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Journalism History

100 Episodes

23 minutes | Aug 1, 2022
Episode 107: Framing Protest and Describing Disability
Researcher Joy Jenkins describes how the language used in news media to describe people with disabilities has changed through the case of a 1977 protest in support of civil rights regulations. Show transcripts are available at https://journalism-history.org/podcast/
28 minutes | Jul 4, 2022
Episode 106: Doctors Confront the Turn-of-the-Century Press
Researcher Ulf Jonas Bjork explains the criticism voiced in medical journals against reporters, advertisers and the newspaper industry in the late 1800s and early 1900s. Show transcripts are available at https://journalism-history.org/podcast/.
28 minutes | Jun 6, 2022
Episode 105: Watergate and the Press
In observance of the 50th anniversary of the Watergate arrests, researcher Jon Marshall explores the role of the press in covering the scandal and the eventual downfall of the Nixon administration. Show transcripts are available at https://journalism-history.org/podcast/
19 minutes | May 9, 2022
Episode 104: The Moon Hoax
Researcher Brian Thornton discusses one of the first and most bizarre newspaper frauds in the United States: the infamous moon hoax of 1835, perpetuated by the New York Sun and reporter Richard Adams Locke. Show transcripts are available at https://journalism-history.org/podcast/
43 minutes | Apr 25, 2022
Episode 103: Journalists on Film
Author Richard Ness reviews Hollywood’s diverse depictions of journalists over the years, from crusading reporters in All the President’s Men and Spotlight to manipulative media executives in Citizen Kane and Network. Show transcripts are available at https://journalism-history.org/podcast/.
32 minutes | Apr 11, 2022
Episode 102: Defining the Partisan Press Era
Historian Erika Pribanic-Smith uses the hotly contested 1844 presidential election to explain the partisan press era and to draw connections between that era and our own. Show transcripts are available at https://journalism-history.org/podcast/
30 minutes | Mar 28, 2022
Episode 101: The Immigrant Press and First Red Scare
Researcher Anna Popkova describes the importance of the immigrant press in the early 1900s to help build and inform communities new to America and how critical these newspapers were during times of sweeping discrimination. Show transcripts are available at https://journalism-history.org/podcast/
49 minutes | Mar 14, 2022
Episode 100: The Telegraph, Libel and Press Freedom
Author Patrick File discusses his book, Bad News Travels Fast: The Telegraph, Libel and Press Freedom in the Progressive Era, and reviews three turn-of-the-century libel suits, including one from world-famous sharpshooter Annie Oakley. Show transcripts are available at https://journalism-history.org/podcast/. 
27 minutes | Feb 28, 2022
Episode 99: A Tour of the Midcentury Newsroom
Historian Will Mari gives a tour of the American newsroom as it existed in the mid-20th century, introducing the various roles involved in the newsgathering process both inside and out of the newsroom. Show transcripts are available at https://journalism-history.org/podcast/. 
34 minutes | Feb 14, 2022
Episode 98: Dear Abby, I’m Gay
Author Andrew Stoner describes how advice columnists, such as Ann Landers, Dear Abby and Dr. Joyce Brothers, affected public opinion on homosexuality. Show transcripts are available at https://journalism-history.org/podcast/. Editor's Note: Stoner passed away after the recording of this podcast. We dedicate this episode to his legacy.
27 minutes | Jan 31, 2022
Episode 97: The Community-Building Bennett Banner
Researcher Sheryl Kennedy Haydel explains how the journalists of the student-run Bennett Banner used their paper to rally their peers at Bennett College, a historically Black college for women, from the 1930s through the '50s.  Show transcripts are available at https://journalism-history.org/podcast/
32 minutes | Jan 17, 2022
Episode 96: Newspaper Coverage of Women in Politics
Researcher Tracy Lucht analyzes how five trailblazing women in politics of different races, ethnicities and regions were written about after the 19th Amendment was ratified. Show transcripts are available at https://journalism-history.org/podcast/
30 minutes | Jan 3, 2022
Episode 95: The First Presidential Press Secretary
Scholar Meghan Menard McCune reviews the career of Ray Stannard Baker, the chief spokesman for President Woodrow Wilson during the Paris Peace Conference at the end of World War I. Show transcripts are available at https://journalism-history.org/podcast/
45 minutes | Dec 13, 2021
Episode 94: Yes, Virginia, There is a Santa Claus
As a holiday tradition, we re-air our episode where hosts of the Journalism History podcast come together for a special Christmas episode that tells the story of an 8-year-old girl and the most reprinted editorial in the English language. Show transcripts are available at https://journalism-history.org/podcast/. 
41 minutes | Nov 29, 2021
Episode 93: Journalism and Jim Crow
Professor Kathy Roberts Forde discusses her co-edited book, Journalism and Jim Crow: White Supremacy and the Black Struggle for a New America. Show transcripts are available at https://journalism-history.org/podcast/
32 minutes | Nov 15, 2021
Episode 92: Truth and Ideology Among Cold War Correspondents
City University of London Senior Lecturer Dina Fainberg explores the experiences of U.S. and Soviet foreign correspondents during the Cold War and the competing notions of truth they pursued in their reporting. Show transcripts are available at https://journalism-history.org/podcast/. 
60 minutes | Nov 1, 2021
Episode 91: Ratings Powerhouses Univision and Telemundo
Author Craig Allen describes how Spanish-language television networks Univision and Telemundo became ratings powerhouses by programming a unique mix of news, soccer, telenovelas and variety shows. Show transcripts are available at https://journalism-history.org/podcast/
33 minutes | Oct 18, 2021
Episode 90: How the Other Half Lives
Historian Keith Greenwood shares the story of muckraker Jacob Riis and his famous photography examining How the Other Half Lives. Show transcripts are available at https://journalism-history.org/podcast/
27 minutes | Oct 4, 2021
Episode 89: Civil War Press Suppression in the American West
Researcher Mary Lamonica describes the editorial battles waged among American West newspaper editors during the Civil War and the impact that pro-Union support for press suppression had on defining the boundaries of free speech.
40 minutes | Sep 20, 2021
Episode 88: Covering the Kent State Shootings
Author Bob Giles discusses his book, When Truth Mattered: The Kent State Shootings 50 Years Later, and what it was like to be an editor in charge of that coverage in 1970. Show transcripts are available at https://journalism-history.org/podcast/ 
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