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Paula Moura | FRONTLINE | PBS | Official Site

Tow Journalism Fellow, FRONTLINE/Newmark Journalism School Fellowship Before joining FRONTLINE in 2021 as a Tow Journalism Fellow, Paula Moura previously worked as a producer for The New York Times on the investigative video The Amazon is Still Burning. Blame Beef, which received a 2020 Award of Excellence from Pictures of the Year (POYi). She has collaborated with the Times since 2015, as well as with ProPublica and Foreign Policy, and she has covered the Brazilian Amazon region extensively. Moura has also worked as a journalist in Japan and has reported for outlets including The Washington Post, NPR, WNYC, Latino USA, Nashville Public Radio,

ProPublica Hires Mariam Elba as a Research Reporter

New York 9/11 Survivors Eligible for the COVID-19 Vaccine Seek Help

, leave us a voicemail at 646-494-1095 or text “remember” to 73224. Carl Sadler is 79 and lives near Lake George, in upstate New York. Nearly 20 years ago, Sadler worked in Manhattan in the South Tower of the World Trade Center as an executive director at the investment bank Morgan Stanley. On 9/11, he was on the 76th floor when the first plane struck the neighboring North Tower, and he narrowly escaped before the second plane hit his building. Sadler later developed thyroid cancer and asthma, among a host of other long-term illnesses. Sadler and thousands of other survivors of the terror attacks became eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine in mid-February as part of the state’s move to expand vaccine access to people with serious health conditions, including 9/11-related cancers that make them more vulnerable to the coronavirus.

Little Help For New York 9/11 Survivors Eligible For The COVID-19 Vaccine

Little Help For New York 9/11 Survivors Eligible For The COVID-19 Vaccine
patch.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from patch.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Should governments regulate online platforms? | The Hindu Parley podcast

Reasonable regulation is democratic, but the moral panic around big tech is muddying the waters. Australia’s new News Media and Digital Platforms Mandatory Bargaining Code will force platforms like Facebook and Google to pay local media outlets and publishers to link their content in news feeds or search results. The Australian law is being seen as one of the early shots fired in the coming battle by countries to regulate tech giants to take back some of the control they have on global communications. But is it an ideal regulatory model? Won’t regulating the platforms affect free speech? Is regulating platforms the way to save the news media business that is in the doldrums? Here we discuss the issue.

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