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Alison Phillips ‘to quit as Daily Mirror editor’ amid Reach budget cuts

‘Universally loved’ editor, 53, who has led paper since 2018, reportedly accepted voluntary redundancy

 

‘Universally loved’ Mirror editor Alison Phillips will be leaving her role as editor of the Daily Mirror at the end of the month. The Guardian is reporting that she has accepted voluntary redundancy as Reach – owner of the Mirror, Express and scores of local newspapers – pushes through ‘the biggest annual loss of jobs in the UK newspaper industry for decades’.

In a statement, Phillips said: “I will always be beyond proud to be part of a team which showed each day that great journalism can be done with kindness, and be a voice for the decent, compassionate people of this country. I wish everyone there all the very best for a brilliant future.” However, without her, the future looks less than brilliant for the Mirror.

A source at the Mirror told the Guardian: “While there are some great journalists left at the Mirror, many fear that without Alison at the helm, it’s the end for the UK’s only left-leaning tabloid. Everyone is gutted for Alison, who has worked very hard for the brand and her staff amid some terrible calls from above.” Ex-Reach journalist Alison Gow wrote on Twitter, “Alison Phillips leaving the Mirror is like the ravens leaving the Tower”.


 

Our tiny magazine exposed the Post Office. They underestimated us

Two Computer Weekly journalists who were first alerted to the plight of sub-postmasters tell of 15 years of dogged work — and intimidation

Amidst the media frenzy of the UK’s Post Office IT scandal, The Times tells the story of the long term coverage of the case by the ‘tiny trade title’ Computer Weekly. Over 15 years, the industry magazine’s chief reporter, Karl Flinders, has written 350 articles on the scandal.


 

The incredible shrinking podcast industry

A change in how Apple counts and tracks how many people are listening to podcasts is sending shock waves through the industry.

Semafor’s Max Tani says Apple has ‘quietly tightened’ its reporting of how many people listen to podcasts. The podcasting platform had begun switching off automatic downloads for users who haven’t listened to five episodes of a show in the last two weeks. Sounds fair enough TBH.


 

The bold move behind Vogue Polska’s AI-generated cover

Interview with Vogue Polska about their AI-generated cover, which includes a dive into the forecast for AI development in the Polish media landscape by Aleksandra Przegalińska.

What happens if an iconic print fashion magazine replaces models and photographers with AI to create its cover? Vogue Polska did just that, and both the creative process and the public reaction are detailed in this article from Vogue Polska staffer Sofiia Padalko.


More from Media Voices

 

Media Briefs: Yes, you can use Apple News to build first-party data

Apple News doesn’t share reader data directly. But there are clear pathways for publishers to leverage and drive first-party data capture in the app.

 

Newsletter portfolios shrinking as publishers consolidate engagement

The social media traffic collapse has made newsletters more important than ever, but less is looking like more in the fight for engagement.

 

Integrating AI into newsrooms: experiment, report, measure

In the second episode of this two-part series from Mx3 AI, we look at why, how and when publishers are integrating AI into their newsrooms.

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