Zoo Weekly has a special Anzac centenary edition. Unfortunately, no one told the Department of Veterans Affairs.
Facing work intensification, a changing relationship with readers and the rapid digitalisation of their mastheads, a redundancy was the "least bad" option for many print journos who put their hand up for one, a recently published academic study finds. University of Melbourne journalism student Krati Garg reports.
Broken political promises at state and federal levels got people taking this week.
France is locking up people because of what they say on the street. And other Western powers are saying nothing.
Fairfax is still planning to slash its regional newsrooms nearly in half.
Five-year figures reveal the context for Crikey's publication of leaked News Corp accounts last year -- and it's true, 2012-13 was an awful year.
It can be tricky to find a suitable board replacement for yourself, but Roger Corbett has finally done it.
Magazine publishers and newsagents have agreed to trial a program to get rid of low-selling magazine titles.
Andrew Bolt has mentioned ambulance volunteer Rachelle Irving's Crikey story on witnessing remote Aboriginal communities first hand. But of course, he has missed the point entirely.
Fairfax wants to make dozens of staff redundant from 13 Victorian publications as the reporters are asked to make do without subeditors or photographers.