Gallery: Philip Jones Griffiths' Vietnam

GALLERY: PHILIP JONES GRIFFITHS'S VIETNAM The reportage of the Welsh photojournalist is being celebrated in a new exhibition

The reportage of the Welsh photojournalist is being celebrated in a new exhibition

The most celebrated reportage to come out the Vietnam War was Michael Herr’s Dispatches, rightly acclaimed as the most visceral journey into the dark heart of America’s first military defeat. But unlike all wars before it, Vietnam was a genuinely visual conflict, brought into the homes of the public via television and photojournalism. And among its most accomplished witnesses were two British photographers. The one everyone has heard of is Don McCullin, but his work was matched picture for picture by the Magnum photographer Philip Jones Griffiths.

Clarion, Arcola Theatre

CLARION, ARCOLA THEATRE Insider tabloid takedown has real pre-election heft

Insider tabloid takedown has real pre-election heft

“Fury Over Sharia Law For Toddlers!” No, not a prime example of spoof headline generator Daily Mail-o-matic, but the latest piece of fantastical scaremongering from the Clarion, a 125-year-old (semi-)fictional rag that’s upped sales by splashing on immigration every day for a year.

Storyville: Which Way Is the Frontline From Here?, BBC Four

MONDAY'S STORYVILLE, BBC FOUR War photographer Tim Hetherington remembered in powerful documentary 'Which Way Is the Frontline From Here?'

Profile of war photographer Tim Hetherington by his ‘Restrepo’ co-director Sebastian Junger

The title of Sebastian Junger’s documentary comes from a casual remark made as a group of journalists set off towards conflict in the outskirts of the Libyan town of Misrata: it may sound like a standard question from a battle-hardened war correspondent, but the film that follows shows that Tim Hetherington, whose off-camera voice it is, was anything but that. It was April 11 2011, and that journey would prove fatal for the British photographer and filmmaker.

Mammon, More4

MAMMON, MORE4 Latest Nordic noir confuses and grips in equal measure

Latest Nordic noir confuses and grips in equal measure

Well, that was a bit of a brain workout for the first episode - I confess for much of the opening instalment (five more to follow) I didn't have a clue what was going on, who anybody was or how all the characters and a multitude of story strands were connected. Actually, I'm not sure I did entirely understand by the end, but by then the Norwegian thriller set in the nebulous area where politics, finance and journalism collide had drawn me in sufficiently to tune in next week.

Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues

ANCHORMAN 2: THE LEGEND CONTINUES Ron Burgundy sequel lives up to its pre-release hype

Ron Burgundy sequel lives up to its pre-release hype

When Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy was released in 2004 it became a sleeper hit and has since appeared on several “Funniest Movies of All Time” lists. Fans have had to wait nearly a decade for a sequel to see how the eponymous news anchor’s life has panned out, and what has happened to his KVWN colleagues – co-anchor Veronica Corningstone, weatherman Brick Tamland, sportscaster Champ Kind and field reporter Brian Fantana – since they worked together on San Diego's local television station in the 1970s.

The Wipers Times, BBC Two

Sardonic take on the Western front in real-life story of unofficial newspaper for the troops

The last time we saw soldiers going over the top at the Somme with comic baggage attached was the tragic finale of Blackadder. It’s the inevitable comparison that The Wipers Times writers Ian Hislop and Nick Newman were going to face, and though they aim for something different in what is, after all, a true story, there’s no escaping the same absurdity of clipped understatement that they have given their British officer heroes, or the essential one-dimensional nature of characterisation.

The Newsroom, Series Two, Sky Atlantic

THE NEWSROOM, SERIES TWO, SKY ATLANTIC Return to Atlantis Cable News, and writer Aaron Sorkin is back on form

Return to Atlantis Cable News, and writer Aaron Sorkin is back on form

When The Newsroom’s first season started in 2012 the unthinkable seemed to have happened: Aaron Sorkin, creator of The West Wing and Oscar-winning writer of The Social Network, had lost his mojo. Not even his previous, erratic show, Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip, cancelled after its first season, had moments as excruciating as this. 

10 Questions for Amateur Musician Alan Rusbridger

10 QUESTIONS FOR AMATEUR MUSICIAN ALAN RUSBRIDGER The Guardian editor's book about performing on the piano explores the missing link between Assange and Chopin

The Guardian editor's book about performing on the piano explores the missing link between Assange and Chopin

Had we but world enough and time... A new book by the editor of the Guardian makes it clear quite how many hours in the day it takes to run a national newspaper in the digital age. There is the unyielding nature of 24-hour news, while the internet relentlessly asks grave questions of print media’s business model. Some editors respond to the job's demands by keeping obsessively fit, and then there is Rusbridger’s alternative guide to stress-busting: the piano.

Enquirer, National Theatre of Scotland

ENQUIRER, NATIONAL THEATRE OF SCOTLAND Site-specific verbatim theatre tackling the state of journalism means well but lacks focus

Site-specific verbatim theatre tackling the state of journalism means well but lacks focus

Site-specific theatre is hard – where to put the audience, can they stand for nearly two hours, how do we enable them to see/hear, most importantly, what is the purpose of the site and how is it to be used? Verbatim theatre, too, is hard – how to shape a narrative, how to develop characters. Put the two genres together, and what have you got? A well-intentioned, rather unfocused mess, to be honest.

The Arts Desk wins Best Specialist Journalism Site of 2012

TAD AT 5: THEARTSDESK WINS AN AWARD In which we triumphed over the FT and Guardian

We triumph in Online Media Awards 2012 over Financial Times and Guardian

The Arts Desk has been voted Specialist Journalism Site of 2012 at the Online Media Awards. In a celebratory dinner at Arsenal's Emirates Stadium recognising "the best and boldest of online news-based creativity and also the most original", The Guardian were the major winners with five awards, but even their new Data Store section was outgunned in the Specialist Journalism category by The Arts Desk.