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HOW SHOULD JOURNALISTS ACT IN TIMES OF PROTEST When movements arise out of oppression, it can be difficult not to attend protests to show support, especially within marginalizedcommunities.
THE LUSH LIFE OF PAUL RIMSTEAD The Lush Life of Paul Rimstead. THE RIMMER HATED COGNAC. RUM AND Coke, stingers, gin and tonics, whiskey; now those were drinks. But as a reporter on assignment in Paris in 1967 at a sidewalk cafe; on the Champs-Elysees, Rimstead dutifully followed in the path of his idol Ernest Hemingway and ordered cognac. TROUBLE ON THE HOME FRONT Trouble on the Home Front. Cobi Ladner’s first inkling of the competition she was about to face came one night in the mid-1990s. Ladner, editor of Canadian House & Home, Canada’s preeminent decorating magazine, was attending the annual Saturday Night magazine Christmas party, where several hundred guests had gathered for anevening of
KATHRYN SCHULZ’S “WHEN THINGS GO MISSING” The RRJ recommends you read “When Things Go Missing” by Kathryn Schulz, from the Feb. 13, 2017 issue of The New Yorker.. At Toronto’s York Mills subway station a few weeks ago, waiting for the bus driver to come back from wherever bus drivers go when they’re not glowering at you, I took the latest issue of The New Yorker out of my bag. It was midnight and I was freezing. REPORTING ON INDIGENOUS ISSUES? HEED ANGELA STERRITT’S TOPSEE MOREON RRJ.CA
PORTRAIT OF A JOURNALIST: MICHELLE MCQUIGGE Michelle McQuigge, who is blind, is a reporter and editor at the Canadian Press in Toronto. (Maria Iqbal/RRJ) In April 2006, Michelle McQuigge walked through the transparent glass door at the Canadian Press office in Toronto to interview for a summer internship position that just opened up. REVIEW OF JOURNALISM :: THE RYERSON SCHOOL OF JOURNALISMSPECIAL FEATURESABOUTCOVERING DISASTERSLEFT BEHINDPAST MASTHEADSTHE MAGAZINE We also discuss the recent sentencing decision in the trial of Toronto van-attacker Alek Minassian, and why it’s making waves in the Canadian journalism community. “Just focusing on this man’s name, does not equip the citizenry to make decisions, and help influence the people they elect to create policy.”. – Romayne Smith Fullerton. DRAWING THE LINE: HERE’S WHAT’S HAPPENING AT THE RYERSON Ryerson’s School of Journalism found itself in a Twitter storm in February over the questions surrounding how far freedom of speech can go for students in the program. THE STAR, THE ATKINSON PRINCIPLES AND OUTSOURCING Dan Smith, chief steward, editorial, for the Toronto Star, and Kathy Vey, an active member of the Southern Ontario Newsmedia Guild, are handing out black-and-white stickers to staff on December 3, which SONG has declared Core Values Day.Some of the stickers say, “Star to the core!” or “Editors are core!” or “I’m hard core!” BLATCHFORD BEHIND THE BYLINE Christie’s parents, Ross and Kay Blatchford, still figure prominently in her writing. They appear as Rancid and Mad Kay in her Sun column for the same reasons she once gave in her Ryerson column. Kay Blatchford is a small, sharp-featured woman in her mid-60s with the restless energy of someone much younger. Even the white streaks inher hair
HOW SHOULD JOURNALISTS ACT IN TIMES OF PROTEST When movements arise out of oppression, it can be difficult not to attend protests to show support, especially within marginalizedcommunities.
THE LUSH LIFE OF PAUL RIMSTEAD The Lush Life of Paul Rimstead. THE RIMMER HATED COGNAC. RUM AND Coke, stingers, gin and tonics, whiskey; now those were drinks. But as a reporter on assignment in Paris in 1967 at a sidewalk cafe; on the Champs-Elysees, Rimstead dutifully followed in the path of his idol Ernest Hemingway and ordered cognac. TROUBLE ON THE HOME FRONT Trouble on the Home Front. Cobi Ladner’s first inkling of the competition she was about to face came one night in the mid-1990s. Ladner, editor of Canadian House & Home, Canada’s preeminent decorating magazine, was attending the annual Saturday Night magazine Christmas party, where several hundred guests had gathered for anevening of
KATHRYN SCHULZ’S “WHEN THINGS GO MISSING” The RRJ recommends you read “When Things Go Missing” by Kathryn Schulz, from the Feb. 13, 2017 issue of The New Yorker.. At Toronto’s York Mills subway station a few weeks ago, waiting for the bus driver to come back from wherever bus drivers go when they’re not glowering at you, I took the latest issue of The New Yorker out of my bag. It was midnight and I was freezing. REPORTING ON INDIGENOUS ISSUES? HEED ANGELA STERRITT’S TOPSEE MOREON RRJ.CA
PORTRAIT OF A JOURNALIST: MICHELLE MCQUIGGE Michelle McQuigge, who is blind, is a reporter and editor at the Canadian Press in Toronto. (Maria Iqbal/RRJ) In April 2006, Michelle McQuigge walked through the transparent glass door at the Canadian Press office in Toronto to interview for a summer internship position that just opened up. HOW LIFESTYLE JOURNALISM IS GETTING US THROUGH A PANDEMIC Sourdough starters, maskne remedies, dalgona coffee, and home gardens.When the pandemic
FULL(ISH) DISCLOSURE Ontario premier Doug Ford helped legitimize this landscape in Ontario, as the Ryerson Review of Journalism reported in its Spring 2019 issue. His communications team denied interview requests from traditional news outlets. Reporters stationed at the provincial political headquarters, Queen’s Park, found themselves shut out. TROUBLE ON THE HOME FRONT Trouble on the Home Front. Cobi Ladner’s first inkling of the competition she was about to face came one night in the mid-1990s. Ladner, editor of Canadian House & Home, Canada’s preeminent decorating magazine, was attending the annual Saturday Night magazine Christmas party, where several hundred guests had gathered for anevening of
AN OFFICER AND A JOURNALIST An Officer and a Journalist. The wire machines flash bells-the sound that signalled the biggest stories had been ringing all afternoon. The high-pitched noise penetrated every corner of the crowded Toronto Telegram newsroom. The area where the machines were located, just off the big, high-ceilinged newsroom, was packed with reporters smoking THE GREAT NEWSPAPER WAR OF WOODSTOCK, NEW BRUNSWICK Illustration credit: Hyein Lee. Ken Langdon was sitting in a Tim Hortons in Woodstock, New Brunswick, talking with a friend and drinking a black coffee when his cell phone rang. THE FAITH AND FILMS OF SIMCHA JACOBOVICI Simcha Jacobovici’s black and white limo pulls up to a red carpet outside the Princess of Wales Theatre. Floodlights roam the downtown Toronto skyline as he and his entourage-wife, sister, mother and in-laws-arrive at the reception for the screening of Hollywoodism: Jews, Movies and the American Dream, a film he codirected and produced.In front of the theatre he poses with his family forCOURTROOM TRAUMA
Barbara Brown squats close to the pavement outside the Ontario Courthouse, General Division, at 361 University Avenue in Toronto. Her left arm is straight up in the air, clutching her Sony microcassette tape recorder. Her arm is aching beyond belief. Brown, 43, who describes herself as a “tough-chick crime reporter,” has been onthe crime
A FEW WORDS ON ESQUIRE’S “A FEW WORDS ABOUT BREASTS The RRJ Recommends you check out Nora Ephron’s “A Few Words About Breasts,” published in Esquire in 1972. Talking about boobs when you’re surrounded by hardlined definitions of gender is a lot more daunting than it sounds. FARAH NASSER BELIEVES THAT RACE IS THE BIGGEST STORY OF While Nasser is able to pursue stories on diversity and varying perspectives at Global, she is aware that there is a race issue in the industry. When Sunny Dhillon published his article in The Medium titled “Journalism While Brown and When To Walk Away,” Global News Director Mackay Taggart contacted Nasser immediately and asked for her input on how Global can do better. SUBSCRIBER’S REMORSE: BREAKING UP WITH GLOBE UNLIMITED I subscribed to Globe Unlimited over the past winter break. For the uninitiated, it’s a Globe and Mail product that offers full access to the newspaper, the Globe ’s Report on Business, its Politics and Business Insider sections, and a few analytical baubles that typically don’t appear in the newspaper. I decided to take the leap when a paywall appeared, denying me access to a feature I REVIEW OF JOURNALISM :: THE RYERSON SCHOOL OF JOURNALISMSPECIAL FEATURESABOUTCOVERING DISASTERSLEFT BEHINDPAST MASTHEADSTHE MAGAZINELONDON SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM REVIEWCOLUMBIA JOURNALISM REVIEW BILL GATESCOLUMBIA JOURNALISM REVIEW MEDIA BIASCOLUMBIA JOURNALISM REVIEW WEBSITECOLUMBIA UNIVERSITY JOURNALISMGATEWAY JOURNALISM REVIEW We also discuss the recent sentencing decision in the trial of Toronto van-attacker Alek Minassian, and why it’s making waves in the Canadian journalism community. “Just focusing on this man’s name, does not equip the citizenry to make decisions, and help influence the people they elect to create policy.”. – Romayne Smith Fullerton. THE LAW OF RESPONSIBLE JOURNALISM In Quan v. Cusson, the court ruled that the article was on a matter of public interest and the journalist was diligent in trying to verify the allegation. A new defence—responsible communication on matters of public interest—had arrived. The court altered the term “responsible journalism,” acknowledging that the internet age is BLATCHFORD BEHIND THE BYLINE Christie’s parents, Ross and Kay Blatchford, still figure prominently in her writing. They appear as Rancid and Mad Kay in her Sun column for the same reasons she once gave in her Ryerson column. Kay Blatchford is a small, sharp-featured woman in her mid-60s with the restless energy of someone much younger. Even the white streaks inher hair
KATHRYN SCHULZ’S “WHEN THINGS GO MISSING” The RRJ recommends you read “When Things Go Missing” by Kathryn Schulz, from the Feb. 13, 2017 issue of The New Yorker.. At Toronto’s York Mills subway station a few weeks ago, waiting for the bus driver to come back from wherever bus drivers go when they’re not glowering at you, I took the latest issue of The New Yorker out of my bag. It was midnight and I was freezing. TROUBLE ON THE HOME FRONT Trouble on the Home Front. Cobi Ladner’s first inkling of the competition she was about to face came one night in the mid-1990s. Ladner, editor of Canadian House & Home, Canada’s preeminent decorating magazine, was attending the annual Saturday Night magazine Christmas party, where several hundred guests had gathered for anevening of
THE STAR, THE ATKINSON PRINCIPLES AND OUTSOURCING Dan Smith, chief steward, editorial, for the Toronto Star, and Kathy Vey, an active member of the Southern Ontario Newsmedia Guild, are handing out black-and-white stickers to staff on December 3, which SONG has declared Core Values Day.Some of the stickers say, “Star to the core!” or “Editors are core!” or “I’m hard core!” THE LUSH LIFE OF PAUL RIMSTEAD The Lush Life of Paul Rimstead. THE RIMMER HATED COGNAC. RUM AND Coke, stingers, gin and tonics, whiskey; now those were drinks. But as a reporter on assignment in Paris in 1967 at a sidewalk cafe; on the Champs-Elysees, Rimstead dutifully followed in the path of his idol Ernest Hemingway and ordered cognac.COURTROOM TRAUMA
Barbara Brown squats close to the pavement outside the Ontario Courthouse, General Division, at 361 University Avenue in Toronto. Her left arm is straight up in the air, clutching her Sony microcassette tape recorder. Her arm is aching beyond belief. Brown, 43, who describes herself as a “tough-chick crime reporter,” has been onthe crime
SUBSCRIBER’S REMORSE: BREAKING UP WITH GLOBE UNLIMITED I subscribed to Globe Unlimited over the past winter break. For the uninitiated, it’s a Globe and Mail product that offers full access to the newspaper, the Globe ’s Report on Business, its Politics and Business Insider sections, and a few analytical baubles that typically don’t appear in the newspaper. I decided to take the leap when a paywall appeared, denying me access to a feature I FARAH NASSER BELIEVES THAT RACE IS THE BIGGEST STORY OF While Nasser is able to pursue stories on diversity and varying perspectives at Global, she is aware that there is a race issue in the industry. When Sunny Dhillon published his article in The Medium titled “Journalism While Brown and When To Walk Away,” Global News Director Mackay Taggart contacted Nasser immediately and asked for her input on how Global can do better. REVIEW OF JOURNALISM :: THE RYERSON SCHOOL OF JOURNALISMSPECIAL FEATURESABOUTCOVERING DISASTERSLEFT BEHINDPAST MASTHEADSTHE MAGAZINE We also discuss the recent sentencing decision in the trial of Toronto van-attacker Alek Minassian, and why it’s making waves in the Canadian journalism community. “Just focusing on this man’s name, does not equip the citizenry to make decisions, and help influence the people they elect to create policy.”. – Romayne Smith Fullerton. THE LAW OF RESPONSIBLE JOURNALISM In Quan v. Cusson, the court ruled that the article was on a matter of public interest and the journalist was diligent in trying to verify the allegation. A new defence—responsible communication on matters of public interest—had arrived. The court altered the term “responsible journalism,” acknowledging that the internet age is BLATCHFORD BEHIND THE BYLINE Christie’s parents, Ross and Kay Blatchford, still figure prominently in her writing. They appear as Rancid and Mad Kay in her Sun column for the same reasons she once gave in her Ryerson column. Kay Blatchford is a small, sharp-featured woman in her mid-60s with the restless energy of someone much younger. Even the white streaks inher hair
KATHRYN SCHULZ’S “WHEN THINGS GO MISSING” The RRJ recommends you read “When Things Go Missing” by Kathryn Schulz, from the Feb. 13, 2017 issue of The New Yorker.. At Toronto’s York Mills subway station a few weeks ago, waiting for the bus driver to come back from wherever bus drivers go when they’re not glowering at you, I took the latest issue of The New Yorker out of my bag. It was midnight and I was freezing. TROUBLE ON THE HOME FRONT Trouble on the Home Front. Cobi Ladner’s first inkling of the competition she was about to face came one night in the mid-1990s. Ladner, editor of Canadian House & Home, Canada’s preeminent decorating magazine, was attending the annual Saturday Night magazine Christmas party, where several hundred guests had gathered for anevening of
THE STAR, THE ATKINSON PRINCIPLES AND OUTSOURCING Dan Smith, chief steward, editorial, for the Toronto Star, and Kathy Vey, an active member of the Southern Ontario Newsmedia Guild, are handing out black-and-white stickers to staff on December 3, which SONG has declared Core Values Day.Some of the stickers say, “Star to the core!” or “Editors are core!” or “I’m hard core!” THE LUSH LIFE OF PAUL RIMSTEAD The Lush Life of Paul Rimstead. THE RIMMER HATED COGNAC. RUM AND Coke, stingers, gin and tonics, whiskey; now those were drinks. But as a reporter on assignment in Paris in 1967 at a sidewalk cafe; on the Champs-Elysees, Rimstead dutifully followed in the path of his idol Ernest Hemingway and ordered cognac.COURTROOM TRAUMA
Barbara Brown squats close to the pavement outside the Ontario Courthouse, General Division, at 361 University Avenue in Toronto. Her left arm is straight up in the air, clutching her Sony microcassette tape recorder. Her arm is aching beyond belief. Brown, 43, who describes herself as a “tough-chick crime reporter,” has been onthe crime
SUBSCRIBER’S REMORSE: BREAKING UP WITH GLOBE UNLIMITED I subscribed to Globe Unlimited over the past winter break. For the uninitiated, it’s a Globe and Mail product that offers full access to the newspaper, the Globe ’s Report on Business, its Politics and Business Insider sections, and a few analytical baubles that typically don’t appear in the newspaper. I decided to take the leap when a paywall appeared, denying me access to a feature I FARAH NASSER BELIEVES THAT RACE IS THE BIGGEST STORY OF While Nasser is able to pursue stories on diversity and varying perspectives at Global, she is aware that there is a race issue in the industry. When Sunny Dhillon published his article in The Medium titled “Journalism While Brown and When To Walk Away,” Global News Director Mackay Taggart contacted Nasser immediately and asked for her input on how Global can do better.PUBLICATIONS
At the Review’s Spring 2021 digital magazine launch, Brandi Morin weighed in on the renaming debate, where Canadian media has failed Indigenous peoples, and how tomorrow’s journalists can pick up theslack
EIGHT DOCUMENTARIES FROM THE NATIONAL FILM BOARD OF CANADA Compelling Canadian stories to enjoy from the great indoors this summer. It’s been nearly three months since measures were put in place across Canada to slow the spread of COVID-19. DRAWING THE LINE: HERE’S WHAT’S HAPPENING AT THE RYERSON Ryerson’s School of Journalism found itself in a Twitter storm in February over the questions surrounding how far freedom of speech can go for students in the program.PAST MASTHEADS
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Undercover Blues. While cleaning a five-bedroom house in a wealthy Toronto neighbourhood, Jan Wong had to pee. Venturing into the 11-year-old son’s private en suite bathroom, she was disgusted by the un-flushed toilet and the urine on the seat—some of it dried. In her 2006 Globe and Mail series “Maid for a Month,” Wong cleanedother
THE FAITH AND FILMS OF SIMCHA JACOBOVICI Simcha Jacobovici’s black and white limo pulls up to a red carpet outside the Princess of Wales Theatre. Floodlights roam the downtown Toronto skyline as he and his entourage-wife, sister, mother and in-laws-arrive at the reception for the screening of Hollywoodism: Jews, Movies and the American Dream, a film he codirected and produced.In front of the theatre he poses with his family forLEFT BEHIND
Left Behind - Left Behind. Left Behind By Jordana Goldman. Canada is among the most media literate and media active countries in the world. According to CIRA, “Canadians are the second heaviest users of the internet globally, averaging 41.3 hours per month online.”. Internet and journalism is a human right. Freedom of the press and FARAH NASSER BELIEVES THAT RACE IS THE BIGGEST STORY OF While Nasser is able to pursue stories on diversity and varying perspectives at Global, she is aware that there is a race issue in the industry. When Sunny Dhillon published his article in The Medium titled “Journalism While Brown and When To Walk Away,” Global News Director Mackay Taggart contacted Nasser immediately and asked for her input on how Global can do better. * Toggle High Contrast* Toggle Font size
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