Journalism
in sentence
348 examples of Journalism in a sentence
My kind of
journalism
is a product of my society.
I know that sometimes people have their own criticisms about undercover
journalism.
My kind of
journalism
might not fit in other continents or other countries, but I can tell you, it works in my part of the continent of Africa, because usually, when people talk about corruption, they ask, "Where is the evidence?
I'm going to carry on with this kind of journalism, because I know that when evil men destroy, good men must build and bind.
Fake news is not only bad for
journalism.
We proved that it's not bad journalism; it's a deliberate act of misinformation.
We shouldn't be criminalizing
journalism.
Journalism
is not a crime, communication is not a crime, and we should not be monitored in our everyday activities.
The latest was in Idaho just two weeks ago, and today we released a lawsuit challenging it as unconstitutional as a threat to
journalism.
I logged on to a citizen
journalism
platform called iReport, and I recorded a video talking about what the scene was like in Bangalore.
As empowered as I felt with the new liberty that this citizen
journalism
channel gave me, I found myself in an unfamiliar situation.
To me, that's the essence of
journalism
and that's what I'm committed to doing.
And I think, in the future,
journalism
and many other professions, there are flying cameras already quite commonly out there, but I think, you wait a few months, a few years, and for many professions, it's really going to be a requirement.
Tear gas definitely helped to open mine to something that I want to share with you this afternoon: that livestreaming the power of independent broadcasts through the web can be a game-changer in journalism, in activism, and as I see it, in the political discourse as well.
We were not planning to make money out of this, which was wise, because you shouldn't try to make money out of
journalism
now.
But I'm also trying to come up with ways to finance independent
journalism
through a direct relationship with an audience, with an active audience, because now I really want to try to make a living out of my tear gas resolution back then.
And that idea, I think, should be the intention, should be the goal of any good journalism, any good activism, but most of all, any good politics.
In Turkey, I watched four young college students organize a countrywide citizen
journalism
network called 140Journos that became the central hub for uncensored news in the country.
In Turkey, 140Journos are holding hack-a-thons so that they support communities as well as citizen
journalism.
TR: So The Intercept is that new investigative
journalism
website, that's cofounded by Glenn Greenwald.
So five years ago was about when I really began to push the envelope with using virtual reality and
journalism
together.
So you can see that the basic tenets of journalism, they don't really change here, right?
And "Hunger in LA," well, it's helped start a new form of doing
journalism
that I think is going to join all the other normal platforms in the future.
While good
journalism
aims for objectivity, media bias is often unavoidable.
Inspection, environmental monitoring, photography and film and journalism: these are some of the potential applications for commercial drones, and their enablers are the capabilities being developed at research facilities around the world.
But it also presented a gigantic challenge to investigative
journalism.
So it seems staggering that
journalism
has been so late to cover stories in a truly global way.
And it also seems staggering that
journalism
has been so slow to wake up to the possibilities that technology brings, rather than being frightened of it.
And this has plunged
journalism
into crisis, forcing those institutions to reexamine how they function.
The biggest information leak in history had now spawned the biggest
journalism
collaboration in history: 376 sets of native eyes doing what journalists normally never do, working shoulder to shoulder, sharing information, but telling no one.
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