Media

RSS Feed
WAMU 88.5

Poynter: News Organizations Learn To Adapt In Virginia Tech Emergency

The websites of news organizations near Virginia Tech university were overwhelmed with traffic Thursday, prompting many to turn to new alternatives to keep citizens informed.

NPR

The Tweets, Tics And Turns Of Twitter Politics

Is public political discourse any different in the new age of social media? Survey says: Yes. Negative tweets about the GOP hopefuls outnumbered positive tweets by at least 2 to 1, according to a new report.
NPR

'The Atlantic' Remembers Its Civil War Stories

In 1857, a group of American intellectuals founded The Atlantic and used it to challenge the institution of slavery. Now, on the 150th anniversary of the Civil War's beginning, a new issue of the magazine reaches back to a time when slavery — and the future of the United States — was still an open question.
NPR

Volunteers Rally To Save War Columnist's Museum

A museum dedicated to Pulitzer Prize-winning World War II columnist Ernie Pyle is in danger of closing. The site, in Pyle's hometown of Dana, Ind., attracts fewer than 2,000 visitors annually. The state recently cut off support to the museum and moved a number of the artifacts to the capitol. Now, a group of community volunteers is rallying to try to preserve the museum and Pyle's legacy.
WAMU 88.5

GovExec: Ranking Federal Agencies' Tweets

A new report is looking at how well federal agencies are using Twitter to interact with the public.  

NPR

Adbusters Co-Founder Discusses OWS

Robert Siegel talks to Kalle Lasn, a co-founder of Adbusters Magazine. Lasn helped originate the idea for the Occupy Wall Street movement.
NPR

'Times' Advice Guru Answers Your Social Q's

New York Times advice columnist Philip Galanes details how to handle breakups, cellphone calls and food allergies — among other topics — in his book Social Q's: How to Survive the Quirks, Quandaries and Quagmires of Today.
NPR

Whether 'Burma' Or 'Myanmar,' The Root Is The Same

Melissa Block and Guy Raz note that not all news outlets have accepted the name Myanmar for the country also known as Burma. They describe the issue of accepting a name chosen by a brutal regime — and how, in the end, it doesn't matter because the root word is the same.

Pages