From Kristen Hare | Poynter <[email protected]>
Subject Dean Baquet wants your ideas.
Date February 22, 2023 2:55 PM
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Dean Baquet, former executive editor of The New York Times, in 2018. (AP Photo/Ted Anthony)

After retiring last year as executive editor of The New York Times, Dean Baquet took about a month off, then he started visiting local newsrooms. It wasn’t a nostalgia tour, and it wasn’t a victory lap for the journalist who worked in local newsrooms in New Orleans, Chicago and Los Angeles.
Baquet was reporting.
He’s now the executive editor of the Times’ Local Investigations Fellowship, and in that role, wanted to see for himself what life looks like for local journalists, newsrooms and the communities they cover.
Baquet visited The Baltimore Banner ([link removed]) , where he was asked to attend an all-hands meeting and then stick around and talk with reporters.
“So I spent this wonderful day having one-on-one meetings with beat reporters, not pitching them on the project, just talking to them about covering their beats because that’s what I did 100 years ago.”

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I spoke with Baquet about the fellowship ([link removed]) , the kinds of pitches he’s getting and who else he’d like to see apply. Whatever size newsroom you’re in, whatever your beat, if you’re freelance, whatever, don’t discount yourself with this fellowship. In addition to being on the Times’ payroll for a year, you also get to use all of its resources.
As Baquet said, fellows become “a member of The New York Times family, so you can use The New York Times’ stuff.”
You can read our conversation here ([link removed]) and learn even more about that program here ([link removed]) .

That’s it for me. Thanks for reading and I’ll see you next week,
Kristen
Kristen Hare
Faculty
The Poynter Institute
@kristenhare ([link removed])
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