School districts nationwide respond to Newtown shooting
With 20 children and seven adults confirmed dead at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., school officials around the United States sent parents and teachers a message of safety.
With 20 children and seven adults confirmed dead at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., school officials around the United States sent parents and teachers a message of safety.
Dozens of people were killed, many of them children, in a school shooting Friday morning in a small Connecticut town. People flooded online networks with heartfelt responses.
From the ways to be a better communicator to the plight of millennials, here are the week’s most widely read stories.
Congratulations, CNN and Fox News.
Cheerios is the latest brand to take flak for an online campaign. Shouldn’t brands know better by now—or at least be better prepared?
Listening to every tweet and post, this campaign was relentless in reaching out to reporters and policy stakeholders about nuclear safety.
From overused fonts and overused words to one terrible press release, these are the stories grabbing the most attention this week on PR Daily.
Public companies take note, this story could relate to what you’re doing on social media.
A reporter at the Cape Cod Times was caught fabricating dozens of stories dating back to the ‘90s. The paper apologized with a direct response.
It’s called the Lucky Beggar, and it resembles the iconic blue coffee cup found in New York. The retailer said selling the item was a ‘bad decision.’
A freelance photographer is defending his actions after snapping pictures of a man who fell on subway tracks and later died.
A public outcry over the removal of Gilda Radner’s name from the iconic cancer group becomes a case study of what not to do.
After the murder/suicide of Kansas City Chiefs linebacker Jovan Belcher and his girlfriend, the league focused its attention on domestic abuse. Although it was a thoughtful move, the NFL officials must address head injuries and violence.
Only one politician made the list of terrible gaffes in November, leaving open the door for celebrities, cable hosts, and business leaders.
For the second straight year. But the news isn’t all-bad for the cell carrier, according to the results of a Consumer Reports survey.