
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Paul Farhi was a media reporter for the Washington Post until the end of last year. But instead of retiring, he’s been busier than ever, chronicling the seemingly endless stream of bad news stories about the media business, for outlets like The Atlantic and here at CJR.
He joins The Kicker to talk about traditional journalism’s struggles to stay relevant amid the boundless other means companies and high-profile individuals have to communicate with the public—and the growing number of people who say they avoid the news entirely.
You can read more about journalism’s apathy problem in CJR’s Election Issue here.
And read Farhi’s reporting on how some companies no longer feel the need to give any comment to a reporter, even when they think the story is wrong.
Hosted by Josh Hersh
Produced by Amanda Darrach
Research by Kevin Lind
Episode Website
4.5
7171 ratings
Paul Farhi was a media reporter for the Washington Post until the end of last year. But instead of retiring, he’s been busier than ever, chronicling the seemingly endless stream of bad news stories about the media business, for outlets like The Atlantic and here at CJR.
He joins The Kicker to talk about traditional journalism’s struggles to stay relevant amid the boundless other means companies and high-profile individuals have to communicate with the public—and the growing number of people who say they avoid the news entirely.
You can read more about journalism’s apathy problem in CJR’s Election Issue here.
And read Farhi’s reporting on how some companies no longer feel the need to give any comment to a reporter, even when they think the story is wrong.
Hosted by Josh Hersh
Produced by Amanda Darrach
Research by Kevin Lind
Episode Website
9,166 Listeners
1,550 Listeners
38,189 Listeners
3,954 Listeners
599 Listeners
6,670 Listeners
6,118 Listeners
111,917 Listeners
2,321 Listeners
32,390 Listeners
6,866 Listeners
5,697 Listeners
15,335 Listeners
1,471 Listeners
201 Listeners