Layoffs, partnerships, and the Net conspire to kill South Florida's dailies.
Unions glom onto the DeFede legacy
Response to "Tales of Teele," published July 28, 2005
For more than 80 years the Miami Times has been the voice of the black community, but fewer and fewer people are listening
Call it what you will -- mindless fluff, starstruck drivel -- but Ocean Drive has perfected a formula that's the envy of the publishing world
Daughters, rappers, dead newspapers, and the TSA cesspool
Is the Miami commissioner the target of a wicked plot? Or is he spinning a yarn so complex everyone's now dizzy?
Hank Goldberg offers Miami sports fans more than tired talk-radio shtick; the journalist backs up his on-air diatribes with hard facts and common sense
Herald journos and staff not AP brothers' keepers
The case for an American Al-Jazeera
Personal Best
From the issue of August 16, 2001
Knight Ridder
From the issue of November 23, 2000
Scare tactics, uniformed soldiers, clueless social workers, and a compliant Miami Herald
He billed himself as a reformer, but a close look at Alex Penelas's record reveals a politician more in tune with ambition than innovation
Shakey's out, Penelian peccadillo, and shafted lumber labor
Letters from the issue of February 24, 2000
More evidence Miami's daily paper is for the birds: No courthouse buzzard story
No hulking concrete slab at water's edge? No arts center hidden by noisy expressways? No bombed-out corridors of desolation? A dream, right?
American Airlines officials want to know why the Miami Herald is covering old news as if it were a breaking story
And auto repair, and the occasional nephew. . . An edifying look at Miami City Commission candidates' financial statements
Though Herald execs are giddy about their market-driven plan for "journalistic excellence," the critics denounce it as a bitter pillar to swallow
The fight to end homelessness has moved to the boardrooms -- and Donna MacDonald, brash and outspoken, is having trouble finding a way in
Six things you might want to consider before casting your vote for Joe Gersten
The Herald's new managing editor drives a Porsche, adores Elvis, and worked miracles in her California community. At least so says the Herald.
