πŸ”Š CEOInterviews
Start App
Try: AI strategy tariffs earnings guidance layoffs interest rates growth

Charles Whitaker

Senior VP, Chief Human Resources Officer & Chief Compliance Officer, Altria

Search every verified Charles Whitaker interview, podcast appearance, and on-the-record quote β€” each transcript cross-checked by AI and human review to confirm speaker identity. On February 17, 2020, Charles Whitaker delivered a lecture titled "Conflict and Crisis: How the Digital Revolution Upended Journalism and Democracy" as part of the Hayek Lecture Series. Whitaker, who described himself as a "recovering magazine editor" rather than a scholar, discussed how the digital revolution democratized content production and dissemination while also enabling echo chambers and partisan media. He attributed the rise of hyper-partisan media in part to the Reagan administration's elimination of the Fairness Doctrine. Whitaker also stated that legacy media was "complicit in its own demise" by resisting digital adaptation and that the loss of local newspapers has harmed democracy by removing the watchdog function of the press. Whitaker noted that about 225 counties in the U.S. have no daily newspaper, meaning no one is chronicling those communities or holding local government accountable. He argued that the media business historically sold access to audiences rather than information, and that digital advertising's lower cost-per-click made the old exposure model unsustainable. Whitaker expressed optimism about the future of journalism, citing Medill's centennial class and the dynamic opportunities available to new journalists.

Selected quotes

Recent appearances

  • "How the Digital Revolution Upended Journalism" Charles Whitaker, Hayek Lecture Series

    On February 17, 2020, Charles Whitaker delivered, "Conflict and Crisis: How the Digital Revolution Upended Journalism and Democracy," as part of the Hayek Lecture Series. The digital revolution upended the media paradigm in ways that have both advanced and harmed society as we knew it. On the one hand, it democratized the production and dissemination of content, nullifying the influence of gatekeepers who once controlled the flow of information in print and across airwaves. But it also enflamed our tribal passions, allowing us to burrow into echo chambers that confirm our biases and stoke our…

    Watch on YouTube β†—