‘We had a really big purpose’ Robert Samuels and Toluse Olorunnipa discuss writing the richly detailed book about George Floyd's life that won the Pulitzer Prize May 11, 2023 Kelly McBride
Covering a war: A conversation with Isabelle Khurshudyan, Washington Post Ukraine bureau chief ‘When I think about the past year, I’ve seen the best of humanity, the absolute worst of humanity, and sometimes I’ve seen both within minutes.’ April 12, 2023 Tom Jones
The Washington Post’s first accessibility engineer is a step forward for accessible media The Post’s work in focusing on accessibility provides a signpost for other organizations that want to follow suit. March 21, 2023 John Loeppky
After the Las Vegas Review-Journal’s Jeff German was killed, a Washington Post reporter picked up his last story ‘Is there anything more meaningful than honoring someone's legacy or carrying the torch for them?’ February 8, 2023 Amaris Castillo
Opinion | Anticipated layoffs hit The Washington Post The number of layoffs, 20, was smaller than expected. Hardest hit were Launcher, the video game and esports section; and KidsPost, a section for kids. January 25, 2023 Tom Jones
Washington Post to conduct layoffs in early 2023 The cuts will affect a “single-digit percentage” of the workforce. The Post employs roughly 2,500 people. December 14, 2022 Angela Fu
Opinion | What The New York Times wrote about The Washington Post The story painted a picture that wasn’t all that rosy. August 31, 2022 Tom Jones
Opinion | How The Washington Post is trying to reach the next generation The job is to not only figure out how to reach new audiences now, but in the future when there could be platforms that haven’t even been invented yet. July 7, 2022 Tom Jones
Washington Post fires reporter Felicia Sonmez The firing took place Thursday afternoon after a week of very public drama with Sonmez in the middle. June 9, 2022 Tom Jones
Opinion | Anatomy of a controversy: Inside the drama at The Washington Post The controversy currently swirling around The Washington Post doesn’t go back days. It goes back years. June 8, 2022 Tom Jones
Opinion | Digging into the Taylor Lorenz controversy that should not be a controversy at all This is Journalism 101. Has there ever been a journalist who hasn’t knocked on a door at least once in their career? April 21, 2022 Tom Jones
5 questions reporters and editors should ask to diversify their sources Diversity in sourcing quite simply makes our journalism better. More reflective of our world. And more accessible. April 7, 2022 Neema Roshania Patel
A Facebook post cries foul at Washington Post headline, but COVID-19 data supports the journalism Unvaccinated Americans and people over age 75 have been particularly hit hard by the omicron variant, according to the Post. February 14, 2022 Jeff Cercone
Opinion | Did the French police capture one of the men involved in the murder of Jamal Khashoggi? If so, the man could be extradited to Turkey and would be the first person tried for The Washington Post columnist’s murder outside of Saudi Arabia. December 8, 2021 Tom Jones
Opinion | The Washington Post isn’t afraid to report on owner Jeff Bezos On Monday, it reported a story that calls out Blue Origin, the Bezos-owned space venture. October 12, 2021 Tom Jones