Merchants of Truth
The Business of News and the Fight for Facts
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Narrated by:
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January LaVoy
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Written by:
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Jill Abramson
About this listen
The definitive report on the disruption of the news media over the last decade. With the expert guidance of former executive editor of The New York Times Jill Abramson, we follow two legacy (The New York Times and The Washington Post) and two upstart (BuzzFeed and VICE) companies as they plow through a revolution in technology, economics, standards, commitment, and endurance that pits old vs new media.
Merchants of Truth is the groundbreaking and gripping story of the precarious state of the news business told by one of our most eminent journalists.
Jill Abramson follows four companies: The New York Times, The Washington Post, BuzzFeed, and Vice Media over a decade of disruption and radical adjustment. The new digital reality nearly kills two venerable newspapers with an aging readership while creating two media behemoths with a ballooning and fickle audience of millennials. We get to know the defenders of the legacy presses as well as the outsized characters who are creating the new speed-driven media competitors. The players include Jeff Bezos and Marty Baron (The Washington Post), Arthur Sulzberger and Dean Baquet (The New York Times), Jonah Peretti (BuzzFeed), and Shane Smith (VICE) as well as their reporters and anxious readers.
Merchants of Truth raises crucial questions that concern the well-being of our society. We are facing a crisis in trust that threatens the free press. Abramson’s audiobook points us to the future.
©2019 Jill Abramson (P)2019 Simon & SchusterWhat listeners say about Merchants of Truth
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Andrew Robulack
- 2019-02-23
Fascinating, rambling, redundant, revelatory
This is an inconsistent volume. At time it’s absolutely fascinating.. until it becomes a rambling, unstructured string of redundant information. It’s too long for its content, and the story is told in a disjunct manner. The author lapses into long tirades of self-justifying prose that seem to be intended more to defend herself from history more than enlighten the listener. It’s unfortunate, really, she had a front row seat to a key period of media history, but she chooses to stroke her own ego as much as share her observations. That said, there are some truly thoughtful, and revelatory passages. They unfortunately are difficult to separate from the huff of her personal indignation.
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