Media Nation
The Past, Present, and Future of News in America
- In-Person
- Interface
140 W 30th Street
New York, NY 10001 - 6:30PM – 8:30PM EDT
The 24/7 cable news cycle, politically-charged acceptance speeches at Hollywood award shows, and an errant presidential Twitter feed have made it abundantly clear that media is playing an enormous role in American politics.
But its influence isn’t new. Stretching from advocate to government insider, mass media has long broken away from the narrow mandate of objective reporting and grown into a complex ecosystem that participates in the political conversation, much to the chagrin of many of its consumers.
According to a new anthology, , a full century of media history has championed an unthreatened freedom of speech, but when media bias becomes a campaign platform and “alternative facts” force a new press standard, is media as we know it going extinct? With the apparent explosion of fake news and instant Internet dispatches filed without fact check, is journalism losing the fight for truth?
´³´Ç¾±²ÔÌý¹ú²úÊÓÆµ NYC for a conversation on the deep political history of the fourth estate and on the immense influence—and scrutiny—with which it must contend.
INTRODUCTION
Craig NewmarkÂ
Founder, craigslist and the Craig Newmark Foundation
PARTICIPANTS
Brian StelterÂ
Senior Media Correspondent and Host, “Reliable Sources,” CNN
Shani O. HiltonÂ
Head of U.S. News, BuzzFeed
Emily BellÂ
Director, Tow Center for Digital Journalism, Columbia University
Nina BurleighÂ
National Politics Correspondent, Newsweek
Julian ZelizerÂ
Professor of History and Public Affairs, Princeton University
Fellow, Political Reform, ¹ú²úÊÓÆµ
°ä´Ç-±ð»å¾±³Ù´Ç°ù,ÌýMedia Nation: The Political History of News in Modern America