Comedy film series featuring hotshot newsman Ron Burgundy.
What is "Anchorman"?
New York Times reporter who covered the Trump administration and spoke at Chatham University in 2019.
Who is Maggie Haberman?
Style guide used by journalists as a standard for consistent writing and editing.
What is Associated Press style?
Former politician who routinely accused the mainstream media of publishing false information about him and making him the center of a "witch hunt."
Who is Donald Trump?
The student news outlet of Chatham University.
What is the Communique?
1976 film about the Watergate scandal.
Current Washington Post associate editor who was one of the journalists who reported on the Watergate scandal with Carl Bernstein.
Who is Bob Woodward?
The type of comma that's typically excluded from journalistic writing.
What is the Oxford comma?
What is Facebook?
Newspaper company that recently acquired the game Wordle.
What is The New York Times?
A film inspired by Washington Post journalists' efforts to publish the Pentagon Papers in a race against The New York Times.
What is "The Post"?
Famed environmentalist and author who was an editor of the student newspaper before graduating from Chatham in 1929.
Who is Rachel Carson?
The name for a journalist who covers a particular topic for a media outlet.
What is a beat reporter?
A name for an online headline that's designed to be attention grabbing in an attempt to drive traffic to the website.
What is clickbait?
24/7 TV network that's the global leader in cable news.
What is CNN?
2003 bio drama about a young reporter for The New Republic who's busted for fabricating stories.
What is "Shattered Glass"?
Photographer for the Pittsburgh Courier whose archives are housed at the Carnegie Museum of Art. His nickname was "One Shot."
Who is Charles Teenie Harris?
A common type of journalistic story structure that begins with a lede, followed by a nutgraph and body.
What is the inverted pyramid?
Genre known for sensational stories about celebrities that's named after its small size and commonly found in supermarket checkout aisles.
What is tabloid journalism?
The first newspaper published west of the Allegheny Mountains.
What is the Pittsburgh Gazette (known today as the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)?
1940s film inspired by the life of media mogul William Randolph Hearst.
What is "Citizen Kane"?
Politician and publisher who died in 1911 for whom journalism's top award is named.
Who is Joseph Pulitzer?
The reason why journalists in Pennsylvania can't record an interview without first asking for permission.
What is a double-party consent state?
The period of journalism in the late 1800s and early 1900s known for newspapers with attention-grabbing headlines.
What is Yellow Journalism?
Weekly African-American newspaper and website based in Pittsburgh.
What is the New Pittsburgh Courier?