Archive for February, 2021

The body in a sleeping bag and the broken cricket bat – Stuff.co.nz

Hamish McNeilly/Stuff

John Kenneth Collins in the High Court at Dunedin.

WARNING: GRAPHIC CONTENT

Brent Bacon's badly decomposed body was found in a zipped-up sleeping bag, with his exposed feet hanging out the end.

John Kenneth Collins denies murdering Bacon, 45, claiming it was an act of self-defence. The 39-year-old claims he struck his friend with a cricket bat after he came at him with raised fists on the night of February 4, 2019.

The police crime scene investigation was sparked after Bacon's brother-in-law broke into the Kinga Ora home to look for the missing man, where he found a large pool of blood but no body.

READ MORE:* Large pool of blood found after desperate relative breaks in to home, jury told* Trial set for man accused of killing Brent Bacon* 'Impeachment is hell': Donald Trump's celebrity lawyers mount their defence* Woman connected to decomposed body case pleads guilty to charges* Dunedin homicide: Accused couple deny allegations

That body was later found dumped in a rural area north of Dunedin, with Collins and his wife, Aleisha Dawson, later arrested after they fled in Bacon's vehicle.

Hamish McNeilly/Stuff

Inspectors Shona Low and Steve Wood address media after a homicide in Dunedin in February 2019.

Collins pleaded not guilty Bacon's murder, prompting a jury trial before Judge Jan-Marie Doogue in the High Court at Dunedin.

On Tuesday, the court heard from the police scene examination of the Lock St property.

The police investigation also found a yellow-gripped cricket bat handle, which was separated from the bat. The bat's opposite face was heavily stained with a reddish brown colour and found in a black rubbish bag at the property.

Hamish McNeilly/Stuff

The scene at Lock St in Dunedin after a homicide investigation was launched in February 2019.

Blood was also found outside the property, while a cricket set minus the bat was found in the bedroom.

ESR forensic scientist Rosalyn Rough told the court she took part in the scene examination at the Lock St home in late February.

At the property she found a significant amount of blood on the carpet, with blood detected on a range of items; including the wall and ceiling.

At Steep Hill Rd she examined his badly decomposed body, which was inside a zipped-up sleeping bag with only the feet exposed.

Supplied/Givealittle

The body of Brent Bacon was found near a rural road in Waitati, about 30 kilometres north of Dunedin.

Defence counsel Len Andersen QC questioned Rough on the blows, which left bloodstains around the lounge, and the potential position of Bacon.

Earlier, Crown prosecutor Pip Norman read agreed facts for the case.

That included on the night of Bacon's death, Collins took his friend's Toyota Emina, backing it near the front door, before putting his body in the back.

The court was also shown a photo of the sleeping bag containing the body, dumped under a tree along Steep Hill Rd, near Waitati.

Collins and Dawson then headed north in the vehicle, with the couple planning to ''go bush', the court heard.

After Bacon was reported missing, police visited the Lock St address several times, the court heard.

On Monday, Collins admitted charges of interfering with Bacon's body, and taking his car.

Dawson, an accessory in the killing, remains behind bars.

The trial is expected to take up to two weeks.

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The 12 Best Education Articles from February: How Extremists Are Teaching Kids to Hate, the White House Staffs Up With Education Experts, Recruiting…

Every month, we round up our most popular and shared articles from the past four weeks. (Go deeper: See our top highlights from December, November and beyond right here)

Vaccines, CDC guidance for safe classrooms and a growing consensus that districts will need additional federal funds to facilitate reopening the conversation surrounding the nations schools turned towards the future this month, and President Bidens commitment to get many reopened within his first 100 days. At The 74, our February coverage focused extensively on the learning losses associated with school closures and new strategies to accelerate learning, as well as new research on such issues as teacher quality, socioeconomic segregation and evolving attitudes on the value of virtual learning even after the pandemic is over. Below are our most popular articles of the month. (Reminder: You can also get alerts about our latest news coverage, essays and exclusives by signing up for The 74 Newsletter)

(Getty Images)

Student Safety: Five days after extremists used the fringe video gaming platform Dlive to livestream a mob attack on the U.S. Capitol Jan. 6, a youthful white nationalist logged on to the site and offered his take about the future of a movement he helped create a radical agenda, experts warn, thats targeted at teens. As the Capitol riot reawakens many Americans to the persistent reality of white supremacists among us, experts on extremism are sounding the alarm about the ways alt-right groups weaponize video games and streaming platforms to recruit and radicalize impressionable young minds. For teenagers whose isolation has been heightened by the pandemic, the desire for connection makes them particularly vulnerable, particularly in the current political climate. But experts say parents and educators can intervene before its too late. Read more by The 74s Mark Keierleber.

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Accelerating Learning: The news about pandemic-related learning loss keeps getting worse. A recent McKinsey & Co. study predicted that cumulative loss due to COVID-19 could be substantial, especially in mathematics, with students likely to lose five to nine months of learning by the end of this school year. Key educators are advocating an unusual remedy: a national, online volunteer tutoring force. 74 contributor Greg Toppo describes it as a sort of digital Peace Corps meets Homework Helpers. The idea has been endorsed by three former U.S. education secretaries. But as Congress and the Biden administration work out their early priorities, the nonprofit sector has begun to step in. Sal Khan, founder of Khan Academy, has created what he and others think is a scalable blueprint for a national tutoring effort, one that could match knowledgeable adult volunteers as well as millions of young people who have mastered key concepts with students in need. Already, two states Rhode Island and New Hampshire have signed on to Schoolhouse.World, with more expected soon. This is like a lifeline, said Rhode Island Education Commissioner Angelica Infante-Green.

Catherine Lhamon, Miguel Cardona and Carmel Martin (Getty Images)

Education Department: President Joe Biden has assembled a domestic policy team that includes officials who held high-level positions at the Department of Education during the Obama years. Education secretary nominee Miguel Cardona would bring the voice of classroom experience to the department. With so many urgent demands on the administration related to reopening schools, some wonder whether the White House and department officials will send a unified message to schools and families about getting students back in classrooms, or whether tensions will arise. Theres a precedent for the White House taking the lead on ed policy, and former Education Secretary Margaret Spellings suggests that for now, the power center will be the White House. Speaking on the radio last week, Cardona said it will be important to make sure there is consistency in messaging, to make sure there is one message, one plan. At least one expert is calling for a blue-ribbon commission on the federal governments role in reopening a monumental task even if everyone is on the same page. Linda Jacobson reports.

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine announces changes to Ohios school quarantine rules for students having close contact with infected students. (The Ohio Channel)

Reopening: Calling plans by the Cleveland school district to ignore its commitment to reopen schools by March 1 simply unacceptable, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine threatened to pull early vaccines from school staff. District CEO Eric Gordon, who had moved back the reopening target to April 6, changed course in a phone call with DeWine, the governor said at a Feb. 12 press conference. Your commitment is not just to me, DeWine said. Your commitment is to the children in your district and your commitment is to your parents, your parents who said, Yes, I want my child back. A press release from the district did not commit to reopening by March 1 but said Gordon will announce plans Feb. 19, as scheduled. Reopening delays by the Akron school district and one high school in Cincinnati also drew DeWines attention. Patrick ODonnell reports.

Luis Martinez, 11 and a fifth grader in Los Angeles, next to his mother, Tania Rivera, upon receiving an award two years ago. Luis, who has autism and is non-verbal, rarely missed a day of instruction prior to the pandemic. (Tania Rivera)

Special Education: In the waning days of the Trump administration, the U.S. Department of Educations civil rights office launched four investigations into whether schools failed to serve students with disabilities during the pandemic. As 74 contributor Jo Napolitano reports, the inquiries came as no surprise to many parents who have watched their children lose skills it took them years to build. The probes covering the state school system in Indiana, as well as districts in Los Angeles, Seattle and Fairfax, Virginia reflect similar complaints from all across the country, said Denise Stile Marshall, head of The Council of Parent Attorneys and Advocates, a group that works on behalf of children with disabilities. Many parents are desperate and at their wits end.

Summer School: Americas rapid transition to virtual learning left huge numbers of teachers discouraged and parents worried about disastrous academic setbacks for their children. Some policymakers have wondered whether schools should stay open this summer to make up for lost time, including President Joe Biden, who suggested as much earlier this week. Now, a study finds that a summer program providing remote instruction in the midst of the pandemic has earned high marks from participants. The National Summer School Initiative, established last spring by a coalition of education reformers, offered five weeks of virtual math, literacy and enrichment classes to nearly 12,000 students. Some 500 educators were paired with 15 mentors who sent videos of their own teaching, advised on methods and debriefed after classes. And according to surveys and interviews, most participants were satisfied with the results: By the final week of the program, 65 percent of students said they were happy to be participating in summer school, and 86 percent of teachers said it improved their perception of online instruction. What were finding here is that the folks who participated felt like this was a really engaging and positive kind of virtual experience, study co-author Beth Schueler told Kevin Mahnken.

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Republican from Georgia (Stefani Reynolds/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Civics Education: As newly elected GOP Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greenes embrace of conspiracy theories about the mass school shooting in Parkland, Florida, generated national headlines and calls for her expulsion from Congress, a teacher who lived through the violence did what he does best: turn the moment into a learning opportunity. Jeff Foster, who teaches Advanced Placement Government at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, where 17 people died in the 2018 shooting, frequently uses current events as lessons about the importance of civic participation. Even the Jan. 6 mob attack on the U.S. Capitol sparked lively debate among his politically engaged students. But this conversation was different: Everybody in the class agreed that the comments from Greene, a freshman congresswoman from Georgia, were reprehensible. But even more shocking, Foster and other Parkland survivors said, was the failure of Republican leadership to respond with swift action. Read more by The 74s Mark Keierleber.

(Michael Hobbiss, Sam Sims, and Rebecca Allen/British Educational Research Association)

Teacher Quality: For teachers, the development of habits is a necessary concession to the unpredictable nature of their job. Morning assignments, class transitions, even behavior management need to be governed by routines that are as predictable for kids as they are effective for adults. But according to new research, these habits may be responsible for the slowing rate of improvement after teachers first few years on the job. As classroom practices become more automatic, they are also harder to change when they stop achieving their desired results. The profession is consistently subject to so many ambitious reforms from the Common Core to the science of reading to implicit bias training that practitioners need to be open to new methods, the authors argue. Kevin Mahnken explains.

(Getty Images)

History: Contributor Chad Aldeman has some bad news: The effects of COVID-19 are likely to linger for decades. And if the Spanish Flu is any indication, babies born during the pandemic may suffer some devastating consequences. Compared with children born just before or after, babies born during the flu pandemic in 1919 were less likely to finish high school, earned less money and were more likely to depend on welfare assistance and serve time in jail. The harmful effects were twice as large for nonwhite children. It may take a few years to see whether similar educational and economic effects from COVID-19 start to materialize, but these are ominous findings suggesting that hidden economic factors may influence a childs life in ways that arent obvious in the moment. Hopefully, they will give policymakers more reasons to speed economic recovery efforts and make sure they deliver benefits to families and children who are going to need them the most.

Future of Education: Will the forced adoption of online learning accelerate innovation in K-12 education and its transformation toward more student-centered learning? Results from a nationally representative survey research project co-led by contributor Thomas Arnett offer some answers. The survey of 596 U.S. K-12 teachers and 694 school and district administrators found many teaching remotely or in a hybrid arrangement and issues with both synchronous (live class meetings over video calls) and asynchronous (via independent study materials and delayed communication such as email) approaches. One solution: A mix of asynchronous and synchronous online learning, when executed effectively, can have important benefits for students. Teachers adoption of online learning resources does not guarantee that online instruction becomes student-centered. Nonetheless, their growing familiarity with these resources makes the shift to student-centered practices much easier. When schools can go back to normal, many families and educators may be eager to say good riddance to online learning. But its encouraging to see educators discovering ways to use it to make their instruction more student-centered.

Income segregation levels within North Carolina schools increased from 2007 to 2014. (Dave Marcotte and Kari Dalane, via Annenberg Institute at Brown University)

Socioeconomic Segregation: Its a foundational premise of the American dream that through hard work and diligent study, young people can use education to access opportunities denied to their parents. However, mounting evidence suggests that segregation not just by race, but also by income within school systems may stymie those meritocratic aspirations. Previous research has documented the steady uptick in wealth gaps between schools, but a new working paper published by the Annenberg Institute at Brown University finds that income segregation within schools, from classroom to classroom, is also on the rise. However, its not all bad news. The researchers also show that in North Carolina, districts with more economically integrated schools also tended to have schools with more economically integrated classrooms. Its not inevitable that when we take affirmative measures to integrate by income, that schools will invariably resegregate at the classroom level, said Richard Kahlenberg of The Century Foundation. Asher Lehrer-Small has the story.

(RAND Corporation)

Remote Learning: A new, nationally representative survey of district leaders shows that remote coursework is here to stay and school systems will have to apply the lessons from their forced experiments with virtual learning during the pandemic to better adapt. The first survey conducted through the new American School District Panel shows 1 in 5 districts are considering, planning to adopt or have already adopted a fully online school in future years, and 1 in 10 has adopted blended or hybrid instruction, or plans to. Of all the pandemic-driven changes in public education, the creation of virtual schools was the one that the greatest number of district leaders anticipated would continue into the future. Remote instruction is a fundamentally different task than what school districts are designed for, as school systems nationwide learned when they were forced to suddenly close last spring. But, write contributors Heather Schwartz and Paul Hill, lessons from six case studies demonstrate how districts can use their pandemic-related momentum to make online learning a common staple of public schooling.

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The 12 Best Education Articles from February: How Extremists Are Teaching Kids to Hate, the White House Staffs Up With Education Experts, Recruiting...

DesignRush Ranks the Top-Rated PPC Agencies of February – WFMZ Allentown

NEW YORK, Feb. 24, 2021 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- Approximately, 17% of marketers use pay-per-click (PPC) ads for lead generations, and by current projections that percentage is growing. In fact, search engine advertising is expected to reach $132 billion by 2022.

DesignRush, a B2B marketplace connecting brands with agencies, ranked the top agencies that offer PPC and broader paid media expertise to help businesses increase lead conversion rates.

The top-ranking PPC agencies of February 2021 are:

1. Ignite Visibility ignitevisibility.com

Launched in 2013, Ignite Visibility is a full-service digital marketing agency based in San Diego.

Ignite Visibility offers a variety of digital marketing services including SEO, paid media, social media and email marketing, CRO, Amazon marketing, digital PR, creative services, website development and design.

2. Tillison Consulting tillison.co.uk

Tillison Consulting is a multi-faceted digital marketing agency founded in 2007.

Specializing in SEO, PPC, digital marketing strategies, training and social media, Tillison Consulting aids their clients to improve businesses on a local, national and international scale.

3. ProStrategix Consulting prostrategix.com

ProStrategix Consulting is a New York-based consulting firm that helps small businesses market their business.

Backed by the expert-level team, ProStrategix Consulting provides brand strategies, brand messaging and implementation services with the goal of getting practical results.

4. DYNAM IDEAS - dynamideas.com

Expertise: PPC, Advertising Agency Services, Web Design & Development and more

5. Touchline Marketing - touchlinemarketing.com

Expertise: PPC, SEO, Digital Marketing and more

6. TechBear.com - techbear.com

Expertise: PPC, SEO, Web Design & Development and more

7. Manush Digitech - manushdigitech.com

Expertise: PPC, SEO, Social Media Marketing and more

8. E29 Marketing - e29marketing.com

Expertise: PPC, Digital Marketing, Social Media Marketing and more

9. B-Young Social Media Co. - b-young.me

Expertise: PPC, Digital Marketing, Inbound Marketing and more

10. Eco York - ecoyork.com

Expertise: PPC, SEO, Web Design & Development and more

11. Tulumi - tulumi.com

Expertise: PPC, SEO, eCommerce Marketing and more

12. onePRgroup - oneprgroup.com

Expertise: PPC, SEO, PR and more

13. Ten Thousand Foot View - tenthousandfootview.com

Expertise: PPC, SEO, eCommerce Marketing and more

14. Eviblu - eviblu.it

Expertise: PPC, SEO, Inbound Marketing and more

15. White Rabbit - whiterabbit.nz

Expertise: PPC, SEO, Content Marketing, Email Marketing and more

16. Lifted Websites - liftedwebsites.com

Expertise: PPC, SEO, Web Design and more

17. Allinclusive. - new.allinclusive.agency

Expertise: PPC, SEO, Creative Agency Services and more

18. Promodo - promodo.com

Expertise: PPC, SEO, eCommerce Marketing and more

19. BoTree Digital - botreedigital.com

Expertise: PPC, Social Media Marketing, Web Design & Development and more

20. GoDaddy Dave Premier Marketing Agency - godaddydave.com

Expertise: PPC, PR, Web Design & Development and more

Brands can explore the top-ranking PPC agenncies by location, size, average hourly rate and portfolio on DesignRush.

About DesignRush:

DesignRush.com is a B2B marketplace connecting brands with agencies. DesignRush features the top agencies around the world, including the best Digital Agencies, Logo Design, Branding, Digital Marketing, Website Design, eCommerce Web Design Companies and more.

Media Contact

Luka Radovanovic, DesignRush, 8008565417, luka@designrush.com

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DesignRush Ranks the Top-Rated PPC Agencies of February - WFMZ Allentown

Tip: How to submit an FOI request | Tip of the day – Journalism.co.uk

Accessing government information is complicated. In many cases, the information you are after is hidden for a reason.

Submitting a good FOI is a skill that requires practice, a great deal of planning and finesse.

To help you out, the Student Publication Association has published this handy guide to submitting your first FOI and how to best use the information you receive.

According to the author Edd Church, the most important step is to "know what you are looking for."

"Do some research into the names of the types of documents/data sets you are trying to find. If you are looking for change over time, try and obtain data for a few years."

Is it important for you to make your content more searchable? Join the 'Essential SEO skills for media professionals' training course with Adam Tinworth and update your knowledge of the latest algorithm changes.

If you like our news and feature articles, you can sign up to receive our free daily (Mon-Fri) email newsletter (mobile friendly).

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Journalists and the looming superstorm of climate disinformation – Columbia Journalism Review

This article is adapted from The Climate Beat, the weekly newsletter ofCovering Climate Now, a global journalism initiative strengthening coverage of the climate story.The authors are Covering Climate Nows executive and deputy directors.

TEXAS HAD ONLY JUST FROZEN OVER. In the wake of a devastating winter storm, millions in the state were without power and struggling to find warmth. They boiled snow for water; some were dying. And against all evidence the anti-climate political right was grousing about windmills and blaming a Green New Deal that doesnt yet exist.

Unbeknownst to most people, the Green New Deal came to Texas, Tucker Carlson said on February 16 on Fox News. The power grid in the state became totally reliant on windmills. Then it got cold, and the windmills broke, because thats what happens in the Green New Deal. An hour later, on Hannity, routinely Americas most-watched cable news program, Texas governor Greg Abbott said his states predicament shows how the Green New Deal would be a deadly deal for the United States of America. In the days that followed, similar disinformation was repeated across Fox News and Fox Business programming, on competitor right-wing outlets OAN and Newsmax, in right-leaning newspapers, and in myriad statements by Republican elected officials.

These claims were nonsense. Texas runs primarily on natural gas, and it was frozen pipelines and wellsamid an energy infrastructure not designed to withstand coldthat were most responsible for the blackouts. Moreover, in the spirit of deregulation, state officials years ago had isolated their grid from the rest of the country, meaning Texas was unable to import electricity from elsewhere to keep the lights on. Some windmills did freeze, but only because they werent winterizednot due to an innate vulnerability of windmills in general.

In the reality-based press, experts defended renewable energy, and outlets issued explainers debunking Republican assertions. As the saying goes, though, a lie gets halfway around the world before the truth gets its shoes on. And so a story that should have been about Texans in need and a harrowing warning of the climate emergency turning life upside down was instead given over to a political mud fightand thats when it wasnt reduced to a story about the high-flying misadventures of Ted Cruz.

Of course, disinformation is nothing new to the climate story. Exceptional investigative journalism has shown that fossil fuel companies knew as far back as the 1970s that their operations threatened humanitys future, but they kept silent to keep their profits flowing. Now the fossil fuel industry is decidedly on the defensivelosing in the court of public opinion, shedding investors, and facing a new US president who vows expansive climate action. Its no surprise the industry and its backers are again turning to disinformation. Judging by the chorus that followed the Texas freeze, theyre willing to get louder.

The question is, what can, and should, journalists do about that?

The best approach, simple as it sounds, is to lead with the facts, not punditry, says Kristy Roschke, managing director of the News Co/Lab at Arizona State Universitys Walter Cronkite School of Journalism. Reporters should favor local sources and expertise over outsiders; coverage of the Texas storms that centered in-state climate and energy experts was exemplary. And as much as possible, journalists should focus on information that people need to make real-world decisions; if disinformation is often meant to distract, Roschke says, the counter to distraction is usefulness.

Above all, Roschke says, journalists must shirk the habit of framing everything as a two-sided debate. We cant keep reinforcing the debate when theres no debate there, Roschke says.

For the average newsroom, dedicating too much time and space to batting down untruthsfrom determined bad-faith actors, no lesscan come at the expense of the actual news.

Research shows that repetition affects both how our brains imprint information and the claims we judge as true. Repeating falsehoods, then, even to debunk, can inadvertently reinforce them. A tool journalists can use to avoid this trap is what retired UC Berkeley linguistics professor George Lakoff calls a truth sandwichthat is, presenting disinformation between two statements of truth. For example: Power outages in Texas were caused mainly by gas and coal-fired power plants freezing up. Some right-wing media figures and Republican politicians have instead inaccurately blamed renewable energy and the Green New Deal. But wind and solar energy in fact fared better than fossil fuels did during the Texas cold snap, and the Green New Deal does not exist yet, either at the federal level or in the state of Texas.

Many pieces in the wake of the freeze instead led with false statements from officials, even when reporters intentions were to call them out. The aspiration of journalists here is good, its to help people, Roschke says. But the effect is to let disinformation drive the news agenda. By treating bad-faith arguments as worthy points of public discourse, journalists inadvertently lend credibility to false notions that climate change or the need for green energy are up for debate, when the science clearly says otherwise. It becomes this self-perpetuating cycle, Roschke says. Childish behavior and posturing around a topic become news, because elected officials are noteworthy. That news then reinforces those false narratives, which makes politicians keep feeding into [the cycle].

Thats not to say intensive fact-checking doesnt have its place. But for the average newsroom, dedicating too much time and space to batting down untruthsfrom determined bad-faith actors, no lesscan come at the expense of the actual news. No, frozen windmills didnt cause the Texas blackouts is perhaps a satisfying headline to write. But to readers searching for the truthwho, crucially, may never read past the headlineit sustains a lie, Roschke says. (Open-ended headlines like Did frozen windmills cause the blackouts? are worse.)

If theyre careful, journalists can examine false narratives to gain insight into genuine concerns and questions audiences may have, says Shaydanay Urbani, who conducts research and training at First Draft, a nonprofit helping journalists and the public defend against disinformation. Most misinformation has a kernel of truth, Urbani says. The common charge from the political right that green energy will kill jobs, for example, is partially true, insofar as the fossil-fuel industry will necessarily contract in an energy transition. The argument ignores the fact that market forces are shifting to renewables already and that more jobs are being created in green energy than are being lost in fossil fuels. But its only natural that audiences would fear job loss and what change will mean for their communitieswhy fossil fuel backers harp on the specter of lost jobs in the first place. What reporters can do, Urbani says, is dig into those narratives that misinformation plays into and then do stories that address those concerns, while emphasizing the truth. Put differently: Try to use the misinformation to understand the deeper concerns people have and provide reporting that answers those concerns.

Granted, all of this is easier said than done. Disinformation is easy, because it employs simple narratives and plays to peoples emotions. Careful and nuanced reporting is hard, especially at a time when many newsrooms are strapped for resources. Whats more, the imperatives of social media and search-engine optimization make it more complicated than ever to frame a story. And even pitch-perfect stories exist in a fast-moving information ecosystem where best intentions can be effortlessly ripped out of context and repurposed to serve all manner of agendas.

At the end of the day, though, the public desires good information. With meaningful climate action now on the table, the usual suspects can be counted on to lie and obfuscate. This poses a challenge for journalists, but it could also be an opportunity to recover public trust and win over new audiences. I think newsrooms should think of misinformation and disinformation as an opportunity to earn their audiences, Urbani says. We can always be doing more to connect with people.

ICYMI: They won the Alaska newspaper giveaway. Then the pandemic arrived.

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Journalists and the looming superstorm of climate disinformation - Columbia Journalism Review