Splice stories
Read, listen, and watch our reporting on the transformation of media in Asia.
Three new episodes from Splice Pink, our podcast of quick conversations across the media ecosystem
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As China tightens its grip on Hong Kong, Taiwan emerges as Asia’s hub for foreign media.
After years of cutbacks and disinterest, Taiwan ramps up.
India’s #MeToo movement is shaking up newsrooms and putting male journalists on notice.
Conversations on gender inequality, consent in office spaces, and the sexual harassment of women reporters in the field are long overdue.
How the Sarawak Report broke Malaysia’s 1MDB scandal
With no money and no fear, even the scrappiest online operation can bring down a sitting prime minister.
How to start your own media newsletter
The highly prescriptive and opinionated Splice guide to setting up your own media newsletter
Enter Liminal, the new media force carving out a space for Asian-Australians.
Fed up with ‘male, stale, and pale’ in Australia's media landscape, Leah Jing created her own platform.
After Malaysia’s political shift, journalists push for legislative change.
This is what the industry wants.
In Pakistan, a mere mention of the military can get a journalist in trouble. Yet some startups are bravely reporting the facts.
These are the ones worth watching.
Social media is reshaping the way satire is produced and distributed across Asia — as well as how governments strive to contain it.
Some satirists continue to make themselves heard despite the strongman politics of Asia.
At Cofacts in Taiwan, volunteer editors and a time-saving chatbot race to combat falsehoods on LINE.
Misinformation is especially troublesome on chat apps. But this team has found a way.
Nine’s takeover of Fairfax spells trouble not just for Australia’s mainstream media — but for startups and independents too.
The biggest proposed merger in Australian media history is setting off alarm bells across the industry.
Splice 100: Our crazy plan to catalyse a generation of media startups in Asia.
Splice and Civil Media are starting a $1 million fund to help create 100 media startups in 3 years. We need your help.
With Cambodia’s independent media in tatters, journalism students face a bleak future.
For the idealistic young journalist who hoped to make change through their reporting, there are now few job options in Cambodia.
India’s fight against fake news has a problem: More needs to be done on regional languages.
Reporters have been scrambling to debunk myths and hoaxes. But they can't just do that in English and Hindi.
18 months in, the SCMP is on a very different footing. This is what CEO Gary Liu did to turn things around.
“No communication, lack of trust, lack of transparency: that became the number one issue we had to tackle”
A summit, the media, and a $25-million gamble.
What exactly did newsrooms get out of sending their journalists to the Trump-Kim summit? The numbers don't add up.
Myitkyina News Journal is harnessing the power of local journalism in a country that until just a few years ago had no independent media.
When your local paper is in a war-ravaged state in Myanmar, local news isn't about police beats and sports.
Australia’s digital media inquiry suffers from a public interest deficit.
Is the government-ordered inquiry about re-invigorating quality journalism — or protecting the country's flailing print duopoly?
Sri Lanka’s president made some big promises on press freedom when he came to power. But has he followed through?
Three years into Maithripala Sirisena’s tenure, it’s a mixed bag.
“My perfectionism used to really inhibit my creative process.”
Janelle Retka, a Phnom Penh-based illustrator and journalist from Seattle, talks to Splice about her process, her influences, and her dreams.