Have you heard of Axios? If you don’t follow political reporting closely, you likely haven’t. It’s a site whose main draw is “snapshot” like newsletters, filled with tidbits of reporting in bullet-form. It’s like a digest, only instead of summarizing others’ reporting, it intersperses its own, often in the form of texts from “well-wired” Republicans and unnamed insiders. It’s the most potent remaining form of a certain style of political reporting (that my boss/BuzzFeed News’ editor-in-chief Ben Smith wrote about
not your transcription robot
not your transcription robot
not your transcription robot
Have you heard of Axios? If you don’t follow political reporting closely, you likely haven’t. It’s a site whose main draw is “snapshot” like newsletters, filled with tidbits of reporting in bullet-form. It’s like a digest, only instead of summarizing others’ reporting, it intersperses its own, often in the form of texts from “well-wired” Republicans and unnamed insiders. It’s the most potent remaining form of a certain style of political reporting (that my boss/BuzzFeed News’ editor-in-chief Ben Smith wrote about