Two deaths this week give the media a chance to cover significant changes in womenâs sexuality within the past few decades.
An appetite lost over Chick-fil-A and food ethics
After Sikh temple shooting, some predictably react
When I received a one-line e-mail that there had been a mass shooting at a Sikh temple, I had a .5 second heart attack. We have family who live across the street from such a temple in Wisconsin, and the line didn’t include information about location or whether the shooter was on the loose.
Reporters: Don't crush Gabby Douglas's interesting story
Sports reporters write stories very quickly, feeding editors literally on deadline. My sports reporter husband jokes that political reporters stress out maybe once a year during election nights when nearly every weekend has at least two election-like nights for sports. In many ways, they have been doing what Twitter users are now figuring out, how to report reactions professionally as you experience them before writing the big picture piece later.
Gabby Douglas: Watch, there's a faith story in there
London 2012 fetes British ink, film and (gasp!) hymnody
Folks, I have committed a serious sin that I hate to spot among other reporters. When searching for obvious religion, I overlooked the subtle spots.
Pod people: Treat religion news like crime news?
Did anyone else have a good time watching the Olympic’s opening ceremonies tonight? I learned a lot about how the British, or at least how the ones running the Olympics, see their own history.
MSM & Chick-fil-A: The Internet often honors stupid stories
Last week I saw Chick-fil-A trending on Google and thought there must be some delicious promotion, some sort of free sandwich you get for dressing up like a cow. Eager to get a freebie, I clicked through to find out why people were searching.
How to spot a media-generated purity ball trend
How do you spot a fake news trend? You start asking questions. You find out what key figures are behind something, how much money goes into it, who knows about it.