A surveillance pricing ban in Maryland leaves out loyalty programs — costing customers more than they save https://bit.ly/4wBTp2j
About us
Salon is a spirited home for journalism that takes a critical look at current events, seeks alternatives to the status quo, engages with big ideas and holds power to account. Embracing a wide range of liberal and progressive views, we cover the arts and culture with rigor and insight, champion social progress and, with our digital community, lead good-faith debates about the stuff that really matters. We question authority and assumptions, starting with our own.
- Website
-
https://www.salon.com
External link for Salon.com
- Industry
- Internet Publishing
- Company size
- 11-50 employees
- Headquarters
- New York, New York
- Type
- Privately Held
- Founded
- 1995
Locations
-
Primary
Get directions
New York, New York, US
Employees at Salon.com
Updates
-
Salon.com reposted this
If you haven't yet, sign up for Salon.com FREE culture newsletter by Melanie McFarland where she breaks down the art that's built to last: salon-theswell.beehiiv.com This Thursday, she tackles #TheOtherBennetSister & will have a guest recommendation from Andy Dehnart of reality blurred
-
Spring sale! Salon goes beyond the headlines to give you essential context and expert analysis on the stories that matter. Go ad-free with Salon Premium for just $49/year. bit.ly/4dM9yuA
-
-
Salon.com reposted this
Massive high-fives 🙌 to Salon.com writers Sophia Tesfaye (beat: media analysis) and Brian Karem (our White House correspondent), both finalists for the 2026 Dateline Awards. And that's not all. We started the week with great news from the 🌊 🌴 Left Coast: Our executive editor Hanh Nguyen is a finalist for three SoCal Journalism Awards for her entertainment news and features writing. "Smart, provocative, and endlessly cited," indeed. https://lnkd.in/eQvgFMPS
-
What does it take to cover the Trump White House in 2026? Join Salon Editor in Chief Joseph Neese and White House correspondent Brian Karem for a live conversation about DC access, inside sources and the growing pressure on independent journalism. This event is exclusive to Salon Premium members, and registration closes tomorrow, May 12. Already a member? Check your inbox for the invite. Not a member yet? Our Spring sale is happening now — subscribe in time to join the conversation. Learn more 👉 bit.ly/4d37NJc
-
-
The shutdown of Spirit marks end of a major low-cost carrier and raises questions about budget air travel in future https://bit.ly/3OTGTdC
-
Spring savings are here! Salon’s bold journalism goes beyond the headlines with the analysis you need right now. Go ad-free with Salon Premium and save for 58% on annual plans today: bit.ly/4dcBbfW
-
-
"My Parents Are Dead: What Now?" is a darkly funny guide to navigating grief and the paperwork that follows https://bit.ly/485XuB3
-
Unsold tickets, luxury pricing, empty seats reveal how the Games drifted from their roots as a public celebration https://bit.ly/46zxJZ4
-
Wikipedia — “the best website in the history of the internet” — turns 25 this week. As Troy Farah writes, it’s a rare survivor of a web hollowed out by “profit-hungry algorithms, AI slop and racist bots.” Built by volunteer editors who nitpick citations and uphold editorial standards, Wikipedia remains a bastion of what the internet once was. “The World Wide Web can feel like a pretty dark place lately,” Farah writes, “but on Wikipedia — which exists in 340 languages, hosts 7.1 million articles in English, and is consistently among the top 10 most visited websites — it feels a lot different, much brighter and more free.” Which is exactly why Elon Musk wants to destroy it. Read why his AI-generated alternative, Grokipedia, isn’t about seeking truth at all, but “muddying the waters of what you can trust online.”
