A media scooplet from me for @CJR: Rep. @tedlieu is working on legislation aimed at reviving the Federal Writers' Project—a 1930s New Deal program that put unemployed journalists and authors to work documenting America on the public dime. /1

cjr.org/special_report…
The timing and details of the bill are tbd, but Lieu's office told me a new FWP could be anchored within the Labor Dept or a cultural agency, and could run as a grant program administered through existing community institutions—including newsrooms. /2

cjr.org/special_report…
It follows a recent push from fans of the FWP—most notably @DavidKipen, of UCLA—who think reviving it could serve a double benefit: putting unemployed writers to work, and helping America understand itself, which was a key goal of the original project. /3

cjr.org/special_report…
Obviously, there's a long way to go before a new FWP can become a reality. But there are numerous other proposals already before Congress that would at least channel some of the *spirit* of the original—by offering public funding for the news business. /4

cjr.org/special_report…
For @CJR, I took a deep dive into the history of the FWP, what a new one could look like, and the prospects for federal media funding more generally. Journalism is in crisis. Bold ideas are needed to save it—and such boldness is not unprecedented. /5

cjr.org/special_report…
Featuring my scoop on @tedlieu, and extra thoughts and analysis from @davidkipen, @jasonboog, @businessofnews, @notaaroncraig, @VWPickard, and @zawadidoll, who has been running her own, excellent COVID Writers' Project out of Brooklyn. /END

cjr.org/special_report…
And thanks to @CharlesPPierce for the signal boost!

esquire.com/news-politics/…

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More from @Jon_Allsop

17 Nov
THREAD: For @CJR today, I assessed the media criticism and analysis that Barack Obama has repeated, time and again, on his book tour. It certainly merits a hearing. But it merits skepticism, too, on three grounds:

cjr.org/the_media_toda…
1. Obama has a deeply tarnished record on matters journalistic: he pledged to run the most transparent administration in history, then oversaw highly-secretive policies, prosecuted more leakers under the Espionage Act than any prior administration, and subpoenaed journalists.
2. Obama did not, as president, crack down on the Big Tech firms whose platforms he now perceives as a danger to democracy. Nor did his administration prioritize structural support for the news business—a victim of the financial crash that was not bailed out like big banks were.
Read 6 tweets
28 Oct
Lines outside polling places don’t so much reflect democracy in action as democracy in inaction—a reminder of America’s shameful, ongoing history of voter suppression. Add in COVID and they aren't just a democratic disgrace, but immediately dangerous. /1

cjr.org/the_media_toda…
More broadly, in assessing all the early voting, we need to remember the still-very-high rate of people who won't vote—because hurdles like lines put them off or because they've lost faith in politics. If these aren't both forms of suppression, they at least share causes... /2
...institutional racism and a broad culture of bureaucratic incompetence and inertia that doesn’t just make it harder for people to vote, but to access healthcare, affordable housing, and so on. Me today for @CJR: /3

cjr.org/the_media_toda…
Read 4 tweets
27 Oct
THREAD: The Union Leader's Biden endorsement seemed a sign of the times—another extraordinary media rebuke of Trump. Look closely at the endorsement race, though, and it seems less a divining rod for a changed public mood and more a case of 2016 redux. /1

cjr.org/the_media_toda…
In the same vein, we've seen a retreading of the quadrennial debate as to whether endorsements are good or not. Critics say they don't sway voters, make news reporters look biased by association, are often silly, and are representationally problematic. /2

cjr.org/the_media_toda…
These are weighty criticisms. But I think ultimately they damn not the newspaper endorsement, but much bigger problems with the media industry—including bad media literacy, failures of diversity, and bad ownership practices. /3

cjr.org/the_media_toda…
Read 4 tweets
26 Oct
NEW: For @CJR, I spoke to one of my favorite writers, @rickperlstein, about his new book, the big media themes lurking beneath the surface of his work, why 2020 is really *not* 1968, and his advice for reporters covering this election. Some smart quotes:

cjr.org/q_and_a/rick-p…
On media criticism in his work: "The secret is I’ve really produced a three-thousand-page exercise in media criticism, with some politics thrown in for good measure... The media has done a lot more than historians generally appreciate to shape our own political world."
On the mainstream press's longstanding ideology of consensus: "That’s how you rise to the empyrean heights. That’s how you become host of Meet the Press, as opposed to a beat reporter in Cleveland: your success in telling a story about conflict in America being epiphenomenal."
Read 6 tweets

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