 There are two ways of looking at journalism. In one light, it’s a profession, conducted by a credentialed professional class. In the other, it’s a trade, operated in service of customers who want to understand the world. This moment, from the Trumpian pressure on independent media to the related turmoil at CBS News to the uncertainty around AI, is a gloomy one for the profession. But Max lent me this space to share my most optimistic take: that there are hopeful signs that the trade of journalism is resurgent simply because many consumers prefer what it offers — true statements, hard questions — to the alternative. Here are a few signs: The great Silicon Valley podcaster Dwarkesh Patel surprised and delighted his audience in April by pressing Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang on the contradictions of US-China chip policy. A new Pentagon press corps, invited in by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth in a wildly unsuccessful attempt at image management, has somehow forced the Pentagon chief into stonewalling tough questions from Gateway Pundit and The Daily Caller. “They are starting to feel the same frustration as we felt, that they can’t get information,” one surprised Pentagon reporter told me. The Silicon Valley newsletter Pirate Wires, born out of tech’s anger at the media, now breaks news and brings in varying perspectives (OK, mine, on this exact subject). And on the legacy end of the spectrum, the hosts of The New York Times’ Popcast told us on Mixed Signals that they attribute their success (and A-List bookings) to a hunger among both artists and fans for deeper engagement than social media softballs. “It’s like they’ve never seen a real interview before,” Jon Caramanica said of some of the show’s younger fans. This trend can be irritating to the professional journalist class, who will note that these upstarts are extremely messy in various ways — ideological, conflicted, wet behind the ears. But the professionals have our well-documented blind spots, too, which we write about in this week’s piece about New York Times opinion columnist Nick Kristof. And there’s another way to see it: Journalists should have the confidence of our convictions. That means believing — and helping — the gravity of good journalism to defeat boring propaganda and endless podcasts. Also today: One well-funded news outlet pushes up a whole city’s press corps’ pay, and a Father’s Day book recommendation. |