Canada’s meeting place for freelance writers and creators

Established 2010

Once a week, we gather stories about the media business, journalism, writing, publishing, and freelancing—with a Canadian focus—and share them in Off the Wire. Who needs a water cooler?

From Canada:

From the U.S. and beyond:

From Story Board last week:

  • From guest contributor Jeff Nield | Why I quit blogging and why you should too (if you’re a writer): Until last week, I was a part-time blogger at TreeHugger. I mostly covered sustainable food and agriculture, but was free to post on anything under the “green” umbrella. It’s a fascinating beat and I could write from anywhere. But, after three and a half years of trying I accept that I’m not a blogger, so I quit.
  • On professionalism | The Born Freelancer replies to a comment on bridge-burning: Last month, “Dude” commented on my post about blowing up bridges: “I think it quite ironic that in this post you caution against bridge burning, then two posts down celebrate the life of someone who was fearless—and sometimes reckless—enough to burn every bridge he’d ever built. As for this fetishism regarding “professionalism”—get over it. There’s not enough money, almost literally, in publishing for you to care. Be bold. Be brave. Be uncompromising. Or find a career where being obsequious can actually pay dividends.”


Spot a story you think we should include in next week's Off the Wire? Email the link to editor@thestoryboard.ca.


Once a week, we gather stories about the media business, journalism, writing, publishing, and freelancing—with a Canadian focus—and share them in Off the Wire. Who needs a water cooler?From Canada: Are journalism schools graduating too many students? [OpenFile Vancouver] (via @mastmeghan) China denies visa to reporter travelling with Canadian…
Once a week, we gather stories about the media business, journalism, writing, publishing, and freelancing—with a Canadian focus—and share them in Off the Wire. Who needs a water cooler?From Canada: Is Postmedia Canadian enough? Union wants court to decide [Toronto Star] (via @dbanner16) Kenney's office apologizes for ‘new Canadians’ stunt…
Once a week, we gather stories about the media business, journalism, writing, publishing, and freelancing—with a Canadian focus—and share them in Off the Wire. Who needs a water cooler?From Canada: CBC dismantling LP, CD archives [Globe and Mail] (via @JacqValencia) Chantal Hébert: Twitter is not a window to the world — it’s a mirror…
Craig Silverman of Regret the Error, a blog that Poynter recently acquired, has published his annual roundup of notable media errors. It provides many reminders about the importance of careful reporting and editing, as well as laughs (with a dash of schadenfreude). Taking the prize for typo of the year is the "Osama/Obama" mixup, which slipped past…
Brunswick News, owner of nearly all of New Brunswick's print newspapers, is going to start charging readers to access its content online.The Chronicle Herald's Brett Bundale reported on Friday that the company would activate a "hard" pay wall on its online newspaper editions today. Brunswick News owns 10 French-language weeklies, six…
Getting a humour piece into the New Yorker is no easy feat, and it takes a special kind of writer to meet the magazine's sky-high standards. Patricia Pearson, who is represented by the Canadian Writers Group, is one of those writers. Her piece "History: The Customer Reviews" made it into the October 17 issue of the New Yorker, after CWG submitted…
Late last month, Quebec Culture Minister Christine St-Pierre voiced her support for a "professional journalist" status in Quebec. Reaction from journalists (and from us) was predictably negative. For freelancers especially, the designation would block too many from accessing important sources in government. Some suggested it was an attack on…
The New York Times' paywall, which requires readers to subscribe to the site if they read more than 20 stories per month, is exceeding expectations and bringing in significant revenue for the company, writes Felix Salmon for Reuters. Salmon, who made a public bet that the paywall would disappear before its second birthday, is still not a fan of how…
[View the story "Canadian Journalists React to Kai Nagata's Manifesto" on Storify]

Page 41 of 43

First 39 40 41 42 43