
Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation and Outreach at The Christian Science Monitor
Director of editorial innovation @CSMonitor, old-car keeper, pilot, reducetarian, @NewhouseSU, Columbia Sulzberger 2012. RT not endorsement unless it is.
Articles
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1 month ago |
csmonitor.com | Clayton Collins |Jingnan Peng
By now you probably either are all in on the Apple TV+ series that feels like “Black Mirror” meets “Office Space,” or have walled it off. On the eve of the Season 2 finale of “Severance,” we had a no-spoilers chat with our senior culture writer about why, for some, the dark show resonates. March 19, 2025, 5:00 p.m. ET Work-life balance was never quite like this.
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Sep 12, 2024 |
csmonitor.com | Clayton Collins |Mackenzie Farkus
What does it take to stand in the torrent of global movie offerings and sift for ones that engage and connect people? After the Toronto International Film Festival in 2023, our reviewer joined our podcast to explain, and to tell some stories. We’re reprising most of that episode this week. Sept.
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Aug 8, 2024 |
csmonitor.com | Clayton Collins |Mackenzie Farkus
Sports-loving Monitor writer Ira Porter high-jumped at the chance to head to Paris and soak up the 2024 Games. He joined our podcast to talk about days spent sprinting from venue to venue, finding his stories, and basking in the light of a gracious host city. Episode transcript Ira Porter: Bonjour! Hey everybody, it’s Ira Porter, still in these Parisian streets at the 2024 Olympic Games.
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Jun 7, 2024 |
csmonitor.com | Clayton Collins |Mackenzie Farkus
When workers feel empowered, the companies they serve tend to succeed. And when different companies adopt a spirit of mutual aid, that success can spread. We found a case study in Spain’s Basque country. For our reporter, it set up as a story about trust. Capitalism gets cheers and jeers. Your opinion might depend partly on how well that system has treated you. Erika Page likes reporting on big ideas, especially ones that improve lives.
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May 17, 2024 |
csmonitor.com | Clayton Collins |Mackenzie Farkus
History and personal experience have left some Black women in the United States feeling underserved by the medical system when it comes to maternal health. Can birth doulas help restore a sense of agency and control? Our writer explored that question, then joined our podcast to discuss what he learned. As life events go, pregnancy and childbirth rank high as ones requiring support – familial, institutional, societal. Without it, a sense of comfort can ebb.
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Trying things out over at Bluesky, along with some colleagues at @csmonitor. Sky Follower Bridge? Starter packs? All TBD, but anyway, seems like a civil society over there.... https://t.co/vUzr6zL5jy

RT @peterson__scott: “Israel destroyed Gaza. Why must #Israel destroy my second home?...The same method: Evacuations. Relentless bombing. U…

What did Quentin Tarantino once say about our film critic, Peter Rainer, that caused Peter, seated in the room, to drop his chopsticks? Hear him tell the story on the @csmonitor podcast “Why We Wrote This.” And find his report from #TIFF24 on our website. https://t.co/HslUDVA59g