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Mother Jones Marks 50 Years of Holding the Powerful Accountable

Mother Jones Marks 50 Years of Holding the Powerful Accountable

We talk with the magazine’s leaders about its audience, nonprofit structure, journalism in these times, and what other publications can learn from them.

KQED's Forum

February 11, 202654m 49s

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Show Notes

In 1977, a fledgling magazine startup in San Francisco published a searing story about the Ford Pinto, a car model that executives put on the market knowing its design could cause deaths and serious injuries. That was one of many investigative scoops Mother Jones has published in its 50-year history that established its reputation for holding corporations and politicians accountable. Staying alive in the journalism industry has required some maneuvering, but Mother Jones has managed to set up a sustainable model to continue its mission. We talk with the magazine’s leaders about its audience, nonprofit structure, journalism in these times, and what other publications can learn from them.


Guests:

Clara Jeffery, editor-in-chief, Mother Jones and the Center for Investigative Reporting

Adam Hochschild, journalist and co-founder, Mother Jones; author, "American Midnight: The Great War, a Violent Peace, and Democracy's Forgotten Crisis" and other books; lecturer, UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism.

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