‘MindSite News,’ mental health reporting pub, hires investigative journalist Josh McGhee

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Kimberly Mata-Rubio, a journalist for The Uvalde Leader-News, is one of hundreds of mothers who have buried their children this year due to gun violence. Her daughter, Alexandria Aniyah Rubio, “Lexi,” died at her elementary school on May 24, 2022, one of 21 people whose lives were stolen that morning. None of your families, community, or newsroom will ever be whole again.

Incidents of gun violence on school grounds may not always get the widespread attention of the national press, but they are, increasingly, the types of crimes that local newsrooms find themselves reluctantly covering. Thrust into these dire moments of community crisis, journalists have to make quick decisions about how to fulfill their duty to inform the public while demonstrating exceptional restraint and caution in the way they acquire information, approach sources and communicate with their peers. hearings.

Companies used to pay obscene amounts of money to newspapers to run job ads; then, job seekers paid to access where the employers were. But monopolies rarely last forever, and like every other facet of life, the Internet came along and disrupted the traditional dynamic. So what’s the alternative to a dating app culture becoming the way we hire people?

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