The Media Monopoly Crisis
Our new special issue takes on the out-of-control consolidation that is squeezing out independent voices and controlling what we read.
Print Magazine
Our new special issue takes on the out-of-control consolidation that is squeezing out independent voices and controlling what we read.
Each new monthly issue will be much longer—with more room for hard-hitting investigative pieces and reporting that challenges corporate power and conventional wisdom.
The renewed fighting between Israel and Hamas shows the incoherence of mixing humanitarian words and bigger bombs.
The new biopic about the socialist organizer stops at the March on Washington. What is it leaving out?
Racist policing is also deadly for Black women and girls—a reality that is far too often ignored or dismissed.
It’s been a rough year. If you can lend a hand, these causes need—and deserve—your assistance.
How the attention-starved CEO took over our communications infrastructure.
We must ensure that corporations aren’t able to pick and choose winners and losers in journalism.
Once upon a time, six companies controlled the media in this country. That, it turns out, was the good old days…
Working in media has always been an uphill battle for disabled writers, but an ever-shrinking industry gives “hard” a whole new meaning.
We always suspected that whatever magazines and newspapers for white folks weren’t telling us, Black newspapers and magazines would.
Beginning in the 1970s, the Federal Trade Commission gave up on its mission to protect consumers and competition. Then Khan took charge of the agency, and turned it on its head.
A plan to build back better.
How to throw off the corporate shackles and launch an independent news outlet.
A new book examines a set of thinkers and activists who helped transform a set of radical ideas into a political tradition.
In Ordinary Notes, Sharpe considers Black culture “in all of its shade and depth and glow.”