Media
The BBC isn’t “censoring” anything—this is just what editorial decisions look like
The BBC is far from perfect, and sometimes bad decisions are made. But there's no corporation-wide conspiracy
In data: the untold story of how the BBC became Britain’s biggest paper
Tabloid circulation is falling—but the Beeb is benefiting from going digital
We must call out anti-semitism when it's on our own side—not just when it's politically expedient
The responses to the Telegraph's dog-whistle front page were highly predictable—on both sides of the political spectrum. It's time we started calling out hatred wherever it appears
The response to John Humphrys' "jokes" shows we're still letting the wrong people speak about pay
It is, apparently, only women standing together with their female colleagues who aren’t allowed to comment, while men can carry on making those same women the butt of their jokes
Carrie Gracie is right—equal pay is about more than the men and women at the top
The BBC pay row signifies a much deeper problem: an economy that operates on gender and race disparities
Our response to Rotherham shouldn't be about race—it should be about helping our young people
Sarah Champion was wrong to pinpoint the perpetrators' race. Whether it's in Rotherham, Rochdale or Newcastle, the solution lies in listening to young women
In the age of online journalism, readers must become their own editors
A new swathe of left-wing upstart titles have capitalised on distrust of "the MSM". But it's readers, not journalists, who can really make the difference
Don’t just focus on the BBC—class is a problem across the media
It's easy to have a pop at Auntie Beeb, but they're not the only organisation with some serious thinking to do
An epic for our times: How Game of Thrones reached highbrow status
Game of Thrones transformed the TV landscape—and brought fantasy to a new, literary audience
Women on the back pages: why newspaper editors still overlook women’s sport
Far fewer articles are written about women's sport, with editors saying they get less interest. But there is something we can do
Trump’s treatment of journalists won’t harm him—in fact, it’s the perfect distraction
With plenty of the GOP behind him, Trump is free to use his attacks on the media to distract from his scant policy record
The Finsbury Park attack shows why the media needs a better way of reporting terrorism
Far right extremism is on the rise. So why aren't journalists up to speed?