October marked the point of maximum saturation. “I’ve had enough news now, thank you,” wrote Alexandra Petri in The Washington Post. News avoidance was up, wrote Medill professor Stephanie Edgerly in The Hill, noting that even avid journalism consumers were now opting to detox for their own mental health. Not only were current events themselves painful and disorienting, but the modes of reporting themselves felt poisonous.
My solution: Step away from the stories and pundits endlessly grinding on about how divided we are, and get out and actually see other Americans.
Cody, Wyoming
My results were mixed. On one hand, as the photos I took along the way underscore, the public debate in America is vociferous and polarized. On the other hand, the country’s infrastructure is still intact. The national parks were open, with rangers gamely staffing outdoor gift shops. The interstate highways still runs coast to coast, crossing state borders smoothly despite the heated rhetoric about secession. For better or worse, the country is also bound together by its chain stores and gas stations and hotels, homogenizing experiences and challenges across blue and red.
Arches National Park, Utah
The bones of our fractured Union are still there. In 2021, journalists either will need to learn to knit them back together — or will hasten both the country’s disarticulation and their own irrelevance. We need a media that’s not just diverse, equitable, and inclusive, but that positively revels in pluralism — and one that spends as much time reporting on what still functions as it does on what’s broken.
Keystone, South Dakota
We know the old mass-media ways of creating false consensus no longer work: so-called trend stories based on a few shared Upper East Side observations, one-sided crime coverage focused only on certain neighborhoods, stories about women and culture cordoned off and dismissed as soft. Too many of us now have too much agency and voice to allow a narrow swath of reporters and opinionators to pretend to speak for us. This piece about generational and cultural skirmishes at The New York Times illustrates the dynamic nicely.
Arroyo Seco, New Mexico
Some of the more recent approaches to journalism are still premised on old mental models. What is a “newsroom” when we can no longer be in the same room? Perhaps it’s better to think of reporting as a distributed, networked product. With legacy outlets and their staffs increasingly decimated, is the concern that they wield too much power as gatekeepers still salient? Maybe it’s smart of “Leavers” to strike out independently. Do outlets led by members of historically excluded communities need to focus on “engagement”? Or perhaps that’s a frame more relevant to outlets led by those who still wield privilege.
Cisco, Utah
Honing fresh approaches to honoring difference — while affirming the systems and strengths Americans share — will take new people, processes, and power relations, as our team at Dot Connector Studio documented in July’s “Reconstructing American News” report for the Ford Foundation. It will also take the courage to step outside the many kneejerk binaries — red/blue, white/black, male/female, rural/urban — that deform and oversimplify our public discourse, without denying the real-world consequences of related prejudices.
Santa Fe, New Mexico
Jessica Clark is founder and executive director of Dot Connector Studio and publisher of Immerse.news.
October marked the point of maximum saturation. “I’ve had enough news now, thank you,” wrote Alexandra Petri in The Washington Post. News avoidance was up, wrote Medill professor Stephanie Edgerly in The Hill, noting that even avid journalism consumers were now opting to detox for their own mental health. Not only were current events themselves painful and disorienting, but the modes of reporting themselves felt poisonous.
My solution: Step away from the stories and pundits endlessly grinding on about how divided we are, and get out and actually see other Americans.
Cody, Wyoming
My results were mixed. On one hand, as the photos I took along the way underscore, the public debate in America is vociferous and polarized. On the other hand, the country’s infrastructure is still intact. The national parks were open, with rangers gamely staffing outdoor gift shops. The interstate highways still runs coast to coast, crossing state borders smoothly despite the heated rhetoric about secession. For better or worse, the country is also bound together by its chain stores and gas stations and hotels, homogenizing experiences and challenges across blue and red.
Arches National Park, Utah
The bones of our fractured Union are still there. In 2021, journalists either will need to learn to knit them back together — or will hasten both the country’s disarticulation and their own irrelevance. We need a media that’s not just diverse, equitable, and inclusive, but that positively revels in pluralism — and one that spends as much time reporting on what still functions as it does on what’s broken.
Keystone, South Dakota
We know the old mass-media ways of creating false consensus no longer work: so-called trend stories based on a few shared Upper East Side observations, one-sided crime coverage focused only on certain neighborhoods, stories about women and culture cordoned off and dismissed as soft. Too many of us now have too much agency and voice to allow a narrow swath of reporters and opinionators to pretend to speak for us. This piece about generational and cultural skirmishes at The New York Times illustrates the dynamic nicely.
Arroyo Seco, New Mexico
Some of the more recent approaches to journalism are still premised on old mental models. What is a “newsroom” when we can no longer be in the same room? Perhaps it’s better to think of reporting as a distributed, networked product. With legacy outlets and their staffs increasingly decimated, is the concern that they wield too much power as gatekeepers still salient? Maybe it’s smart of “Leavers” to strike out independently. Do outlets led by members of historically excluded communities need to focus on “engagement”? Or perhaps that’s a frame more relevant to outlets led by those who still wield privilege.
Cisco, Utah
Honing fresh approaches to honoring difference — while affirming the systems and strengths Americans share — will take new people, processes, and power relations, as our team at Dot Connector Studio documented in July’s “Reconstructing American News” report for the Ford Foundation. It will also take the courage to step outside the many kneejerk binaries — red/blue, white/black, male/female, rural/urban — that deform and oversimplify our public discourse, without denying the real-world consequences of related prejudices.
Santa Fe, New Mexico
Jessica Clark is founder and executive director of Dot Connector Studio and publisher of Immerse.news.
Megan McCarthy Readers embrace a low-information diet
Juleyka Lantigua The download, podcasting’s metric king, gets dethroned
Brian Moritz The year sports journalism changes for good
Danielle C. Belton A decimated media rededicates itself to truth
Kate Myers My son will join every Zoom call in our industry
John Ketchum More journalists of color become newsroom founders
Tim Carmody Spotify will make big waves in video
Matt DeRienzo Citizen truth brigades steer us back toward reality
Julia Angwin Show your (computational) work
Sarah Marshall The year audiences need extra cheer
Loretta Chao Open up the profession
Joanne McNeil Newsrooms push back against Ivy League cronyism
Nabiha Syed Newsrooms quit their toxic relationships
Kawandeep Virdee Goodbye, doomscroll
Gordon Crovitz Common law will finally apply to the Internet
Rachel Glickhouse Journalists will be kinder to each other — and to themselves
Jonas Kaiser Toward a wehrhafte journalism
Chicas Poderosas More voices mean better information
Joshua P. Darr Legislatures will tackle the local news crisis
Delia Cai Subscriptions start working for the middle
José Zamora Walking the talk on diversity
J. Siguru Wahutu Journalists still wrongly think the U.S. is different
John Davidow Reflect and repent
Rodney Gibbs Zooming beyond talking heads
Burt Herman Journalists build post-Facebook digital communities
Amara Aguilar Journalism schools emphasize listening
Taylor Lorenz Journalists will learn influencing isn’t easy
Gonzalo del Peon Collaborations expand from newsrooms to the business side
Aaron Foley Diversity gains haven’t shown up in local news
Rasmus Kleis Nielsen Stop pretending publishers are a united front
Cindy Royal J-school grads maintain their optimism and adaptability
Marie Shanahan Journalism schools stop perpetuating the status quo
Francesco Zaffarano The year we ask the audience what it needs
Doris Truong Indigenous issues get long-overdue mainstream coverage
Ben Collins We need to learn how to talk to (and about) accidental conspiracists
Raney Aronson-Rath To get past information divides, we need to understand them first
Bill Adair The future of fact-checking is all about structured data
Janet Haven and Sam Hinds Is this an AI newsroom?
AX Mina 2020 isn’t a black swan — it’s a yellow canary
Mike Ananny Toward better tech journalism
Astead W. Herndon The Trump-sized window of the media caring about race closes again
David Skok A pandemic-prompted wave of consolidation
Edward Roussel Tech companies get aggressive in local
Jacqué Palmer The rise of the plain-text email newsletter
John Garrett A surprisingly good year
Jeremy Gilbert Human-centered journalism
Natalie Meade Journalism enters rehab
M. Scott Havens Traditional pay TV will embrace the disruption
Jennifer Choi What have we done for you lately?
Candis Callison Calling it a crisis isn’t enough (if it ever was)
Marcus Mabry News orgs adapt to a post-Trump world (with Trump still in it)
Celeste Headlee The rise of radical newsroom transparency
Tauhid Chappell and Mike Rispoli Defund the crime beat
Kristen Muller Engaged journalism scales
Whitney Phillips Facts are an insufficient response to falsehoods
Andrew Donohue The rise of the democracy beat
John Saroff Covid sparks the growth of independent local news sites
C.W. Anderson Journalism changed under Trump — will it keep changing under Biden?
Colleen Shalby The definition of good journalism shifts
Anna Nirmala Local news orgs grasp the urgency of community roots
Brandy Zadrozny Misinformation fatigue sets in
Nisha Chittal The year we stop pivoting
Sonali Prasad Making disaster journalism that cuts through the noise
Pablo Boczkowski Audiences have revolted. Will newsrooms adapt?
Imaeyen Ibanga Journalism gets unmasked
Annie Rudd Newsrooms grow less comfortable with the “view from above”
Andrew Ramsammy Stop being polite and start getting real
Masuma Ahuja We’ll remember how interconnected our world is
Jer Thorp Fewer pixels, more cardboard
Jim Friedlich A newspaper renaissance reached by stopping the presses
Julia B. Chan and Kim Bui Millennials are ready to run things
Nik Usher Don’t expect an antitrust dividend for the media
Zizi Papacharissi The year we rebuild the infrastructure of truth
Mariano Blejman It’s time to challenge autocompleted journalism
Cherian George Enter the lamb warriors
Mandy Jenkins You build trust by helping your readers
Rick Berke Virtual events are here to stay
Francesca Tripodi Don’t expect breaking up Google and Facebook to solve our information woes
Alfred Hermida and Oscar Westlund The virus ups data journalism’s game
Steve Henn Has independent podcasting peaked?
Richard Tofel Less on politics, more on how government works (or doesn’t)
Parker Molloy The press will risk elevating a Shadow President Trump
Joni Deutsch Local arts and music make journalism more joyous
Patrick Butler Covid-19 reporting has prepared us for cross-border collaboration
María Sánchez Díez Traffic will plummet — and it’ll be ok
A.J. Bauer The year of MAGAcal thinking
Ariane Bernard Going solo is still only a path for the few
Jennifer Brandel A sneak peak at power mapping, 2073’s top innovation
Catalina Albeanu Publish less, listen more
Matt Skibinski Misinformation won’t stop unless we stop it
Nonny de la Pena News reaches the third dimension
Pia Frey Building growth through tastemakers and their communities
Bo Hee Kim Newsrooms create an intentional and collaborative culture
Michael W. Wagner Fractured democracy, fractured journalism
Ernie Smith Entrepreneurship on rails
Garance Franke-Ruta Rebundling content, rebuilding connections
Stefanie Murray and Anthony Advincula Expect to see more translations and non-English content
Sam Ford We’ll find better ways to archive our work
Mike Caulfield 2021’s misinformation will look a lot like 2020’s (and 2019’s, and…)
Marissa Evans Putting community trauma into context
Sara M. Watson Return of the RSS reader
Rachel Schallom The rise of nonprofit journalism continues
Sumi Aggarwal News literacy programs aren’t child’s play
Mark Stenberg The rise of the journalist-influencer
Ariel Zirulnick Local newsrooms question their paywalls
Nicholas Jackson Blogging is back, but better
Kerri Hoffman Protecting podcasting’s open ecosystem
Benjamin Toff Beltway reporting gets normal again, for better and for worse
Sarah Stonbely Videoconferencing brings more geographic diversity
Talmon Joseph Smith The media rejects deficit hawkery
Beena Raghavendran Journalism gets fused with art
Anthony Nadler Journalism struggles to find a new model of legitimacy
Alicia Bell and Simon Galperin Media reparations now
Renée Kaplan Falling in love with your subscription
Tonya Mosley True equity means ownership
Kevin D. Grant Parachute journalism goes away for good
Linda Solomon Wood Canada steps up for journalism
Meredith D. Clark The year journalism starts paying reparations
Nico Gendron Ask your readers to help build your products
Laura E. Davis The focus turns to newsroom leaders for lasting change
Charo Henríquez A new path to leadership
Logan Jaffe History as a reporting tool
Tamar Charney Public radio has a midlife crisis
Gabe Schneider Another year of empty promises on diversity
Tanya Cordrey Declining trust forces publishers to claim (or disclaim) values
Ben Werdmuller The web blooms again
Hadjar Benmiloud Get representative, or die trying
Ståle Grut Network analysis enters the journalism toolbox
Hossein Derakhshan Mass personalization of truth
Chase Davis The year we look beyond The Story
Jesse Holcomb Genre erosion in nonprofit journalism
Mark S. Luckie Newsrooms and streaming services get cozy
Robert Hernandez Data and shame
Victor Pickard The commercial era for local journalism is over
Don Day Business first, journalism second
Alyssa Zeisler Holistic medicine for journalism
Christoph Mergerson Black Americans will demand more from journalism
Jean Friedman-Rudovsky and Cassie Haynes A shift from conversation to action
Zainab Khan From understanding to feeling
Sue Cross A global consensus around the kind of news we need to save
Jody Brannon People won’t renew
Ray Soto The news gets spatial
Rishad Patel From direct-to-consumer to direct-to-believers
Ryan Kellett The bundle gets bundled
Heidi Tworek A year of news mocktails
Shaydanay Urbani and Nancy Watzman Local collaboration is key to slowing misinformation
Samantha Ragland The year of journalists taking initiative
Cory Bergman The year after a thousand earthquakes
David Chavern Local video finally gets momentum
Ashton Lattimore Remote work helps level the playing field in an insular industry
Errin Haines Let’s normalize women’s leadership
Eric Nuzum Podcasting dodged a bullet in 2020, but 2021 will be harder