Evan Gershkovich was arrested a year ago today in Russia while on a reporting assignment for the Journal Email not displaying correctly?
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** OPINION
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Good morning. First, an update on the newsletter. There will be no Poynter Report on Monday. My colleagues will handle the newsletter next Tuesday, and I will return to see you all again on Wednesday.
And now onto today’s Poynter Report, with an opening item written by my colleague, Angela Fu.
** Wall Street Journal marks one year of reporter’s detainment in Russian jail
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Staff at the Wall Street Journal's New York office hold signs in support of their colleague Evan Gershkovich, who was detained by Russia a year ago while on a reporting assignment. (Courtesy: Wall Street Journal)
Today, images of Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich ([link removed]) will run in several prominent news outlets. Emblazoned across some, a promise: “We’ll Keep Telling Evan’s Story. Until He Can Tell His Own.”
It’s the culmination of a weeklong effort ([link removed]) by The Wall Street Journal to mark the one-year anniversary of Gershkovich’s detainment in Russia. On March 29, 2023, Russian officials arrested Gershkovich, 32, while he was on a reporting assignment and charged him with espionage. Gershkovich, The Wall Street Journal and the United States government have all denied the charges, but he continues to be held in a Moscow prison, uncertain of when he will face trial.
“This is a full-frontal assault on the free press,” said Wall Street Journal assistant editor Paul Beckett. “The charge he faces is totally bogus. We haven’t seen any evidence or been presented with a shred of anything that would explain what they thought he was doing that leads to the false charges they filed against him.”
On the night of Gershkovich’s arrest, Beckett, the Journal’s Washington, D.C., bureau chief at the time, contacted the State Department, National Security Council, Pentagon and other institutions to report Gershkovich missing. By October, Beckett had transitioned to a new role to work on Gershkovich’s case full time. His work involves multiple fronts: supporting Gershkovich and his family, keeping Wall Street Journal employees updated on Gershkovich’s situation, talking to people in Washington about strategies to bring Gershkovich home, and creating awareness campaigns.
Lawyers for The Wall Street Journal and parent company Dow Jones are working most directly to negotiate Gershkovich’s release, Beckett said. “But we believe that keeping Evan front-of-mind will help those negotiations and hopefully help them end faster.”
The latest awareness campaign started last weekend with “Swim for Evan” events at 10 beaches named Brighton across the world. (Gershkovich used to regularly visit the Brighton beaches in New York and England.) On Wednesday, more than 200 people attempted to symbolically cover the 4,707 miles that separate Moscow from Gershkovich’s hometown of Princeton, New Jersey, in a dozen different “Run for Evan” events. And throughout the week, major publications in the U.S. and the U.K. ran ([link removed]) editorials ([link removed]) and ([link removed]) feature ([link removed]) stories
([link removed]) about ([link removed]) Gershkovich’s ([link removed]) detainment ([link removed]) .
Reporters across major outlets also came together Wednesday for a 24-hour “Read-A-Thon” of Gershkovich’s work. Along with Gershokivch’s friends and colleagues, prominent journalists including CNN anchor Kaitlan Collins, ABC News anchor David Muir, Fox News anchor Brett Baier, Washington Post executive editor Sally Buzbee, Atlantic editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg, New Yorker editor David Remnick and New York Times reporter Jodi Kantor read Gershkovich’s reporting aloud.
“I think it’s easy for it to be lost on people what the impact for democracy and journalism is for Evan to be detained,” said Wall Street Journal reporter Caitlin Ostroff, who helped organize the event. “When I was printing out Evan’s stories for the Read-A-Thon and putting together the massive binders that we have of them, I was completely awestruck by how much he has done — how many different types of topics, people, regions he has covered.”
Gershkovich, the son of Soviet Union immigrants, started his journalism career at The New York Times before working for The Moscow Times and Agence France-Presse. He joined The Wall Street Journal in January 2022 and helped cover the Russia-Ukraine war. Gershkovich was working in Yekaterinburg with press credentials from Russia’s foreign ministry when he was arrested.
“He had just a great interest in Russian culture, people and society, in addition to all the usual things a foreign correspondent covers in terms of the government and economy. He really took to Russia and loves the country, loves covering the Russian people. That’s the kind of reporter he was,” said Beckett, who worked with Gershkovich when he was D.C. bureau chief. “Some foreign correspondents will go and just hobnob with expats and embassy people. He went and dived right in.”
On Wednesday, a Russian judge extended Gershkovich’s detention by three months, The Wall Street Journal reported ([link removed]) . It was the fifth time Gershkovich’s detention has been extended, and it is unclear when his case will reach trial. In the meantime, he is being kept in the infamous Lefortovo prison, where he spends 23 hours a day in his cell.
“And yet he has been reading. He has been exercising. He has been writing letters, doing yoga, finding ways to maintain his equilibrium, and we’re really grateful for that,” Beckett said. “He’s clearly an extraordinary young man.”
Gershkovich’s colleagues said they hope the week’s awareness campaign will inspire people to learn more about him and his situation. The Wall Street Journal maintains a page ([link removed]) with information and resources regarding Gershkovich’s case, and readers can write messages to him and his family ([link removed]) .
“He should be here,” said Ostroff, who met and befriended Gershkovich while she was working at The Wall Street Journal’s London bureau. “He should be annoyingly taller than me, looking down, laughing at my antics. And he’s not.
“But what keeps me going is honestly just random people who take an interest. … Each new person that we’re able to reach is a victory. Even if those individual people don’t think they can do much, even them just knowing Evan’s name is so much.”
A MESSAGE FROM POYNTER
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** How to make stories about 'the economy' compelling
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And now media news, tidbits and interesting links for your weekend review …
* The Atlantic has surpassed 1 million subscribers and is now profitable, according to a note to staff from editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg and CEO Nicholas Thompson. In a release ([link removed]) , The Atlantic says, “Overall revenue is up more than 10 percent year over year; advertising booked year-to-date is also up 33 percent year over year. Subscriptions to The Atlantic have increased by double-digit percentages in each of the past four years –– and surged 14 percent in the past year. The Atlantic has more than doubled the total number of paid subscriptions since it launched digital and a digital + print bundle four years ago.” In addition, The Atlantic reported it has earned Pulitzer Prizes each of the past three years.
* Wall Street Journal media reporter Isabella Simonetti tweeted ([link removed]) Thursday that former Republican National Committee chair Ronna McDaniel, who was cut loose by NBC News as a contributor after internal backlash, is drawing interest from Newsmax — the conservative TV network.
* Variety’s Brian Steinberg with “TV Talkers From Pat McAfee to Rachel Maddow Gain New License to Blast Bosses On-Air.” ([link removed])
* The Daily Beast’s Corbin Bolies with “Karlie Kloss and a Kushner Plan to Revive Life Magazine.” ([link removed])
* The Los Angeles Times’ Adam Tschorn with “I’m an ex-game show writer. Here’s how I make the Los Angeles Times News Quiz fun.” ([link removed])
* From The Associated Press in collaboration with the Howard Center for Investigative Journalism programs and PBS’s “Frontline,” it’s Reese Dunklin, Ryan J. Foley, Jeff Martin, Jennifer McDermott, Holbrook Mohr and John Seewer with “Why Did More Than 1,000 People Die After Police Subdued Them With Force That Isn’t Meant To Kill?” ([link removed]) (Here’s the link with even more from the AP ([link removed]) .)
* The New York Times’ Annie Correal, Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs, Campbell Robertson, Michael Forsythe and Mike Baker with “The Five Minutes That Brought Down the Francis Scott Key Bridge.” ([link removed])
* The Wall Street Journal’s Jason Gay with “The Eerie Agony of a Broken Bridge.” ([link removed])
* The Washington Post’s Nitasha Tiku and Pranshu Verma with “AI hustlers stole women’s faces to put in ads. The law can’t help them.” ([link removed])
* Awful Announcing’s Andrew Bucholtz with “Media need to realize not all sports gambling scandals are equal.” ([link removed])
* The Ringer’s Bryan Curtis writes about one of the top sports announcers in the business who is calling this year’s Final Four: “Ladies and Gentlemen, Ian Eagle.” ([link removed])
** More resources for journalists
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* Get the edge on reporting on the eight hot topics of the 2024 election with Beat Academy ([link removed]) (webinar series) — Rolling enrollment from now through September. Enroll today. ([link removed])
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