Journalism: Local journalism
The Bridge
Check out past copies of The Bridge, PCC's student newspaper (no longer active). Bound copies of The Bridge from 1974 - 2002 are available at all four PCC Libraries. (Access to The Bridge's years of online publishing is no longer available.)
Local journalism
- Oregon LiveWebsite for The Oregonian, Oregon's largest newspaper and the oldest continuously published newspaper on the West Coast.
- Oregon Public Broadcasting (OPB)Website for the primary public radio and television broadcasting network in Oregon
- Willamette WeekPortland's alternative weekly newspaper and a website
- Portland TribuneWeekly newspaper, part of the Pamplin Media Group,
- Green Living Journal PDXThe Portland edition of the Green Living Journal is a family-owned business, covering Food, Building, Health, Education, Transportation, Business, Energy and Nature.
Published journalism by former PCC students
I Am the War by
Call Number: Cascade Library 959.7043 V37i 2000Former Bridge student staffer Jim Hallas was a war correspondent and provided photography and content for this book. .Survival Math : notes on an all-American family by
Call Number: Cascade Library 305.896 J33s 2019Former PCC student Mitchell S. Jackson is a published author with numerous articles published in the New York Times.
- Sergio OlmosFormer Bridge student staffer Sergio Olmos is now a free lance journalism who has provided content for New York Times, NPR and other publishers.
- Joe RiedlFormer PCC Bridge student staffer Joe Riedl has been published in Willamette Week.
- Samm SaxbyFormer PCC Bridge student staffer Samm Saxby is now a published author.
Oregonian coverage of summer 2020 protests for racial justice
"Portland's Burning Heart" uses a combination of iPhone footage, on-the-ground photography and haunting voice over to tell the story of Portland's ongoing street protests from the perspective of a woman who knows them well: Emmy-winning photojournalist Beth Nakamura of The Oregonian. Beth is the burning heart at the center of the film, and over the course of its 13 minutes we watch as she evolves from local reporter to teargas-dodging, stab-vest-wearing conflict journalist.