Anchors
News anchors are more than familiar faces behind a desk. They organize information, calm audiences during crises, and connect viewers to the wider world in real time.
Don't Just Read it – Explore It
News anchors are more than familiar faces behind a desk. They organize information, calm audiences during crises, and connect viewers to the wider world in real time.
“analysis” promises more than a recap but less than a hot take. Here’s how this label works, what to expect when you see it, and why transparency around it matters.
Amnesty sits at the crossroads of justice and mercy, allowing governments to wipe certain offenses from the books—but always raising hard questions about who deserves forgiveness and who is left out.
Algorithm bias influences which headlines rise, which voices fade, and how audiences understand the world. Here’s how it works, why it happens, and what can be done.
Agenda setting is the quiet power of newsrooms: choosing which stories lead, which get buried, and which never appear at all—and in the process, shaping what societies worry about most.
From civil rights marches to hashtag campaigns, activism is about people deciding that staying silent costs more than speaking up—and then organizing to push institutions, cultures, and laws to change.
Accuracy is journalism’s non-negotiable baseline. Every fact, quote, and statistic should be checked before it reaches the public—yet mistakes still happen.