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Nytimes morning briefing
Nytimes morning briefing









We are thrilled to announce that David Leonhardt will return to the newsroom to become the new writer, host and anchor of our flagship newsletter, which will be rebranded as The Morning. That’s why we are turning to one of our most authoritative and nimble journalists to take the helm. The newsletter now has more than 17 million subscribers, one of the largest daily audiences of any kind in journalism, across television, radio, print and digital. Quietly, our flagship email newsletter, The Morning Briefing, has become one of our biggest and most important news products. For the first time, it’s getting a true host - David Leonhardt, the current Opinion columnist and past founder of The Upshot.įrom a memo to staff from Dean Baquet, Joe Kahn, and James Bennet: But a good morning newsletter orders the universe - says “this is most important,” “these are worth a quick look,” and “this is something lighter so you don’t close this email quite so angry at the world as those other stories would seem to justify.” It’s a guide - a host, even, moving you with ease and purpose through all your newsroom’s work.Īll that is why I’m interested in today’s announcement from The New York Times about changes to its flagship morning newsletter, The Morning Briefing. Any digital news consumer wakes up with untold thousands of new articles they could decide to read. That’s what podcasts do you’re essentially telling a publisher “I trust you to come up with something compelling for me to listen to every day/week/whatever” rather than trusting the Facebook algo to do it.Īnd most prominently, it’s what most email newsletters do. Taking stories out of that context - making them just another unique URL on the internet - allowed Facebook, Google, Twitter, and other platforms to become the premier digital curators.Ī lot of the smart product development in news the past decade has been about recapturing that curatorial power.

nytimes morning briefing

That context is a key ingredient in any good publisher’s promise that you aren’t just getting more information - you’re getting the right information.

nytimes morning briefing

The rise of digital disrupted the news business in countless ways, but one of the most profound was the loss of the publisher’s role as curator.Ī newspaper didn’t just produce the news, after all - it also ordered and structured it, telling you which stories were important enough to merit a banner A headline and which were only worth a squib on 11D.











Nytimes morning briefing