But since I've posted on this topic before, I do notice I've changed my sources somewhat.
For a long time, I've paid for and read the New York Times. I also regularly read the Guardian; it has done terrific work recording the hundreds of killings by U.S. police departments. And this election season, the Washington Post successfully lured me to pay up for its coverage. For months, it seemed to be doing the most thorough job of digging into Donald Trump's many shady enterprises. David Fahrenthold has been THE essential source of Trump revelations. The Wapo columnists are interesting, especially Greg Sargent and Paul Waldman at The Plum Line.
Several individual reporters/pundits have provided exceptional coverage and insight. Farai Chideya has offered profiles of subsegments of the electorate. Jamelle Bouie, chief political correspondent at Slate provides historically grounded commentary from an African American perspective. And Rebecca Traister at New York has succeeded in describing consistently and thoughtfully how woman hatred plays out in this contest.
Two newer journalism sites have often outpaced the legacy news media organizations, carving out niches that begged to be filled. I sure hope Vox thrives. There's amazing journalism coming from Ezra Klein's baby. And I find Talking Points Memo essential, not so much for their click bait outrage snippets, as for Joshua Marshall's historians perspective on the circus.
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I get most of my news on Twitter, which I can quickly scan and then decide what I want to spend more time on. Not much for podcasts, though. I seem to be off them for the time being.
I don't listen much to podcasts because I don't have an iPod or smartphone. I hardly watch cable news anymore because they're focused on campaign trivia and personalities, especially this election. I read our local paper and The Honolulu Star-Advertiser. I also check out various Twitters, blogs (Louis Proyect is informative), and The Drudge Report. Sometimes NPR. And I'm a longtime subscriber to magazines, including Reason and Chronicles.
Related:
http://www.businessinsider.com/what-your-preferred-news-outlet-says-about-your-political-ideology-2014-10
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