His political satire made Buchwald one of America’s most widely read columnists.
For a decade, the West has sleep-walked through a new kind of warfare being waged from Moscow. It took Putin's ground war against Ukraine to wake people up.
Newsboys in antebellum New York and elsewhere were embroiled in all the major conflicts of their day, becoming mixed metaphors for enterprise and annoyance.
Historic microphone used by Edward Murrow for London broadcasts to be loaned to the National Press Club
Edward R. Murrow’s radio broadcasts from London, aired live while Nazi bombs fell around him, are classics of journalism – and literature.
Facebook and Google have repeatedly blocked American Heritage's content because they can't tell the difference between Russian trolls and a trusted, award-winning magazine.
FDR waged his own war on "fake news," specifically on the Chicago Tribune publisher Robert R. McCormick.
Not given credit for their work and paid half a man's salary, women writers won a landmark suit against discrimination at the magazines of Time, Inc., but their success has been largely overlooked.
Seventy-five years ago this June, the celebrated writer for The New Yorker was one of the first journalists to witness the carnage on Omaha Beach.
Nearly 1800 newspapers have died since 2004, creating “news deserts” across the country. At many remaining journals, cuts have been so deep that they've become “ghost papers.” What are the implications for democracy?
The late David Halberstam was a journalist, heart and soul, with a distinctive way of writing history.
Charles Saxon's cartoons are a definitive record of upper-class suburban life in the 1960s and ’70s.
What you don’t remember about the day JFK was shot
A VETERAN JOURNALIST reflects on how public discourse has been tarnished by the press’s relentless war against presidents, including his own biggest offense.
He was a Northerner. He was an industrialist. He was a Jew. And a young girl was murdered in his factory.
A newsman returns to a classic work by a famous predecessor and finds that Mark Sullivan’s vanished America has something to tell us.
He may have been the greatest caricaturist of all time; he has imitators to this day. But his true passion was for a very different discipline.
Seen in its proper historical context, amid the height of the Cold War, the investigation into Kennedy’s assassination looks much more impressive and its shortcomings much more understandable.
An Interview with Walter Cronkite
The most powerful columnist who ever lived single-handedly made our current culture of celebrity, and then was destroyed by the tools he had used to build it.
The mysterious apotheosis of the newspaper editor
Their unwilling subjects considered the tabloid photographers pushy and boorish. But they felt they were upholding a grand democratic tradition.
The American newspaper: beleaguered by television, hated both for its timidity and its arrogance, biased, provincial, overweening, and still indispensable. A Hearst veteran tells how it got to where it is today, and where it may be headed.
In the infancy of television (but not of American royalty-worship), the networks fought their first all-out battle for supremacy over who would get to show Queen Elizabeth II being crowned.
William Randolph Hearst was a journalist, politician, art collector, and bon vivant with a passion for power, possessions, and women.
America’s first Miss Lonely hearts advised generations of anxious lovers in the newspaper column that started it all.
He wanted only what every journalist of the time did: an exclusive interview with the Duke of Windsor. What he got was an astonishing proposition that sent him on an urgent, top-secret visit to the White House and a once-in-a-lifetime story that was too hot to print, until now.
It took us longer to name the war than to fight it.