Cour de justice de la République, le procureur général Rémy Heitz, qui représente l'accusation, a rappelé l'importance du dossier de « prise illégale d'intérêts » qui vise le ministre de la justice, jugé alors qu'il est en fonction. Un article de Michel Deléan publié lundi 6 novembre 2023, lu par Christine Pâris.
durée : 00:14:53 - Journal de 8 h - Éric Dupond-Moretti va s'expliquer à partir de ce lundi 6 novembre devant la Cour de justice de la République. Le garde des Sceaux est jugé pour prise illégale d'intérêts.
durée : 00:14:53 - Journal de 8 h - Éric Dupond-Moretti va s'expliquer à partir de ce lundi 6 novembre devant la Cour de justice de la République. Le garde des Sceaux est jugé pour prise illégale d'intérêts.
durée : 00:03:55 - Le Billet politique - par : Jean Leymarie - Le procès d'Eric Moretti débute devant la CJR, la Cour de justice de la République. Le garde des Sceaux comparaît pour prise illégale d'intérêts. Pour la plupart, les juges de la CJR sont eux-mêmes... des politiques. Est-ce normal ?
durée : 00:14:53 - Journal de 8 h - Éric Dupond-Moretti va s'expliquer à partir de ce lundi 6 novembre devant la Cour de justice de la République. Le garde des Sceaux est jugé pour prise illégale d'intérêts.
In this episode, Jeffrey sits down with Jason Mendelson, a recovering Venture Capitalist, attorney, CJR advocate, musician, producer, and all-around badass changemaker and entrepreneur. They discuss his upbringing, the injury that led him away from music for a time, becoming a venture capitalist, and more. He's written and recorded his own album, played in various bands, and produced for stars like Aloe Blacc, Payge Turner, and many more and also founded CJR organization Breakthrough. Watch this episode on YouTube: https://youtu.be/zrppDxI_5T0 Learn more: Host: Jeffrey M. Zucker Producer: Kait Grey Editor: Nick Case Recording date: 7/24/23 Breakthrough: https://timetobreakthrough.org/ https://www.linkedin.com/company/timetobreakthrough/ Books: Venture Deals - https://a.co/d/38pCzmM How to Be a Lawyer - https://a.co/d/cCAQ2TQ Jace Allen music: https://jaceallen.com https://open.spotify.com/artist/6PbQjHVCUrghNLctvGturu https://jaceallen.bandcamp.com/ https://www.youtube.com/@jaceallen https://www.instagram.com/jaceallen_music/ https://www.facebook.com/jaceallenmusic https://music.apple.com/us/artist/jace-allen/1365882791 https://soundcloud.com/user-949081121 Gen3 Music: https://gen3band.com/ https://open.spotify.com/artist/1TPAYfqlShQs2XeMXHOil3?si=OolkMYJISuy14EUj2k0vJw https://music.apple.com/us/artist/gen3/1561047640 https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClhSEHtaWhSwVG3-MlenEIg Bio: Jason: I am a musician and work in the criminal justice reform ecosystem. I've written a best-selling book (Venture Deals) and will release my second book "How To Be a Lawyer" in Q2 2022. In my past, I have been a venture capitalist, startup co-founder, adjunct professor and part-time author in Boulder, CO. Previously, I was an attorney at a large tech Law firm and prior to that, a software engineer. I won't answer LinkedIn requests for anything pertaining to my tech-world background. If you want to chat about something in the criminal justice reform space or musical (and not music tech / startup), I'm all ears! Jace Allen Music Bio 0:00 - Intro 8:59 - Importance of Giving Back 11:01 - Education 12:56 - Early Music Career 15:29 - Injury 18:31 - Corporate Life 24:40 - Venture Capital 26:37 - Venture Deals, How to Be Smarter Than Your Lawyer and Venture Capitalist 30:47 - Breakthrough 40:29 - Law Professor 41:14 - How to Be a Lawyer: The Path from Law School to Success 44:04 - SRS Aquium 47:20 - AI 53:11 - Jace Allen 55:08 - Good Noise Studios 1:00:47 - Gen3 1:02:42 - Art Creating Impact 1:08:15 - Stand Together Foundation 1:16:40 - When Work Affected Change 1:21:20 - Ask Jeff a Question 1:23:05 - Most Proud of 1:24:44 - Snap Your Fingers 1:25:54 - How to Support
Today Gauldy checks in with Julien Perrier of the Partzilla PRMX Race Team, Brought to you by KTM Canada, Husqvarna Canada and GasGas Canada, as well as Race Tech and CJR. Starting in 2010, Julien has built the Partzilla PRMX Race Team into one of the strongest teams in the Canadian pits as well as a staple of the American supercross scene. In this episode, Gauldy and Julien get into the details of how the team came to be, the journey to becoming a major player in Canadian moto and how the 2023 season has been shaking out.
We've decided to change the name for this mid-week podcast to increase the scope of the stories we can tell from the best of the Canadian series. No longer limited to rookies, we'll bring the best interviews with the series' best and most interesting riders. This week we have the ever improving and indisputably legit top 5 newcomer, Daniel Elmore. This one is brought to you by KTM Canada, Husqvarna Canada and GasGas Canada, as well and Race Tech and CJR racing; as always, the best way to support us, is to support our sponsors and we appreciate every single one of you that takes the time to listen.
The New York Times publisher A.G. Sulzberger joins Steve Hayes and Sarah Isgur in a special interview recorded from The Times' building in New York. They discuss Sulzberger's recent CJR piece on objectivity in journalism (and its discontents), digging into the historically hostile relationship between right wing media and The Times, the challenges of fighting "bias" in news, and the possible paths to rebuilding public trust in institutional journalism. Show Notes: -A.G Sulzberger's article for the Colombia Journalism Review Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Gauldy checks in with last weekend's top intermediate, Blake Davies. At just 14, Blake is a very ambitious young lad, earning an impressive 12th overall in Edmonton. He's well spoken and gets into all of the details from last weekend's race, his career thus far and growing up in BC with dirt (and snow) bikes playing a central role. This episode is brought to you by Race Tech and Charlie Johnson Racing. Please support CJR (and by doing that you'll be supporting Race Tech) to support us! Thanks for Listening!
Sports Illustrated's Rohan Nadkarni returns to the show to preview the NBA Finals with the Miami Heat and the Denver Nuggets. Drew, Roth, and Rohan talk the power of Caleb Martin, hate on the Celtics to a respectful degree, decide if the Nuggets are being stiffed by national media, and make time to complain about the Mountain Time Zone. All that and Remembering a Guy, diving into the Funbag, and a very special Sandwich Expert Corner, are coming up on this episode. Stuff We Talked AboutRohan's article on ECF Game 6Rohan's article on Bam from Nov 2022Rohan called his shot on Caleb MartinJaylen Brown's supermax projectionsRohan writing about how the Celtics shouldn't break upRohan's piece about Jokic MVP article from last yearRohan writing about Aaron GordonDefector in CJR!Do you want to hear your question answered on the pod? Well, give us a call at 909-726-3720. That is 909-PANERA-0! Sponsors- Wildgrain, where you can get $30 off the first box plus free Croissants in every box using code DISTRACTION at Wildgrain.com/DISTRACTION- Shaker and Spoon - Get $20 off your first box at shakerandspoon.com/distraction Credits- Hosts: Drew Magary & David Roth- Producer: Eric Silver- Editor: Brandon Grugle- Production Services & Ads: Multitude- Subscribe to Defector! About The ShowFrom Defector Media: Former Deadspin writers Drew Magary and David Roth should really stick to sports. Sure, their new indie sports podcast will break down the week in sports: the Mets grounding into quadruple plays, NBA players getting testy on the court and horny on Instagram, Bill Belichick cutting 80% of his roster just to keep himself interested, horrifying takes from sports talk radio that need to be broken down, etc. But these two men and their guests will have their fair share of off-the-field issues they'll also have to address: stupid Funbag questions, bad tweets from bad people, pointless food arguments, and even less. Every week is a VERY long week these days. We could all use a little Distraction. Head to defector.com for more info.
EXPERTS YVES THRÉARD Éditorialiste, directeur adjoint de la rédaction – « Le Figaro » JÉRÔME JAFFRÉ Politologue – Chercheur associé au CEVIPOF VANESSA SCHNEIDER Grand reporter – « Le Monde » CHLOÉ MORIN Politologue Auteure de « On aura tout essayé » Que se passe-t-il au Parlement ? Alors que des milliers de Français manifestaient mardi un peu partout en France contre la réforme des retraites, 3,5 millions selon la CGT, 1,28 selon le ministère de l'Intérieur, l'Assemblée nationale a connu une séance particulièrement tumultueuse à l'occasion de débats sur l'exemplarité des élus. Les députés avaient à peine commencé leurs interventions en fin d'après-midi sur la proposition de la présidente du groupe Renaissance Aurore Bergé, que les échanges ont totalement dérapé. Le texte examiné visait à imposer une peine d'inéligibilité automatique aux auteurs de violences aggravées, en particulier sur les mineurs et les conjoint(es). Mais il a très vite été critiqué par les oppositions comme une réaction opportuniste à la condamnation du député insoumis Adrien Quatennens en décembre dernier pour des violences sur sa compagne. A la tribune, le président du groupe LR Olivier Marleix a invité la majorité à "s'offrir une séance d'introspection" et ne s'est pas privé d'énumérer des condamnations, mises en examen ou enquêtes concernant des membres du camp présidentiel, le député Damien Abad, le secrétaire général de l'Elysée Alexis Kohler et, pour terminer, le garde des Sceaux. Eric Dupond-Moretti est mis en examen pour prise illégale d'intérêts, une première pour un ministre de la Justice en exercice. L'association de lutte contre la corruption Anticor et les deux principaux syndicats de magistrats avaient déposé une plainte à l'encontre du garde des Sceaux, l'accusant d'avoir profité de son poste pour régler des comptes avec des magistrats, dans des affaires où il était impliqué en tant qu'avocat. La Cour de justice de la République (CJR), juridiction destinée à juger les ministres ou ex-ministres pour les crimes ou délits commis dans l'exercice de leurs fonctions, a ordonné un procès, mais les avocats d'Éric Dupond-Moretti ont formé un pourvoi en cassation. Piqué au vif, le ministre de la Justice a alors fait deux bras d'honneur. Face au tollé suscité, et après deux suspensions de séance, le garde des Sceaux a finalement reconnu et "regretté" ses gestes qui n'étaient selon lui "pas adressés au député Marleix" mais à l'atteinte "à la présomption d'innocence". "Vous avez fréquenté beaucoup de voyous mais c'est plus qu'inapproprié", l'a corrigé Olivier Marleix. Finalement, le texte a été repoussé par l'hémicycle, à hauteur de 140 voix contre 113. Un revers dur à accepter pour la députée Aurore Bergé, porteuse du projet, qui avait fini la défense de son texte au bord des larmes. Mais l'affaire est loin d'être close pour nombre de députés. Ente indignation et consternation, des élus de toutes les oppositions réclament la démission du ministre de la Justice tandis qu'au Sénat l'application, inédite, de l'article 38 enflamme les débats. En plein examen de l'article 7 de la réforme des retraites, celui qui consacre le recul de l'âge de départ à 64 ans, le sénateur LR Bruno Retailleau a dégainé un point du règlement jamais utilisé pour couper court aux débats dans la nuit de mardi. La gauche dénonce une "censure" et une "attaque contre la démocratie !". Les Sénateurs doivent poursuivre l'examen du projet de réforme des retraites jusqu'à ce dimanche alors que les grèves et les blocages se poursuivent dans le pays, notamment sur plusieurs axes routiers et dans les raffineries, avec des syndicats à la fois agacés du silence de l'exécutif, et galvanisés par le nombre record de manifestants mardi et le soutien d'une majorité de Français dans les sondages. DIFFUSION : du lundi au samedi à 17h45 FORMAT : 65 minutes PRÉSENTATION : Caroline Roux - Axel de Tarlé REDIFFUSION : du lundi au vendredi vers 23h40 RÉALISATION : Nicolas Ferraro, Bruno Piney, Franck Broqua, Alexandre Langeard, Corentin Son, Benoît Lemoine PRODUCTION : France Télévisions / Maximal Productions Retrouvez C DANS L'AIR sur internet & les réseaux : INTERNET : francetv.fr FACEBOOK : https://www.facebook.com/Cdanslairf5 TWITTER : https://twitter.com/cdanslair INSTAGRAM : https://www.instagram.com/cdanslair/
The Far-Right House Republican's Madcap Hearings Yesterday and Today | The Spiking of a Story on The Nation Magazine's Publisher's Pro-Putin Bias By the CJR's Kyle Pope | What Are "Spaces Not Bases" When the US Already has 750 Bases in 80 Countries? backgroundbriefing.org/donate twitter.com/ianmastersmedia facebook.com/ianmastersmedia
Last week, the Columbia Journalism Review published a four-part investigation into the media's fraught relationship with Donald Trump. In this episode of the Kicker, Jeff Gerth, who authored the report, talks to Kyle Pope, CJR's editor and publisher, about the origin of the investigation and the intense responses to it, with which Gerth admits he is still “grappling.” On the podcast, Gerth says he considers his 24,000-word story an “anatomy,” reconstructing how the media covered Trump and Russia. In reporting the piece, Gerth interviewed Trump at – predictably – a golf course, and reached out to dozens of journalists who covered Trump-Russia, albeit with limited success. “Many of them are loath to want to discuss or/and engage with what they do,” Gerth says in the episode. “I find it perplexing.” For additional news on this story and on the media, subscribe to CJR's daily newsletter at cjr.org/email
Week in Review with Glenn Greenwald: Omar Ousted, AOC's Oscar-Worthy Performance, CJR's Russiagate Fallout, & More Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
For $5 a month, become a Useful Idiot! Get extended interviews, Thursday Throwdowns, and a chance to have your comment read on the show in the Absurd Arena at http://usefulidiots.substack.com Or find us on Locals at http://usefulidiots.locals.com Click here for the full interview with Matt Taibbi: https://open.substack.com/pub/usefulidiots/p/matt-taibbi-exposes-russiagate-bots?r=je5va&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web With Matt Taibbi's Twitter Files and Jeff Gerth's new in-depth reporting for CJR exposing the years of lies spread by Russiagaters, bitter attacks from outed journalists are rolling in. Gerth and Taibbi, who come from the old style of journalism where you fact check your work and don't accept government officials' claims on faith, have each shown clear, indisputable evidence of disinformation campaigns pushed by corporate reporters. And since the so-called journalists can't argue the facts, they dig themselves a deeper hole with more lies and name-calling. Jeff Gerth has been working as a reporter for decades and published, in the very mainstream Columbia Journalism Review, a 20,000-word report on his findings, only to be called a liar and misdirecting magician in the most self-important article by Mother Jones' David Corn (“The true media failure is that Trump got away with it and that articles like this one that you are now reading are still necessary.”) And possibly worse than that is the near complete silence from the rest of mainstream media who, as Gerth reported, refused to follow Bob Woodward's pleas for introspection. They're not silent, however, about Matt Taibbi. These corporate stenographers, either angry that Taibbi called them out for lying or jealous that they didn't get the Twitter Files story themselves, haven't made any substantive arguments against his findings both because they can't, but also because they know they don't need to. Their audiences are trained to believe them. There are, however, two people who suggested one substantive criticism of the Twitter Files. Funny enough, they're two of the real journalists who have been defending Taibbi's work: Briahna Joy Gray and Glenn Greenwald. Their question: if Musk and Twitter are the guardians of this information, how can you be sure you aren't being manipulated by the possibility that they are handpicking what they want you to see? Watch the extended episode to hear Taibbi's response, plus Matt unveils never-before-shared info on the Twitter Files. It's a Useful Idiots exclusive. Plus, catch this week's Thursday Throwdown where the US says yes to the jets. It's all this, and more, on this week's episode of Useful Idiots. Check it out. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
After two decades of attending the World Economic Forum's annual gathering of business elites in Davos, Rana Foroohar, associate editor of the Financial Times, stayed back this year. In this week's episode of The Kicker, Foroohar tells Kyle Pope, editor and publisher of the Columbia Journalism Review, why the annual meet-up of global technocrats imparts “icky” feelings, and why the Davos crowd, including the journalists reporting from the conference, might have a skewed outlook on the economy. Also joining Pope in conversation is Mercy Orengo, a CJR fellow. Orengo shares insights from her recent conversations with business reporters tasked with covering an uncertain economy.
Afghan Refugees, Voting & CJR, The Afghan Adjustment Act, and Muslim Advocacy Day at the Capitol with Nicole Baumann and Veronica Laizure
At the start of January, Jon Allsop, chief writer of Columbia Journalism Review's newsletter, The Media Today, tuned back into the news after a two-month hiatus. On this week's Kicker, Allsop discusses what he found upon his return: a “ghostland” of a Twitter feed and a keen awareness of the “trivial” nature of the news cycle. In conversation with Kyle Pope, CJR's editor and publisher, Allsop also talks about what media trends he'll be monitoring in the new year. Other CJR staffers – Pesha Magid, a Delacorte fellow; Mathew Ingram, CJR's chief digital writer; and Amanda Darrach, a contributing producer – discuss the media issues they're watching in a round-robin discussion with Pope. Subscribe to The Media Today newsletter at cjr.org/email
On today's Kicker, what the media got right and wrong in the 2022 midterm election. Ross Barkan, a politics reporter for New York magazine, The Nation and more talks with CJR's editor and publisher Kyle Pope about the media's penchant for speculation in divisive elections. Also in the discussion: how the media grapples with writing about a democracy in peril. On today's Kicker, what the media got right and wrong in the 2022 midterm election. Ross Barkan, a politics reporter for New York magazine, The Nation and more talks with CJR's editor and publisher Kyle Pope about why the media's penchant for speculation in divisive elections. Also in the discussion: how the media grapples with writing about a democracy in peril. “Is this the election that will determine the future of democracy?” Barkan questions. “Maybe, maybe not. But I have my own reservations about that kind of grandiose rhetoric.”
Reporting from Moscow in the final years of the Cold War, Bill Keller witnessed the Soviet Union “fall apart like Humpty Dumpty.” On this week's Kicker, Keller says Vladimir Putin is trying to put Humpty Dumpty back together again – evoking international anxieties from the past. Kyle Pope, editor and publisher of the Columbia Journalism Review, asks Keller about these anxieties, and, alongside CJR staff, discusses how the media should approach nuclear speculation. Also in this episode, Keller talks about his recent book, "What's Prison For? "Keller shares lessons from reporting inside prisons in the U.S. and abroad, and contemplates the through line of his journalism career spanning criminal justice to the Cold War. In the end, Keller says, prisons and Russia belong to the same beat: freedom.
Just as Europeans prepare for winter amid rising gas prices – calling upon their old ties to gas-rich African countries – a colonial-era island off the coast of Senegal erodes into the rising sea. Both these stories, discussed on this week's Kicker with Nic Haque, a reporter for Al Jazeera, underscore the urgency of the climate crises that journalists cover across the globe. Some of that work, including Haque's, will be celebrated October 25 in “Burning Questions,” a broadcast on PBS's World Channel showcasing the winners of the 2022 Covering Climate Now Journalism Awards. Haque talks with Kyle Pope, editor and publisher of CJR, on covering climate emergencies in West Africa, and how climate change has touched his life, personally and professionally.
Un ministre de la Justice… bientôt jugé. Le 3 octobre, la cour de justice de la République (CJR) a ordonné un procès contre Eric Dupont-Moretti pour «prise illégale d'intérêt». Une première dans l'histoire de la Ve République.Pour bien comprendre les ennuis judiciaires de l'actuel garde des Sceaux, il faut remonter à son ancienne vie d'avocat. Le célèbre pénaliste avait eu maille à partir avec plusieurs magistrats, notamment ceux qui ont analysé à son insu ses relevés téléphoniques dans l'enquête sur l'affaire des écoutes, visant l'ancien président Nicolas Sarkozy et son avocat.Eric Dupont-Moretti est accusé d'avoir voulu profiter de sa nouvelle fonction de ministre pour régler ses comptes avec ces magistrats, en diligentant des enquêtes administratives contre eux. Déjà très impopulaire auprès des juges, le ministre fait face à de nombreux appels à démissionner, mais il est soutenu par le président de la République. Code source remonte le fil des accusations qui pèsent sur le garde des Sceaux avec Timothée Boutry, journaliste au service police-justice du Parisien.Ecoutez Code source sur toutes les plateformes audio : Apple Podcast (iPhone, iPad), Google Podcast (Android), Podcast Addict ou Castbox, Deezer, Spotify.Crédits. Direction de la rédaction : Pierre Chausse - Rédacteur en chef : Jules Lavie - Reporter : Ambre Rosala - Production : Thibault Lambert et Clara Garnier-Amouroux - Réalisation et mixage : Julien Montcouquiol - Musiques : François Clos, Audio Network, Epidemic Sound - Identité graphique : Upian - Archives : BFMTV, France Inter, France 3. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
The Institute for Advancing Health Value has recently released two new Intelligence Briefs highlighting two major impactful events in the movement to value-based care. 2021 MSSP Performance Results Analysis: The Institute analyzes 2021 performance data, sharing high-level program performance and examining savings across participation tracks, by the provider type, size and location of ACOs, and their experience in the program, and reflects on the future of the MSSP in light of the recently proposed changes to the program and the beginning of CMS's new capitated total cost of care model, ACO REACH. The ACO REACH Final Cohort: The Institute analyzes the incoming final cohort of provisionally-accepted REACH ACOs within the context of the model's history, analyzing the roster relative to GPDC's current participants, and sharing expectations for the future. (This Intelligence Brief was sponsored by Bamboo Health.) Check out this special bonus episode where Eric and Dan interview Kate de Lisle on her research analysis on these recent CMS announcements. You may also download these Intelligence Briefs at https://www.advancinghealthvalue.org/analysis-of-mssp-2021-and-aco-reach-2023/ Episode Bookmarks: 01:30 Download the new Institute intelligence briefs on the 2021 MSSP Performance Results and the ACO REACH Final Cohort 02:30 Background on Kate de Lisle, Senior Manager of Payment & Delivery Transformation at Leavitt Partners 04:00 Recently announced MSSP Results as an important bellwether for the success of the value movement 05:30 Total program savings of nearly $5.4 billion over the model's lifetime 06:30 5th consecutive year of net savings – has the MSSP demonstrated proof of concept? 07:00 Was 2021 a good year for the MSSP since the net savings wasn't quite as large as the year prior? 07:30 The average per beneficiary PMPM savings amount was $164 (double what it was in 2019) 08:00 81% of ACOs generated savings and 58% earned a Shared Savings bonus. Quality scores were also high. 08:45 89% of ACOs taking downside risk generated savings (compared to 76% that saved in an upside-only track) 09:15 Risk-bearing ACOs generated $5.3M per ACO (compared to $2.9M for non-risk bearing) 09:45 ACOs led by physician groups realized the most savings. 10:00 Hospital-led ACOs realized a decline in savings. 10:30 Years of experience in the MSSP is no longer a straightforward predictive indicator of performance success. 14:00 Last month, CMS released the names of the 110 provisionally-accepted organizations selected to join the ACO REACH model starting in 2023 15:30 Only 47% of REACH applicants were provisionally accepted. 17:30 New cohort had similar profiles of selected groups accepting Global and Professional Risk. 18:00 New entrants are serving vulnerable and high-risk populations. 19:00 Groups moving from Next Gen ACO to ACO REACH 20:30 Far fewer payer-led ACOs in the new REACH cohort 21:30 What considerations did CMS take into account when selecting for participation in the new REACH program? 22:00 Sustained interest in ACO REACH from VBP enablement companies (e.g.Aledade, agilon health) 23:30 Provider-owned enablement companies participating REACH (e.g. Castell Health) 24:30 Upstart primary care companies accepted into ACO REACH (e.g. Oak Street Health, Iora Primary Care, ChenMed, Cano Health, Cityblock, ConcertoCare) 25:00 ChenMed (a leading full-risk MA primary care practice in the country) is included in the new ACO REACH cohort. 25:30 OneMedical has also been accepted into the program. 26:30 The Institute for Advancing Health Value has a complimentary membership for provider organizations! 27:00 Will CMMI be sunsetting various APMs, including specialty care models like BPCI and CJR programs? 28:30 Kate speaks about the “weak signals” being broadcasted by CMMI around the future of the APM portfolio. 30:00 What impact will ACO REACH have on the CMS 2030 Goal?
Seeing Abundance, Supporting Women, and Shifting the Narrative.In this episode of The Outspoken Podcast, host Shana Cosgrove talks to Nic Cober, Esq., Principal Managing Partner of CJR and founder of The BOW Collective. Nic describes her journey to and through serial entrepreneurship, from her unexpected first small business venture as owner of a hair salon and day spa to her current role as cofounder of a multi-million dollar legal and consulting firm based in Washington, DC. She talks about the joy she finds in working directly with small businesses and consulting with banks, municipalities, and others to support small-business owners. She shares how her new nonprofit venture, the Black Owner and Women's Collective, came to be and how she got to ring the bell at the NYSE. Nic encourages women to support women-owned businesses and to realize that partnerships are power, and she has ideas for what to read even when you're tired of reading. QUOTES “What I realized and what I think has been my forever light bulb moment is whatever you had you can have again. Because I had the intellectual property to do it the first time. And so: OK, you've lost that, well, what did you do right? What relationships did you make? How can you repurpose your gifts in order to get it again?” - Nic Cober [13:35] “I don't see a lot of married CEO women that are able to have tremendous success personally and professionally without a truly supportive person. And when you own a business together, it stands to reason that it works because you both want it to work. You are both aligned. [. . .] We are both alpha personalities, but we do the beta. We do the beta dance.” - Nic Cober [35:16] “Partnerships are the best key to success. It's people. [. . .] If you don't have a collaborative nature on how you can make your business a win-win and triangulate that, you won't be successful. But if you do, you will always have advocates and allies out there that will come to your aid when you need it the most.” - Nic Cober [46:07] TIMESTAMPS [00:04] Intro [01:55] Meet Nic Cober [03:25] From Practicing Law to Owning a Small Business [11:50] From Running a Small Business to Advising Small Business Owners [14:22] Dealing with Adversity, Getting Past Fears [19:25] Consulting with Small Businesses [24:52] Narrowing vs. Broadening Your Business's Appeal [26:40] On Partnerships, Relationships, and Inspiring Parents [33:40] Spouses Who Work Together and Marriages That Work [38:38] The BOW (Black Owner & Women's) Collective [46:07] Partnerships Are the Secret to Success [51:31] On What to Read Even When You're Too Tired to Read [53:40] Women Supporting Women and Women-Owned Businesses [56:04] Outro RESOURCES https://www.sba.gov/funding-programs/loans/504-loans (Small Business Administration 504 Loan Program) https://thecjrgroup.com/ (Cober Johnson Romney (CJR)) https://cjrbuilds.com/ (CJR Development) https://www.wbcollaborative.org/ (Women Business Collaborativ)https://www.thebowcollective.org/ (e) https://enterprisingwomen.com/ (Enterprising Women) https://www.thebowcollective.org/ (The BOW Collective) https://www.wbenc.org/ (WBENC (Women's Business Enterprise National Council)) https://www.ted.com/talks (TED Talks) https://www.linkedin.com/in/harold-w-johnson-ii-b746215 (Harold W. Johnson II), cofounder of CJR, on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/eason-pamela-prince-eason-3bb2258 (Pamela Prince-Eason), President and CEO of WBENC, on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/monica-smiley-5660075 (Monica Smiley), Editor and Publisher of Enterprising Women, on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/edie-fraser-38b4466 (Edie Fraser), CEO of Women Business Collective, on LinkedIn https://eckharttolle.com/ (Eckhart Tolle) RELEVANT LINKS https://niccoberesquire.com/ (Nic Cober, Esquire) https://www.linkedin.com/in/niccoberesquire (Nic Cober, Esquire) on...
Hier, relate Sud-Ouest, « les Français ont appris que le ministre de la Justice, Eric Dupont-Moretti était renvoyé devant la Cour de justice de la République, puisque le très fidèle et irremplaçable bras droit du chef de l'État, Alexis Kohler, avait été mis en examen la semaine dernière, lui aussi pour prise illégale d'intérêts. Deux premières d'un coup. » Finalement, pour ce qui concerne le garde des Sceaux, « pas de surprise, relève Libération, mais toujours une forme d'incompréhension et même de l'inquiétude. Le renvoi d'Éric Dupond-Moretti devant la Cour de justice de la République était attendu. Son pourvoi en cassation l'était tout autant. Comme la confirmation du côté de l'Élysée que la jurisprudence qui a longtemps voulu qu'un ministre mis en examen quitte ses fonctions appartient bel et bien au passé. Pas de surprises, donc, mais à l'arrivée une situation inédite, s'exclame Libération : jamais un ministre de la Justice n'avait fait l'objet d'un renvoi devant la CJR. Avouez que c'est plus que baroque, pointe encore le journal, et assez peu en phase avec le concept de sérénité qu'on accole normalement à l'idée de justice et à ceux qui la représentent. C'est d'ailleurs le vrai problème de cette histoire et l'objet de l'inquiétude de beaucoup. Le niveau de tensions et de défiance entre les magistrats, leur ministre et le pouvoir exécutif n'a jamais atteint un tel niveau. » Vent mauvais ? « République exemplaire : le serment d'hypocrites », dénonce pour sa part La Charente Libre. « C'est l'histoire d'un ministre de la Justice et d'un vice-président. Ils devaient régner sur une République exemplaire promise par leur patron. Ce lundi, la République exemplaire annoncée en 2017 s'effrite tel un bloc submergé par les vents mauvais, marées judiciaires et rafales de mises en examen. (…) On ne mesure pas l'effet de ce poison lent qui gangrène notre démocratie, fulmine encore La Charente Libre, avec l'appui assumé d'Emmanuel Macron. À son arrivée en 2017, les mis en examen devaient renoncer à leur poste au sein de l'exécutif. (…) À partir de 2021, changement de pied du Président : quand la justice s'intéresse de trop près à ses proches, c'est parce qu'elle veut s'attaquer à lui à travers eux. » Alors, attention, prévient le quotidien charentais, « à force de présenter la justice comme un adversaire et non un pilier de la République, pourquoi les Français ne reprendraient pas l'exemple d'en haut pour suivre les politiques les plus extrêmes qui font d'autres piliers républicains des dangers, à commencer par l'État de droit ? » Prendre ses distances avec le travail : un luxe ? À la Une du Figaro, ce constat : « les Français et le travail : le grand bouleversement » « Quête de sens, rejet de la hiérarchie, volonté de privilégier sa vie personnelle… Depuis le début de la crise sanitaire et l'émergence du télétravail, un salarié sur trois, selon une enquête Ipsos, a changé son plan de carrière. Et un salarié sur quatre, révèle un autre sondage, envisage de démissionner prochainement. » C'est vrai, reconnait Le Figaro, « la valeur travail, que Macron et la droite veulent réhabiliter, n'a plus la cote. Elle la retrouvera d'autant moins, commente le journal, que gauche et syndicats réunis, qui la défendaient bec et ongles, y sont désormais quasiment tous foncièrement hostiles, lui préférant le droit à la paresse. » Et Le Figaro de prévenir : « il faut tout le confort de notre société d'abondance et de notre modèle social sans équivalent pour s'autoriser cette prise de distance avec l'effort et les contraintes professionnelles. Mais la France et l'Occident ne sont pas seuls au monde. Ailleurs, d'autres n'ont pas ce luxe. Sans états d'âme, ils accélèrent et nous défient. Il faudra bien se réveiller avant qu'il soit trop tard. » Brésil : le populisme a de beaux jours devant lui… Enfin, la présidentielle au Brésil, avec finalement un second tour entre Lula et Bolsonaro… « Le populisme a de beaux jours devant lui, relève La Croix. Coriace, il engage ceux qui le combattent dans une guerre totale et asymétrique. Comme Donald Trump, Jair Bolsonaro ne recule devant aucun bobard, aucune foucade, il joue sans vergogne des failles du système informationnel pour installer ses supporteurs dans des réalités parallèles, où l'Amazonie ne brûle pas, où le climat ne se réchauffe pas, où le Covid ne tue pas. Où les élections perdues sont gagnées. Cela fonctionne auprès d'une part importante de la population brésilienne. Ce qui n'augure rien de bon, conclut La Croix, pour le lendemain du second tour, quel qu'en soit le résultat. »
C...J...R... The brightest young star in fashion, SCAD alumnus Christopher John Rogers, is in the studio! Rogers and his core creative team of fellow SCAD alumni returned to campus for SCAD Fashion Weekend, where CJR was honored with the André Leon Talley Award. Rogers and company spent as much time with current fashion students as possible, and Rogers made sure to sit with Paula Wallace to reflect on where the CJR brand has been and where it's going.
Cliquez ici pour accéder gratuitement aux articles lus de Mediapart : https://m.audiomeans.fr/s/P-UmoTbNLs Pour la première fois, un député Rassemblement national siégera à la Cour de justice de la République (CJR). Une étape de plus dans la notabilisation de l'extrême droite, sous l'effet de sa progression fracassante à l'Assemblée nationale et de la passivité complice de la majorité présidentielle. Un article de Mathieu Dejean et Antton Rouget publié mercredi 27 juillet 2022, lu par Jeremy Zylberberg.
On this week's Kicker, Rebecca Traister, a writer-at-large for New York Magazine and the Cut, and the author of “Good and Mad,” a book about the history and political power of women's anger, sits down with Kyle Pope, editor and publisher of CJR. They discuss why the press seemed only willing to cover “medically chilling” abortion stories, and how to protect sources as abortion's legal loopholes disappear.
Should climate crisis coverage focus on the danger at hand, or on optimism and solutions at work? On what individuals can do, or industrial changes? As newsrooms struggle to reach a consensus, the Covering Climate Now Journalism Awards provide a model for impactful work. Justin Worland, senior correspondent at TIME, was just named CCN's 2022 Journalist of the Year. On this week's Kicker, Worland sits down with Kyle Pope, editor and publisher of CJR, to discuss his climate crisis coverage and The Uproot Project, his initiative to support environmental journalists of color.
Nina Totenberg has covered the Supreme Court for five decades. On this week's Kicker, the NPR reporter sits down with Kyle Pope, editor and publisher of CJR, to discuss a court she says is more conservative than it has been since the late 1920s and early 1930s, and what happens next in light of the leak of the Roe v Wade decision. Nina Totenberg is NPR's legal affairs correspondent. She has a book coming out in September called "Dinners with Ruth: A memoir about The power of friendships," available for preorder now.
We break down media coverage of the Texas shooting, ‘Jim Crow 2.0' goes poof, and NPR creates a snitch line. Show Notes: LA Times on Chris's big news Ronald Brownstein on Filibuster WaPo on Stefanik WaPo on Monkeypox CJR on Political Writing Smithsonian on Small Town papers WaPo Op-Ed on Trump 2024 WSJ on Depp v Herd Trial trends NYT on John Fetterman's style Timestamps: 5:22 - Coverage of Texas Shooting 9:41 - Filibuster 14:40 - NRA mentioned in Media 19:17 - Trump Primary Coverage 29:39 - Stu Varney 32:15 - Sussman Trial 35:00 - Monkeypox 40:04 - NPR Mask Policy 44:00 - Obsessions 44:14 - WaPo on Elise Stefanik 50:40 - CJR on Political Writing 54:39 - Reader Mail 1:00:56 - Smithsonian on small-town paper 1:02:15 - Trends from Depp v Herd trial 1:04:31 - NYT on John Fetterman's style If you have a story you want us to talk about, e-mail us at wretches@nebulouspodcasts.com
The Columbia Graduate School of Journalism announced today that Jelani Cobb will be its new dean. Cobb is a professor at the school, a staff writer at The New Yorker, an author, a documentary producer, and the director of the Ira A. Lipman Center For Journalism and Civil and Human Rights. On this week's Kicker, Cobb speaks with Kyle Pope, editor and publisher of CJR, about the role of journalism at a politically fraught time, diversity efforts at the J-school and in journalism, and the high cost of degrees at institutions like Columbia.
Al Roker, weathercaster for the Today Show, is one of the best-known and trusted names in media. He has also led efforts to educate the American public on the ties between weather and the climate crisis. On this week's Kicker, Roker and Kyle Pope, editor and publisher of CJR, discuss the evolution of weather coverage, from lighthearted entertainment to reporting on the frontlines of the biggest story of our time.
Over the past week, Ukrainians have used social media to document Russia's attacks on civilians. Those efforts have been more effective at blunting the Russian propaganda machine than anything that has come out of the technology companies themselves. On this week's Kicker, Kyle Pope, editor and publisher of CJR, speaks with Jane Lytvynenko, a senior research fellow in the Technology and Social Change Project at the Harvard Kennedy School's Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy. They discuss Ukrainian “prebunking” of Russian propaganda, and where Lytvynenko, a Ukranian-Canadian expert on Russian disinformation, gets her news.
Media reporter Jon Allsop, speaking from the sidelines of the COP26 climate summit in Glasgow, shares his reporting and analysis about how the gathering is being covered. Allsop, the author of CJR's The Media Today newsletter, tells Brian Stelter that "this summit brings all the storylines together." He describes the unequal nature of global news coverage, citing a "huge equality problem" that is evident at the summit, and major investments by outlets like The New York Times. "This is a huge news peg," he says, but reporters will need to stay on the story and see if countries "actually follow through on the pledges that they made here." To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
Maria Bustillos is a writer and journalist whose work I've been following for many years — I first read her essays in The Awl, and she's gone on to write for many other publications including The New Yorker, CJR, and Longreads. In 2016 she took on another assignment: covering the trial of Hulk Hogan vs. Gawker. Hogan's victory, the revelation that the lawsuit was secretly funded by billionaire VC Peter Thiel, and the shuttering of Gawker sent Bustillos on a mission: Is it possible to create a billionaire-proof media company? That's what she's aiming to build with The Brick House, a cooperative of nine publications including her own site, Popula. Get updates from EIL: https://markarms.com/newsletter/EIL on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/EILSupport the show (https://www.eil.show/join)