This is more wishful thinking than prediction: Journalists, chastened by their failure to see the Trump victory coming, will gain a healthy skepticism about data. Political journalism used to be more like anthropology — relying on field work, on long, in-depth interviews. I fear that kind of reporting is now regarded as “anecdotal.” Okay, you filled a notebook with soul-baring interviews, but where are the metrics? The metrics of 2016 — unreliable polls, economic indicators that told us things were getting better (never mind the back end of the bell curve), low crime rates that don’t measure fear — didn’t tell the story. I’m all for data, but we shouldn’t be slaves to it.
Bill Keller is editor-in-chief of The Marshall Project and previously executive editor of The New York Times.
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Ken Schwencke Disaggregation and collection
Carla Zanoni Prioritizing emotional health
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Ariane Bernard Better data about your users
Umbreen Bhatti A sense of journalists’ humanity
Renée Kaplan Pure reach has reached its limit
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Guy Raz Inspiration and hope will matter more than ever
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Andrew Ramsammy Rise of the rebel journalist
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Laura Walker Authentic voices, not fake news
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Sam Ford The year we talk about our awful metrics
Claire Wardle Verification takes center stage
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Tanya Cordrey The resurgence of reach
Alexis Lloyd Public trust for private realities
Errin Haines Chaos or community?
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Jonathan Stray A boom in responsible conservative media
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Geetika Rudra Journalism is community
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Mike Ragsdale A smarter information diet
Dan Colarusso Let’s make live video we can love
Richard Tofel The country doesn’t trust us — but they do believe us
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Javaun Moradi What can we own?
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Millie Tran International expansion without colonial overtones
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Matt Karolian AI improves publishing
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Maria Bustillos “It’s true — I saw it on Facebook”
Jonathan Hunt Measurement companies get with the times
Anita Zielina The sales funnel reaches (and changes) the newsroom
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Tim Griggs The year we stop taking sides
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Steve Henn The next revolution is voice
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Rebekah Monson Journalism is community-as-a-service
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Priya Ganapati Mobile websites are ready for reinvention
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Michael Oreskes Reversing the erosion of democracy
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Matt Waite The people running the media are the problem
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Ray Soto VR moves from experiments to immersion
Sydette Harry Facing journalism’s history
Amy O'Leary Not just covering communities, reaching them
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David Chavern Fake news gets solved
Taylor Lorenz “Selfie journalism” becomes a thing
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Robert Hernandez History will exclude you, again
Mary Meehan Feeling blue in a red state
Melody Kramer Radically rethinking design
Ashley C. Woods Local journalism will fight a new fight
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Rachel Sklar Women are going to get loud