Mallary Tenore covers media news for the Poynter Institute’s Poynter.org.
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Timothy Lavin: The Listener, The Atlantic, Jan/Feb 2010
Refreshing to see well-written stories about lesser-known media phenomena like Coast to Coast AM.
James Verini: Lost Exile, Vanity Fair, Feb. 23, 2010
Verini does a great job describing what the death of the paper (in this case, Russia’s English-language paper The Exile) means to the two men who started it and how this ties into the experience of loss.
Richard Morgan: Seven Years as a Freelancer, or, How to Make Vitamin Soup, The Awl, Aug. 2, 2010
Using humor and honesty to show how unglamorous the life of a freelancer can be.
Laurie Hertzel: News Reporting in Duluth: Adventures of an Accidental Journalist, MinnPost, Aug. 26, 2010
I’ve always loved stories about female journalists who aren’t afraid to advocate for gender equality in the newsroom, and I think this one is particularly good. I like the memories that Hertzel shares about working with Jacqui Banaszynski — arguably one of the most influential editors and coaches in the business.
Frank Bruni: The Age of Laura Linney, The New York Times, July 28, 2010
This story isn’t about the media, but I’m including it because it reminds me of the importance of being versatile as a journalist. Bruni has written about a wide variety of topics — Hollywood, politics, his struggles with weight, etc. — and always does so in a way that makes me think he has studied that particular subject or source for years.