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National Affairs
How Packer slipped on Fairfax, with help from Malcolm Turnbull
Rodney Tiffen
26 July 2018
When Channel Nine last tried to gain control of Fairfax, the broadcaster’s proprietor ran into trouble and an old friendship was sundered
Books & Arts
The journo who never got away
Michael Cannon
5 June 2018
Books
| Murdoch lieutenant Les Hinton doesn’t burn
all
his bridges in his frank new memoir
Essays & Reportage
You are no longer the product
Tom Greenwell
6 February 2018
Dutch news site
De Correspondent
represents a radical challenge to traditional journalistic practice. Now, it’s about to launch in the United States
Correspondents
The Guardian goes for broke
David Hayes
10 January 2018
Britain’s liberal beacon is scaling down but thinking big
Essays & Reportage
Reading about a revolution
Norman Abjorensen
10 October 2017
A gathering flow of news about the revolutionary movement in Russia reached Australian readers during 1917
International
Few bright spots for press freedom in Southeast Asia
Luke Hunt
4 October 2017
Is China’s harsh brand of media control serving as a role model for its neighbours?
Essays & Reportage
Journalism is in peril. Can government help?
Tom Greenwell
29 June 2017
State support for the press is commonplace in Europe, and it doesn’t appear to inhibit journalists. But does it bring real benefits?
Essays & Reportage
Back to the future with Facebook
Sybil Nolan
4 April 2017
From the archive
| Are Facebook, Google and Apple as different from the old news media as they claim to be?
Sybil Nolan
looks at their vertical transition
From the archive
Mitchell, Murdoch and me
Peter Brent
13 October 2016
A critic-turned-employee of the
Australian
recalls the highs and lows of dealing with Chris Mitchell, editor-in-chief
Essays & Reportage
A different kind of news?
Tom Greenwell
13 September 2016
A historic shift has given readers the edge over advertisers in determining the news media’s viability, writes
Tom Greenwell.
But what will that mean in practice?
Essays & Reportage
Shooting the picture: then and now
Sally Young & Fay Anderson
7 September 2016
Much has changed since the earliest photojournalism, write
Sally Young
and
Fay Anderson
. But some challenges have made a comeback in the digital age
Correspondents
Anthony Sampson, the inside-outsider
David Hayes
29 July 2016
The anatomist of Britain and ally of South African freedom, born ninety years ago, was a pioneer in journalism, says
David Hayes
Correspondents
A post-Brexit election
David Hayes
5 July 2016
Britain’s media finds in Australia’s drama some relief from the country’s own, says
David Hayes
National Affairs
Reputations in the courtroom
Sally McCausland
10 June 2016
Two recent defamation decisions illustrate how the law can be bad for both sides when cases go to court, writes
Sally McCausland
From the archive
The Independent, a restless farewell
David Hayes
25 March 2016
The last print run of a once vital newspaper has been hailed as a digital ascent. But it’s more complicated than that
National Affairs
Why Bill Shorten and Labor can afford to ignore Rupert Murdoch
Rodney Tiffen
23 June 2015
With declining reach and influence, the Murdoch empire can no longer determine election results, writes
Rodney Tiffen
Summer season
War stories
Jeannine Baker
15 April 2015
Women reporters showed they could report alongside men during the second world war
National Affairs
Tabloid tweeter tangles the truth
Rodney Tiffen
18 December 2014
Australia’s most powerful American citizen increasingly sees reality in the same way as the Tea Party, says
Rodney Tiffen
Books & Arts
Making the cut
Ken Haley
27 November 2014
Ken Haley
finds much to like in this tribute to some of the greats of Australian journalism
Books & Arts
Ah, yes, there you are
Richard Johnstone
1 October 2014
Photographer Jane Bown sought to unearth something essential and make it visible
Books & Arts
Money and morality
Stuart Macintyre
19 September 2014
Stuart Macintyre
reviews a new biography of the titan of Australian newspaper proprietors, David Syme
Books & Arts
Whom the gods wish to destroy…
Ken Haley
7 August 2014
Ben Hills offers a distinctive take on what went wrong for Fairfax, writes
Ken Haley
National Affairs
In praise of the strong proprietor
Mark Day
14 July 2014
The
Australian
exists because Rupert Murdoch is an old-fashioned media mogul willing to follow his instincts, argues former editor
Mark Day
in this talk from…
National Affairs
Wacky backy
Rodney Tiffen
12 July 2014
When the
Australian
waded into the tobacco packaging debate it was met with a barrage of well-informed criticism. The paper’s response was to dig in
Essays & Reportage
Near-death on Mort Street
Peter Browne
6 July 2014
By the time the first edition of the
Australian
hit the streets, a vital part of Rupert Murdoch’s strategy had gone awry
National Affairs
Yes, it is our ABC
Rodney Tiffen
5 December 2013
The gulf between the views of the public and the ABC’s vocal critics is large and growing, writes
Rodney Tiffen
National Affairs
Rupert Murdoch’s sixtieth anniversary and the hazards of longevity
Rodney Tiffen
16 October 2013
Rupert Murdoch may have set a world record for longevity in corporate governance, but his reputation would stand higher if he had retired ten years ago, writes
Rodney Tiffen
Books & Arts
Fairfax adrift: the view from Sydney
Sybil Nolan
30 August 2013
Readers and journalists are mostly missing from two recent books about the troubles at Fairfax, writes
Sybil Nolan
Essays & Reportage
Shaping the Herald: Sir Keith Murdoch seen through his confidential memoranda
Michael Cannon
29 June 2013
As managing editor of the Melbourne
Herald
, Keith Murdoch battled employers, sensation-mongering and overly large headlines in a remarkable series of notes to his senior…
Books & Arts
Torn in two parts
Bridget Griffen-Foley
21 June 2013
On the anniversary of its publication,
Bridget Griffen-Foley
reviews John Douglas Pringle’s self-deprecating account of a much-admired career
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