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For centuries, the humble article has been journalism’s beating heart — a sturdy container of facts, stories and public accountability. But as AI-powered chatbots and generative tools reshape how people consume information, some newsroom leaders are wondering if its time has finally come. Gard Steiro, editor and publisher of Norway’s Verdens Gang, thinks the article should die so journalism can survive. In an age where audiences expect conversations, videos and personalized feeds, the classic story form may be the next casualty of the digital revolution.
Public media is once again fighting for its life. In a razor-thin vote, the U.S. House moved to strip $1.1 billion in funding from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting — a move critics call an existential threat to NPR, PBS and hundreds of local stations that millions of Americans rely on. From Detroit to Hartford, station leaders are scrambling to prepare for a future without federal support, even as they double down on their mission to serve diverse communities with trusted news and programming. At stake isn’t just a budget line — it’s whether public media will survive as one of the last locally owned, independent voices in American journalism.
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