Olivia Carville's profile photo

Olivia Carville

New York

Reporter at Bloomberg News

Investigative reporter for @business; feature writer for @BW. President of @NYFWA. Adjunct Prof @Columbiajourn. Kiwi 🥝

Featured in: Favicon bloomberg.com Favicon uol.com.br Favicon msn.com Favicon globo.com Favicon nytimes.com Favicon indiatimes.com (+3) Favicon time.com Favicon yahoo.com (+4) Favicon hindustantimes.com Favicon latimes.com

Articles

  • 2 weeks ago | publico.pt | Olivia Carville

    Deste artigo Gerir notificações Receba notificações quando publicamos um texto deste autor ou sobre os temas deste artigo. Estes são os autores e tópicos que escolheu seguir. Pode activar ou desactivar as notificações.

  • 2 weeks ago | nzherald.co.nz | Olivia Carville

    Kids are growing up online, immersed in social media. Photo / 123RFThe “stranger danger” fears of the 20th century can seem quaint compared with the horror stories kids may come across in the digital world. Before the internet, parents feared sexual predators or drug dealers having physical access to their children. Now, they’re just a swipe away. Kids are growing up online, immersed in social media, obsessed with it and, in some cases, addicted to it.

  • 2 weeks ago | phillytrib.com | Olivia Carville

    The “stranger danger” fears of the 20th century can seem quaint compared with the horror stories kids may come across in the digital world. Before the internet, parents feared sexual predators or drug dealers having physical access to their children. Now they’re just a swipe away. Kids are growing up online, immersed in social media, obsessed with it and, in some cases, addicted to it. More than 95% of teens in the U.S. use social media, with one-third saying they are logged on almost constantly.

  • 2 weeks ago | detroitnews.com | Olivia Carville

    TECHNOLOGYOlivia CarvilleBloombergView Comments The “stranger danger” fears of the 20th century can seem quaint compared with the horror stories kids may come across in the digital world. Before the internet, parents feared sexual predators or drug dealers having physical access to their children. Now they’re just a swipe away. Kids are growing up online, immersed in social media, obsessed with it and, in some cases, addicted to it.

  • 2 weeks ago | bloomberg.com | Olivia Carville

    Last February, I sat on the floor of 19-year-old Kyla Palomaki’s apartment in northern Michigan for seven hours during a snowstorm. We started on the couch and then slid to the shag rug after she dragged a box of mementos into the living room. They were tokens of her relationship with Jordan DeMay, who had killed himself two years earlier.

Try JournoFinder For Free

Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.

Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →

X (formerly Twitter)

Followers
5K
Tweets
2K
DMs Open
Yes
Olivia Carville
Olivia Carville @livcarville
6 Apr 25

RT @perripeltz: Can’t Look Away is out now on https://t.co/abusoeCcnY Teens are dying. Tech is profiting. And no one’s being held accountab…

Olivia Carville
Olivia Carville @livcarville
5 Apr 25

RT @MishalHusain: This weekend @business: children, social media, smartphones, and the US lawyers going after the tech firms. As ‘Can’t Loo…

Olivia Carville
Olivia Carville @livcarville
5 Apr 25

RT @ColumbiaJournMA: On Monday, April 7 in NYC, see a special @NYFWA screening of "Can't Look Away," a new documentary based on @ColumbiaJ…