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Kyle Pope

Kyle Pope

Editor-In-Chief & Publisher at Columbia Journalism Review

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Email address
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Influence score
43
Phone
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Location
United States
Languages
  • English
Covering topics
  • Media

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Recent Articles

cjr.org

Objectivity wars, and the future of media trust - Columbia Journalism Review

In an interview last fall, journalism scholar Jay Rosen referred to journalistic objectivity as the surface upon which enemies of the press wield their war against the truth. “Every time you are shown not to be behaving objectively, you are kind of in violation of your code, and you can be brough…
cjr.org

Giving climate the coverage it deserves - Columbia Journalism Review

Melting ice in Greenland swamping South Carolina. Deadly heat scorching low-wage workers in Los Angeles. Rising seas driving Africans to migrate to Europe and coastal Bangladeshis to flee inland to overcrowded cities. The climate emergency is unfolding in our own backyards and around the world—an…
cjr.org

60th Anniversary - Columbia Journalism Review

In this issue, we have sought to convey the scope and ambition of CJR over the course of its life. The stories are organized thematically, rather than chronologically, to help connect the dots from one age to the next.
cjr.org

On journalistic books and withholding information - Columbia Journa...

Even before Donald Trump lost the presidential election in 2020, books about him and his administration—covering the chaos and turmoil at the White House, Trump’s impeachment trial, his tangled relationship with questionable characters like Steve Bannon, and more—had already become a cottage indu…
cjr.org

Our Damned Trump Fixation - Columbia Journalism Review

For the past five years, members of the media have blamed Donald Trump for hijacking the narrative of American politics. His outsize threat to democracy drove journalists’ obsession; his personal dysfunction propelled an outrage machine. According to data from mediaQuant, a media tracking firm, T…
cjr.org

Covering the election charades in Arizona and Florida - Columbia Jo...

In Arizona, the 2020 election still isn’t over. Well, it is—the votes were counted, counted again, and certified months ago; Biden won the state—but Republicans in the state senate have insisted on auditing every ballot cast in Maricopa County (which gave Biden his victory margin), ostensibly to …
cjr.org

What the polls show, and the press missed, again - Columbia Journal...

The final vote tallies still aren’t known, but the media verdict of this presidential election is in: it’s 2016 all over again. Four years ago, in the hours after Donald Trump declared victory on the strength of 306 Electoral College votes and the ballots of nearly sixty-three million Americans,…
cjr.org

A Time of Opportunity - Columbia Journalism Review

Good riddance to the political coverage that was
cjr.org

The Story of Our Time - Columbia Journalism Review

Reporters covering the climate crisis must be more than stenographers of tragedy
cjr.org

'Always Looking for the Allegory' - Columbia Journalism Review

The director of Mad Max tells Kyle Pope how to make climate fear compelling
cjr.org

The one way Sanders is the new Trump - Columbia Journalism Review

The Wednesday morning after the 2016 presidential election, I wrote a piece for CJR criticizing the American press for its coverage of the rise of Trump, which I argued would “stand among journalism’s great failures.” In the second paragraph, I wrote: Reporters’ eagerness first to ridicule Trump…
cjr.org

Dan Rather on Trump, Nixon, and why he never worked in network news...

Dan Rather is as much an emblem of American journalism as any reporter still alive. He covered the Vietnam War in the ’60s during the heyday of the foreign correspondent; stood up to Nixon at the height of Watergate; sat at the anchor desk of CBS Evening News at a time when the network news […]…
cjr.org

The Jared bubble - Columbia Journalism Review

What my 18 months as Jared Kushner’s first editor taught me about the Trump family and the press
cjr.org

In search of a local news solution - Columbia Journalism Review

For a very brief moment this spring, a few floors below the CJR offices, local journalism found itself back in the spotlight. There stood Pulitzer Prize Administrator Mike Pride, himself a product of a local newsroom (Concord Monitor, circulation 20,000), behind a lectern in Columbia’s Pulitzer H…
cjr.org

Two journalists–father and daughter–on covering Standing Rock - Col...

Nearly 40 years ago, a young journalist just out of Stanford traveled to the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation in North and South Dakota and started a newspaper. That reporter, Bill Grueskin, would run the Dakota Sun for two years, the first step in a news career that would lead him to The Miami He…
cjr.org

The Mar-a-Lago meeting and journalism's worst impulses - Columbia J...

Even the photos were anachronisms: The 1980s-era gold leaf. The overflowing basket of Lay’s potato chips. The piles of roast beef. The images, posted on social media on Sunday, were souvenirs from an off-the-record holiday party for the press at Mar-a-Lago, soon to be Donald Trump’s winter White…