✍️✍️ Job Deadlines ✍️✍️ — September 16

Hilarious Queen virtue signalling plus deadlines at the Associated Press, BBC, Channel 4, DublinLive, Euractiv, The Guardian, AFP, Amnesty, STV, University of Toronto and the Washington Post

✍️✍️ Job Deadlines ✍️✍️ — September 16

Hello folks and welcome to another edition of Inside The Newsroom! The airwaves here in the UK have continued to be dominated by the death of Queen Elizabeth II, and the accession of King Charles III. The 10-day official mourning period ends after Monday’s funeral at Westminster Abbey.

I’ve generally buried my head in the sand from the wall-to-wall coverage, but the few times I’ve checked in, I’m reminded of the fascinating ways some have handled the news. The Guardian’s Esther Addley and Nicola Davis wrote a super interesting piece on the behavioral science behind grief and what this past week of mourning might evoke in people. Some of the reasons why people felt so close to QEII are rather touching, others simply want to respect such a historic moment.

Some responses, though, have been nothing but ridiculous and hilarious. Look no further than some UK businesses who had a complete nightmare. British Cycling admitted it “got this one wrong” for telling people they shouldn’t cycle during the Queen’s funeral out of respect. And Norwich City Council closed a pair of cycle racks initially without any explanation or context…

Elsewhere, the UK Met Office’s social team got itself in a right pickle by announcing it would only post daily forecasts and warnings as a “mark of respect”. Then it completely butchered its explanation of why it felt the need to inform the public of its social media strategy…

And perhaps the most absurd virtue signal of them all involved Morrisons, who turned down the volume of its beeps at its checkout tills. Several outlets reported the move was made out of respect, but the supermarket insists it was because it switched off music and tannoy announcements in its stores. Make up your own mind.

I’d start a petition on how nonsensical some of these cancellations have been, but I’m unable to because of the UK government’s petition website temporarily being suspended.

In more serious news, Russia’s attempted invasion of Ukraine continues. After 205 days of fighting, we’ll look at the latest on the ground on Monday.

Check out this past Monday’s jobs update where we added another round of hundreds of jobs at the likes of AFP, Apple, BBC, CBS, El País, ESPN, Euractiv, Guardian, ITV , Nat Geo, NewsNation, NHL, Reuters, Scripps, SELF, The New Yorker, WBAL, WIRED and hundreds more.

Subscribe below for full access. See you again next week! 👋


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New jobs at ABC, the AP, the BBC, Bloomberg, CBS News, Condé Nast, Dow Jones, the FT, Forbes, Gannett, Gray Media, Hearst, Hypebeast, McClatchy, NBC, Nexstar, ProPublica, Reuters, Sky, TEGNA, Telemundo, The Athletic, The Atlantic and Univision

Hello and welcome to another edition of Inside The Newsroom, home to more journalism opportunities than any other newsletter in the world. Last week we talked about feedback and rejection not being a referendum on your life. This week I want to talk about something the industry undervalues because it

By Daniel Levitt