As Our Sunday Visitor celebrates its 110th anniversary, its editor, Father Patrick Briscoe, examines the unique mission that Catholic media undertakes in order to bring its readers closer to Christ. Father Briscoe writes: “To proclaim the truth is a promise that was
Readers of The Tablet, newspaper of the Diocese of Brooklyn, New York, now see something on the paper's website that previously was only familiar to consumers of media like NPR.
A "Support Us" tab takes viewers to a site where they are asked
Gretchen Crowe, editor-in-chief of OSV News, writes about the importance of trust in the media: “Recently I came across some data indicating that when it comes to learning about the Faith, we look first and foremost to the people with whom we
Three more Catholic journalists are bringing their talents, news experience and passion for the Catholic faith to OSV News, the news agency being launched by OSV in the wake of Catholic News Service ceasing stateside operations in December. Joining the OSV News
The team behind OSV News continues to grow, Editor-in-Chief Gretchen R. Crowe is pleased to announce, with the addition of two Catholic media powerhouses, Elizabeth Scalia and Maria Wiering, to the ranks of the news service.
Three veteran Catholic News Service journalists will be joining the OSV News wire service when it launches on Jan. 1, OSV announced Friday. CNS National Editor Julie Asher, former CNS Assistant Director for Media Reviews John Mulderig, and CNS Photographer Bob Roller
Huntington, Ind. – OSV is pleased to announce the appointment of Father Patrick Mary Briscoe, O.P., as editor of Our Sunday Visitor, the weekly national Catholic newspaper founded by Archbishop John F. Noll in 1912. Father Patrick comes to OSV from the
The Portland-based Catholic Sentinel and El Centinela newspapers will close Oct. 1, reflecting a national transition in Catholic communications, according to a news release issued jointly July 21 by the Archdiocese of Portland and Oregon Catholic Press.
The newspapers are the official publications
Catholic communicators need to use extra care and educational efforts to combat a situation where some media "become places of toxicity, hate speech and fake news," Pope Francis said.
In a message to members of Signis, the World Catholic Association for Communication, the
In his latest column, Scott Warden writes about how his job in Catholic media has become a vocation. Lately, though, he writes, “the reputation of both institutions that I love so dearly — the Church and the Fourth Estate — has fallen