Behind the Scenes: Pablo Torre and the Collapse of the Old Media Order
For most of the past century, there was a simple equation in journalism: if you wanted to produce serious, trusted reporting, you needed a serious institution.
Investigations came almost exclusively from places such as The New York Times, The Washington Post or major broadcast networks — organizations with deep pockets, layers of editors and the legal muscle to withstand blowback.
That paradigm is eroding—for a mix of reasons, from broken business models to shifting consumer habits. And in its place, a new model is emerging: more independent, personality-driven journalism that uses modern platforms and direct audience engagement to produce stories with real depth—and real teeth.
Pablo Torre’s 2026 Pulitzer Prize for Audio Reporting is a clear signal of that shift. Not just because he won, but because of how he won. Torre didn’t do this work inside a legacy newsroom. He did it through “Pablo Torre Finds Out,” a podcast built within Meadowlark Media — a newer, talent-led company.
His investigation into whether the Los Angeles Clippers skirted NBA salary cap rules was rigorous enough to trigger league scrutiny and compelling enough to earn journalism’s highest honor.
That would have been hard to imagine even a decade ago.
So, what does this mean for traditional media, for public trust and for the future of journalism?
Those are exactly the sorts of questions we’ll take up at this year’s Vineyard Forum.
We’ll be joined by Bimal Kapadia, president of Meadowlark Media, along with Noosphere CEO and foreign correspondent Jane Ferguson, Shorenstein Center Director and Edward R. Murrow Professor of Practice Nancy Gibbs and moderator Adi Ignatius of Harvard Business Review.
Together, they’ll dig into how the media landscape is reshaping in real time.
If you’d like to join us, email me at jmacht@masslive.com and we’ll get you signed up. The event will take place in Edgartown, Martha’s Vineyard on Thursday, July 9, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Harbor View Hotel.
The broader theme this year is the Future of Power — across energy, media and politics. MassLive is producing the forum in partnership with our friends at The Vineyard Gazette, as part of our ongoing effort to expand what local journalism can be: not just reporting on communities, but convening them around the most important issues of the moment.
Each week, I’ll share more about the different conversations that will define this year’s The Vineyard Forum. Please join us!
Have a great weekend, Josh
Check out some photos below of the 2025 Forum: