
A Reading with Poet Laureate Arthur Sze
Apr 5, 2026 - 00:53:19
Radio and PodcastLive Radio & Podcasts
In her 2021 book Saving the News: Why the Constitution Calls for Government Action to Preserve Freedom of Speech, our guest Martha Minow “outlines an array of reforms, including a new fairness doctrine, regulating digita...
Saving the News: Why the Constitution Calls for Government Action to Preserve Freedom of Speech is an episode from MIT Comparative Media Studies/Writing by MIT Comparative Media Studies/Writing. In her 2021 book Saving the News: Why the Con...
This episode belongs to MIT Comparative Media Studies/Writing.
Use the player on this page to stream the episode online.
Published Apr 15, 2022, 01:20:43 long, audio available.
In her 2021 book Saving the News: Why the Constitution Calls for Government Action to Preserve Freedom of Speech, our guest Martha Minow “outlines an array of reforms, including a new fairness doctrine, regulating digital platforms as public utilities, using antitrust authority to regulate the media, policing fraud, and more robust funding of public media. As she stresses, such reforms are not merely plausible ideas; they are the kinds of initiatives needed if the First Amendment guarantee of freedom of the press continues to hold meaning in the twenty-first century.” Martha Minow has taught at Harvard Law School, where she also served as Dean, since 1981. In addition to Saving the News, she is author of When Should Law Forgive? (2019), In Brown’s Wake: Legacies of America’s Constitutional Landmark (2010), among many other books and articles. She is an expert in human rights and advocacy for members of racial and religious minorities and for women, children, and persons with disabilities, she also writes and teaches about digital communications, democracy, privatization, military justice, and ethnic and religious conflict. Heather Hendershot is Professor of Comparative Media Studies at MIT and studies TV news, conservative media, political movements, and American film and television history. She is author of the forthcoming book When the News Broke: Chicago 1968 and the Polarizing of America, which follows her 2016 title Open to Debate: How William F. Buckley Put Liberal America on the Firing Line. She has held fellowships at Vassar College, New York University, Princeton, Harvard, Radcliffe, and Stanford, and she has also been a Guggenheim fellow. Her courses emphasize the interplay between creative, political, and regulatory concerns and how those concerns affect what we see on the screen.
You can listen to Saving the News: Why the Constitution Calls for Government Action to Preserve Freedom of Speech online on Radio and Podcast. Open the player on this page to stream the available audio.
Saving the News: Why the Constitution Calls for Government Action to Preserve Freedom of Speech is an episode from MIT Comparative Media Studies/Writing by MIT Comparative Media Studies/Writing.
This episode is 01:20:43 long.
This episode was published on Apr 15, 2022.
Yes. Use the heart button on the episode page to add it to your favorite episodes list.
Yes. This page shows related episodes from MIT Comparative Media Studies/Writing when more episodes are available from the podcast feed.
You can listen to Saving the News: Why the Constitution Calls for Government Action to Preserve Freedom of Speech on this page when the episode audio is available from the podcast feed.
Saving the News: Why the Constitution Calls for Government Action to Preserve Freedom of Speech is from MIT Comparative Media Studies/Writing by MIT Comparative Media Studies/Writing.
Published Apr 15, 2022 and 01:20:43 long