Stirring through the ashes
Political pathologists will be stirring through the ashes of the 2016 presidential election for years to come trying to understand exactly what happened.
Political pathologists will be stirring through the ashes of the 2016 presidential election for years to come trying to understand exactly what happened.
In 2016, the number of deaths of refugees and migrants crossing the Mediterranean hit an all-time high.
Alan Soon keeps his finger firmly on the pulse.
The media landscape has changed. Where once ‘legacy media’ dominated, their traditional territory is being encroached on by social media platforms and online outlets.
When I went to get a master’s degree in journalism, lesson one, day one in the World Room at Columbia Journalism School in New York was a lecture about trust: in this case, journalists’ and authorities’ trust in the stories told by the apparent vi
Poor publicity is rarely the flipside of good publicity.
My favourite fictional public relations practitioner, the vile Malcolm Tucker of The Thick of It (2005–2012), was voted only the seco
Recent terrorist attacks around the world – including Paris, Beirut and Metrojet Flight 9268 – were marked not only by their cruelty but also the use of social media before, during and after the attacks.
Podcasting is becoming a popular tool for brand storytelling.
The world has seen an explosion of data collection.