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The Return of the Road Warrior: Why Media’s Best Jobs Now Require a Passport (or at Least a Carry-On)

This week's standout media roles signal a decisive industry pivot toward immersive, travel-driven storytelling that audiences actually trust.

hot media and creative jobs
Miles icon
By Miles Jennings
@milesworks
Miles Jennings is CEO of Mediabistro and its parent CognoGroup. He previously founded and led Recruiter.com through its NASDAQ listing, executing more than 10 acquisitions over nearly a decade as CEO and COO.
5 min read • Originally published February 9, 2026 / Updated March 20, 2026
Miles icon
By Miles Jennings
@milesworks
Miles Jennings is CEO of Mediabistro and its parent CognoGroup. He previously founded and led Recruiter.com through its NASDAQ listing, executing more than 10 acquisitions over nearly a decade as CEO and COO.
5 min read • Originally published February 9, 2026 / Updated March 20, 2026

Something interesting is happening in media hiring right now, and it goes deeper than the usual remote-versus-office debate. Scan this week’s most compelling job listings and a pattern emerges quickly: employers aren’t just looking for people who can make content, they want people who can go get it. Travel-required social media production. Video work rooted in community impact. Communications roles tied to real organizations doing real things in real places. The throughline is unmistakable.

After several years of algorithmically optimized, studio-lit, could-have-been-made-anywhere content, audiences have developed a finely tuned radar for authenticity, and they’re rewarding creators who deliver it. The brands and organizations hiring this week clearly understand that. They’re not posting travel-required roles because they enjoy the expense reports. They’re doing it because location-specific, experiential content consistently outperforms the generic alternative, and the gap is widening.

For job seekers, the implications are worth paying attention to. The most competitive candidates in today’s market aren’t choosing between “remote” and “in-office”—they’re positioning themselves as versatile enough to do both, and nimble enough to create compelling work wherever the story lives.

This Week’s Standout Roles

Social Media Producer (Travel Required) — Showplace

Why this one caught our eye: Showplace isn’t a media company per se—they design high-end vacation rentals. But they’ve clearly figured out what many hospitality brands are still learning: content is the product now. This role asks you to travel to properties across the country and create social content that sells an experience, not square footage. You’ll be documenting real guest moments, translating interior design decisions into visual storytelling, and building a social presence that makes people reach for their credit cards. It’s part travel photographer, part brand journalist, part social strategist, and it requires someone who’s genuinely comfortable working independently, far from headquarters, with a camera and a content calendar.

What they’re looking for:

  • Willingness (and enthusiasm) for extensive domestic travel to property locations
  • Demonstrated ability to produce polished content independently—no production crew, no safety net
  • A storyteller’s instinct paired with a strategist’s discipline around data and performance metrics
  • Experience turning physical spaces and in-person experiences into scroll-stopping digital content

See the full listing and apply →

Video Producer/Editor, Social Impact — Marketing for Change

Why this one matters: Let’s be honest—most video production roles exist to move product. This one doesn’t. Marketing for Change works exclusively on public health, environmental protection, and democracy issues, and they need a Video Lead who can own projects from concept through final delivery. The difference here isn’t just subject matter; it’s intent. You’re creating work designed to shift how people think and behave around issues that genuinely matter. That’s a different creative muscle, and if you’ve been quietly wishing your production skills served a bigger purpose, this is the listing to bookmark.

What they’re looking for:

  • End-to-end ownership of video projects—you’re not handing off to someone else at any stage
  • A portfolio that shows experience in cause-driven, social impact, or advocacy content
  • Strong collaborative instincts within a creative team that takes its mission seriously
  • Genuine investment in using media as a tool for behavioral and social change

See the full listing and apply →

Media Director — Marketing for Change

Why we’re watching this: Most Media Director roles ask you to optimize an existing machine. This one asks you to design and build the machine, oriented entirely around behavioral science and social change rather than commercial outcomes. If you’ve spent years in traditional media buying and feel ready to redirect that expertise toward something with more weight, this is an unusually clean opportunity to do exactly that.

What they’re looking for:

  • Proven senior leadership across media planning, buying, and strategy
  • A genuine understanding of how media exposure drives behavior change—not just awareness, but action
  • An entrepreneurial mindset comfortable with building new capabilities inside a growing organization
  • Fluency across paid, earned, and owned media strategies, with the judgment to know when each matters most

See the full listing and apply →

Communications Associate — Kittleman & Associates

The quiet standout: This one’s easy to scroll past—it’s part-time, it’s a communications associate title, it doesn’t scream prestige. But look closer. Kittleman is the nation’s first executive search firm dedicated exclusively to nonprofits. That means this role gives you a front-row seat to how leadership moves across the entire social impact sector. You’ll handle communications for a firm that places CEOs, Executive Directors, and senior leaders at organizations doing consequential work. As a career-building move, especially for someone early in communications or considering the nonprofit space, the access and exposure here punch well above the title.

What they’re looking for:

  • Part-time availability with remote flexibility—ideal for balancing alongside other commitments
  • Strong fundamentals in nonprofit or mission-driven communications
  • Preferred (but not required) location in Chicago, Philadelphia, Boston, or Denver
  • Direct reporting line to a Vice President, meaning real mentorship access and visibility

See the full listing and apply →

What This Week’s Listings Tell Us About Where Media Hiring Is Headed

What these roles collectively signal is that the media industry is recalibrating the balance between digital efficiency and real-world credibility. The pandemic proved that remote content creation works. But the market is now telling us that works and wins are different things—and the content that wins increasingly comes from people who were actually there.

If you’re actively searching, consider how your resume and portfolio answer this question: Can you create compelling content outside of controlled conditions? Highlight the on-location shoots, the community partnerships, the projects where you had to adapt on the fly because the real world doesn’t come with a creative brief. Show that you can bridge physical experience and digital storytelling—because that’s the skill set employers are clearly willing to pay for right now.

As remote work matured, the market has become more discerning about which work benefits from a home office and which work demands boots on the ground. The most interesting media careers in 2025 are shaping up to require both.

Topics:

Hot Jobs
Hot Jobs

Remote Jobs with Clear Pay are Hiring Now

hot media and creative jobs on Mediabistro
Miles icon
By Miles Jennings
@milesworks
Miles Jennings is CEO of Mediabistro and its parent CognoGroup. He previously founded and led Recruiter.com through its NASDAQ listing, executing more than 10 acquisitions over nearly a decade as CEO and COO.
4 min read • Originally published February 18, 2026 / Updated March 20, 2026
Miles icon
By Miles Jennings
@milesworks
Miles Jennings is CEO of Mediabistro and its parent CognoGroup. He previously founded and led Recruiter.com through its NASDAQ listing, executing more than 10 acquisitions over nearly a decade as CEO and COO.
4 min read • Originally published February 18, 2026 / Updated March 20, 2026

Salary Transparency Keeps Gaining Ground in Media Hiring

Compensation clarity used to be the exception in media job postings. Today, it looks more like a baseline expectation. Across the current Mediabistro board, a notable share of listings include specific salary ranges, and the roles that tend to attract stronger, more qualified applicant pools. For job seekers tired of guessing whether a role pays $55K or $95K, the shift is meaningful.

What caught our eye today is how this transparency clusters around mission-driven organizations. Independent newsrooms, behavioral science firms, and publishers rooted in personal development: these employers compete for talent by leading with clarity about what the work pays and what it means. That combination is powerful, especially for mid-career professionals weighing their next move.

The four roles below span production, community management, editorial leadership, and media strategy. They share a common thread: each one sits inside an organization doing something specific and purposeful, and each one gives you real information about what you’d earn.

Today’s Hot Jobs

Senior Producer at Status Coup News

Why you should look closely: Status Coup has carved out a distinct identity in independent journalism, reporting on-the-ground stories that mainstream outlets overlook. This senior producer role is fully remote, offers benefits, and carries real editorial authority. You’d manage a growing team of reporters, producers, editors, and freelancers while shaping the editorial output across live and recorded content. At $80,000 to $85,000 with full benefits, this is a competitive offer for an independent outlet.

What they need from you:

  • Experience managing and assigning video edits across a team of producers and editors
  • Ability to identify needed re-edits and communicate changes clearly to production staff
  • Strong organizational systems for tracking edits and content workflows
  • Alignment with the outlet’s mission of covering underreported stories with a clear editorial point of view

Apply to the Senior Producer role at Status Coup News

Content and Community Manager at Hay House

The draw here: Hay House, the largest publisher of personal development books, events, and courses, is hiring a remote Content and Community Manager dedicated to author Rebecca Campbell’s brand. You’d steward two membership communities, blending content production with virtual event coordination. The four-day work week is a genuine differentiator. The $65,000 to $75,000 salary range is solid for a role that offers such schedule flexibility, and the work itself sits at the intersection of publishing and digital community building.

Core qualifications:

  • Experience managing online membership communities and digital content production
  • Ability to coordinate virtual events and collaborate closely with a high-profile author
  • Strong editorial sensibility for personal development and spiritual growth content
  • Comfort working remotely within a mission-driven publishing organization

Apply to the Content and Community Manager position at Hay House

Executive Editor at the Association for Computing Machinery

What makes this role notable: ACM publishes one of the world’s most respected technology magazines, and this Executive Editor position includes full P&L responsibility, ownership of the editorial calendar, and oversight of both print and digital operations. The $125,000 to $140,000 salary range reflects the seniority expected. You’d lead article acquisition, manage an editorial advisory board, and collaborate with ad sales on new products.

If you have experience in technology publishing, particularly with software development audiences, this is a rare leadership seat. The hybrid schedule requires three days per week at ACM’s New York City headquarters. For those exploring senior editorial jobs, this one combines editorial vision with genuine business ownership.

Key requirements:

  • Strong editorial and online skills with experience in technology publishing
  • P&L management experience, including annual budget oversight
  • Ability to manage circulation strategy and grow a high-quality subscriber base
  • Experience working with editorial advisory boards and ad sales teams on product development

Apply to the Executive Editor position at ACM

Media Director at Marketing for Change

Why this stands apart: Marketing for Change is an independent national advertising firm driven by behavioral science and focused on social change campaigns. The Media Director role is a senior leadership position where you’d shape how research-driven strategies translate into real-world media planning and buying across regional, state, and national campaigns. This is the kind of role where your media expertise directly influences public health outcomes, civic engagement, and community behavior. The Orlando-based position puts you at the intersection of behavioral insight, creative storytelling, and smart media investment.

What they’re seeking:

  • Recognized leadership in media planning, buying, and earned exposure
  • Entrepreneurial mindset with ability to scale a media practice
  • Deep expertise across specialized media channels, including digital, broadcast, and out-of-home
  • Experience leading campaigns that drive measurable behavior change, not just impressions

Apply to the Media Director role at Marketing for Change

The Takeaway for Job Seekers

If you’ve spent your career in media and find yourself drawn to organizations with a clear mission, the current market is working in your favor. The roles above reward domain expertise and editorial judgment more than generic “content” skills.

A senior producer who understands independent journalism, a community manager fluent in membership models, an executive editor who can own a P&L, a media director who thinks in behavioral outcomes: these are specific, valued skill sets. When you’re updating your resume and preparing your references, lead with the specialized knowledge that sets you apart. The employers hiring right now want depth, and they’re willing to pay for it.

Topics:

Hot Jobs
Advice From the Pros

What’s Next for Mediabistro: AI Job Matching, Content, Hiring Tools, and Playbook in 2026

AI job search, smarter alerts, employer hiring tools, and workflow planning for media and creative teams. Here's what Mediabistro is building in 2026.

mediabistro people tell world's stories
Miles icon
By Miles Jennings
@milesworks
Miles Jennings is CEO of Mediabistro and its parent CognoGroup. He previously founded and led Recruiter.com through its NASDAQ listing, executing more than 10 acquisitions over nearly a decade as CEO and COO.
7 min read • Originally published March 9, 2026 / Updated March 20, 2026
Miles icon
By Miles Jennings
@milesworks
Miles Jennings is CEO of Mediabistro and its parent CognoGroup. He previously founded and led Recruiter.com through its NASDAQ listing, executing more than 10 acquisitions over nearly a decade as CEO and COO.
7 min read • Originally published March 9, 2026 / Updated March 20, 2026

This is the second in a series of posts about Mediabistro’s return to being an independent company. The first, “Mediabistro Is Back,” covered the separation, the mission, and where we’re headed. This one gets into the specifics of what we’re actually building.

Fair warning: our latest newsletter covers what happens when a tech billionaire decides to collect Hollywood like Infinity Stones. We’re taking notes. Except our version of world domination involves better email alerts and a freelancer database, which is admittedly less cinematic but hopefully more useful to your career.

We have four major product priorities for the next few months, and I want to walk through each of them. Some of this is already underway. Some of it is early-stage. All of it is pointed at one goal: making Mediabistro the most useful platform in the world for people who work in media, content, and creative fields, and for the companies that hire them.

Storytellers need a home now more than ever.

1. More Content, More Voices

The foundation of any good professional community is content that actually helps the people in it. We’ve been investing in ramping this up for the last couple of months, and the results are showing up.

We’ve expanded the articles we publish on Mediabistro, covering everything from the latest in branding and hiring trends to practical career advice for freelance writers, editors, producers, and creative professionals. We started covering media industry news (and man, it can be messy!)

Also, our newsletter, which now reaches more than 70,000 subscribers on Substack, has been redesigned to deliver a truly unique voice every week: industry news, job picks, and the kind of insider perspective that media professionals can actually use.

But we’re just getting started. The next phase is about increasing both quantity and quality, and expanding who contributes.

We’re building out systems to support more user-generated content on the platform. If you’re a working journalist, a content strategist with a strong point of view, or a creative director who’s learned something the hard way, we want to hear from you. Mediabistro should be a place where media professionals share knowledge with each other, not just a place where we publish to them.

We’re also bringing back Showcase, a feature that longtime Mediabistro users will remember. Showcase was a space for creative professionals to share their work and get it in front of employers and peers. It’s a natural extension of what we’re doing with freelance profiles, and it gives talented people a way to be discovered on the platform based on what they’ve actually produced. More details on the relaunch soon, but it’s a priority.

The more useful, relevant content we produce and curate for media professionals, the stronger the community gets. And the stronger the community, the more valuable Mediabistro becomes for everyone, job seekers and employers alike.

2. AI-Powered Job Search and Email Alerts for Media Professionals

This one is big. And honestly, pretty complex.

If you’ve used Mediabistro’s job search and email alerts before, you know the basics work. But “the basics work” isn’t the standard we’re aiming for. We want every job seeker on Mediabistro to feel like the platform understands what they’re looking for and surfaces the right opportunities without making them dig.

We’re already incorporating AI into the core of how jobs enter the platform. The rebuilt system launched with intelligent features for employers, including automated job description drafting and a streamlined employer dashboard, with expanded capabilities for job seekers to follow. On the ingestion side, this means smarter processing of job listings so we can classify roles more accurately, tag them with richer metadata, and normalize the wild inconsistency of how employers title and describe the same types of positions.

A “Content Manager” at a streaming company and a “Brand Editor” at a DTC startup might be functionally a similar job. Our system should know that and surface both to a candidate whose background fits.

On the job seeker side, this means better search relevance and dramatically improved email alerts. Right now, alerts are keyword-based. It works okay, but it’s a blunt instrument. We’re working toward alerts that understand the intent behind what someone is looking for, factoring in their experience level, their past search behavior, the types of roles they’ve engaged with, and the specific media verticals they care about.

The goal is that when you get a Mediabistro job alert in your inbox, every listing in it feels relevant. Not “sort of close.” Relevant. That’s the experience we’re building toward, and AI is what makes it possible at scale.

3. Application Tracking and Candidate Matching Tools for Media Employers

We rebuilt Mediabistro’s platform from scratch last month, and now we’re using that foundation to build the features that make hiring here more complete. The primary focus: application tracking and automated candidate matching.

For employers, this means better tools for managing the candidates who apply to their listings. Right now, the workflow for most employers is: post a job, receive applications, sort through them manually (or export them into another system), and communicate with candidates off-platform. We want to close that loop. We’re building tools that let employers track applicants, organize their pipeline, and manage the process inside Mediabistro, so the platform doesn’t end at the job post.

On the matching side, we’re developing automated suggestions that surface candidates to employers based on role requirements and candidate profiles. If you post a senior editor role and there are three freelancers on Mediabistro whose work history and portfolio match perfectly, you should know about them, even if they haven’t applied yet. That kind of proactive matching is where hiring platforms create real value, and it’s where Mediabistro has a distinct advantage because our user base is already specialized.

For job seekers, this means your profile and work history do more for you. The better your Mediabistro profile, the more likely you are to be surfaced to employers who are hiring for roles that match your background. That’s a much more efficient model than applying cold and hoping for the best.

4. Playbook: Workflow Planning and Hiring Tools for Creative Teams

We recently launched Playbook on Mediabistro, and it’s a product I’m excited about. Playbook is a discovery and workflow tool that helps creative teams find the right software, platforms, and services for their work, and then map out how those tools fit together with people into total workflows.

Playbook currently tracks 435 tools across 28 categories, from editorial production and visual design to video, audio, marketing analytics, and content creation. It starts with your creative process. Describe your work in plain language – “produce a short documentary for a non-profit client” or “build a monthly content calendar with SEO and social distribution” – and Playbook’s Stack Advisor responds with a step-by-step workflow, mapping the right mix of human talent and software to each stage. It’s built specifically for media and creative workflows, not a generic SaaS comparison.

Here’s where it gets interesting. We’re now working on integrating Mediabistro’s hiring tools directly into Playbook. The idea is that as a company maps out its creative workflow, it can identify gaps that require talent, not just software. If your workflow reveals that you need someone to own video production or editorial strategy, Playbook should help you go from “we need this capability” to “here’s the right person to hire” without leaving the platform.

We’re also publishing the Media Innovation Index, powered by Playbook’s product discovery data. It scores automation exposure by creative category and updates as new tools enter the market. Right now, Image Generation sits at 85% automation exposure, Graphic Design at 75%, and CMS & Publishing at 50%. It’s a running read on where the creative technology landscape is heading.

This is the long-term vision for Mediabistro as a product: not just a job board, and certainly not just a tools directory, but an integrated platform where creative teams can plan their workflows, find their tools, and hire the people they need, all in one place. Playbook will be a connective tissue that should help make it possible.

The Common Thread

If you look at all four of these priorities together, there’s a clear throughline: make Mediabistro more useful to more people, more often. So that’s our evil plan.

Content brings people to the platform and keeps them engaged. AI-powered job matching makes the core job board experience dramatically better. New tracking and matching features make the platform stickier for employers. And Playbook extends Mediabistro’s value beyond the job search into the day-to-day work of running creative teams.

None of this happens overnight. We’re a small team doing ambitious work, and we’re building in the open. Some of these features will ship in the next few months. Others will take longer. But the direction is clear, and we’re moving fast.

And if you have ideas, feedback, or want to contribute content to the platform, reach out to us on X or Bluesky. We’re building this for the community, and we’d love to hear from you!

– Miles Jennings, CEO of Mediabistro

Feel free to ping me directly on X as well.

Topics:

Advice From the Pros
media-news

Media’s Double Bet: Fighting for AI Licensing While Training the Next Solo Generation

Publishers are organizing collective AI licensing deals. J-schools are teaching students to build careers without them. Both strategies make sense, and that's the problem.

Miles icon
By Miles Jennings
@milesworks
Miles Jennings is CEO of Mediabistro and its parent CognoGroup. He previously founded and led Recruiter.com through its NASDAQ listing, executing more than 10 acquisitions over nearly a decade as CEO and COO.
6 min read • Originally published March 11, 2026 / Updated March 20, 2026
Miles icon
By Miles Jennings
@milesworks
Miles Jennings is CEO of Mediabistro and its parent CognoGroup. He previously founded and led Recruiter.com through its NASDAQ listing, executing more than 10 acquisitions over nearly a decade as CEO and COO.
6 min read • Originally published March 11, 2026 / Updated March 20, 2026

The media industry is running two parallel experiments, and the results will define who gets paid for what over the next five years.

Publishers are organizing collective licensing schemes to force AI platforms to pay for training data. Journalism schools are redesigning curricula around the assumption that traditional newsroom employment is no longer the primary path. Both things are happening at the same time, in the same industry, often at the same institutions.

These aren’t contradictory strategies. They’re hedges. Some institutions are fighting to preserve revenue models built on scale. Others are preparing professionals for a landscape where that fight fails.

Meanwhile, Netflix keeps greenlighting multi-season series and expanding its production footprint, underscoring that content spending remains robust. And Quentin Tarantino is publicly attacking a former collaborator over criticism of his work, offering a sharp case study in how established creators manage legacy when cultural consensus shifts.

The thread connecting all of it: recalibration. Different sectors are placing fundamentally different bets on where the money and the jobs will be.

The Collective Bargaining Table for AI Licensing Is Getting Bigger

Smaller publishers have struggled to secure AI licensing deals because they lack the leverage of The New York Times or The Atlantic.

A new initiative from Publishers Licensing Services (PLS) aims to change that with a content licensing store that AI companies can access through a single fee structure. Press Gazette details the scheme: regional and independent publishers pool their content and negotiate collectively, similar to music licensing frameworks that have existed for decades.

The practical value is straightforward. AI platforms get streamlined access to diverse training data, and smaller publishers get paid instead of being scraped.

The career implications matter more. If these frameworks take hold, they create new roles in rights management, licensing operations, and revenue compliance at organizations that have traditionally run on advertising and subscriptions alone.

Key Takeaway: Collective licensing creates a marketplace structure before statutory requirements arrive, establishing pricing benchmarks and usage tracking that would support future regulation.

Poynter reports that news organizations worldwide are advocating for statutory licensing frameworks that would mandate payment when AI companies use journalism to train models. The parallel to the music industry is deliberate: just as Spotify and Apple Music operate under compulsory licensing structures, publishers want similar requirements for AI platforms.

The difference is enforcement. Music licensing works because platforms need real-time catalog access to function. AI models train once and deploy indefinitely, making post-training audits much harder.

All of this assumes publishers retain enough institutional leverage to demand payment. Some corners of the profession have already moved past that assumption entirely.

J-Schools Are Teaching Students to Be Their Own Newsrooms

When journalism programs redesign curricula around creator-model careers, they’re acknowledging something the industry already knows: full-time newsroom jobs are scarce, and the traditional employment pipeline is broken.

Poynter profiles journalism schools now teaching students to build personal brands, develop direct audience relationships, and monetize through newsletters, podcasts, and freelance platforms instead of staff positions.

This isn’t a feel-good innovation story. It’s an institutional retreat.

Audience development, revenue diversification, and platform optimization are moving from elective to core because the profession’s own training infrastructure has absorbed the reality that institutional employment isn’t the default outcome. Students are learning to function as their own editor, publisher, and business manager before graduation.

For mid-career professionals, the implications are sharper. You’re competing in the same ecosystem as people trained from the start to operate independently, often with lower overhead and more platform fluency.

Newsrooms still hiring for traditional roles increasingly expect candidates to bring existing audiences, established newsletters, or proven traffic-generation capabilities. The job becomes less about reporting skills alone and more about demonstrated ability to build and sustain reader relationships directly.

This is where reporting jobs in journalism are evolving. The byline remains valuable, but the infrastructure supporting it has fundamentally changed. Freelancers who once relied on assignment editors now need strategies for building editor relationships without geographic proximity or institutional access.

The contrast with the licensing fight is stark. One effort assumes publishers can maintain collective leverage. The other assumes individuals need to operate independently because that leverage is already gone. Both can be true simultaneously, and that’s exactly what makes this moment so unstable.

Netflix Is Still Hiring Through Its IP

While the news side of media contracts, entertainment production tells a different story. Netflix continues investing in long-running series, and that investment translates directly into sustained employment for writers, producers, cast, and crew.

Variety’s cast guide for One Piece Season 2 shows the scale. The live-action manga adaptation is expanding with new cast members as the story enters its next arc, requiring hundreds of crew positions across multiple countries.

The career signal is clearest in Bradley Whitford’s promotion to series regular for The Diplomat Season 4. Deadline reports the Netflix political thriller has already secured a fourth-season pickup, and Whitford’s elevation from recurring to regular indicates the kind of long-term planning that creates stable employment for entire production teams.

Where The Jobs Are: One Piece operates at blockbuster scale with international production teams. The Diplomat represents premium drama employing experienced writers and producers in multi-season arcs. Both are genres where Netflix continues spending aggressively, even as other platforms pull back.

Streaming platforms are consolidating around proven IP and prestige series with demonstrated audience retention. That creates predictable hiring patterns, and it also means fewer opportunities in experimental or mid-tier content that platforms once used to fill catalog depth.

Tarantino’s Legacy Fight Goes Public

Quentin Tarantino is responding aggressively to criticism from Rosanna Arquette, who worked with him on Pulp Fiction and recently told The Sunday Times that his use of the N-word in his films makes her uncomfortable three decades later.

His statement to Variety accuses Arquette of “a decided lack of class, no less honor” and suggests her criticism is opportunistic publicity-seeking.

Deadline’s coverage includes Tarantino’s pointed line: “You took the money.” That crystallizes the professional tension underneath.

The substance of the N-word debate isn’t new. Critics have questioned Tarantino’s language choices for decades, and he’s consistently defended them. What’s notable is the public nature of the dispute and what it reveals about how established creators protect their reputations when cultural consensus shifts around their work.

For professionals navigating similar dynamics, this is about risk calculus. Speaking publicly about past projects that made your career carries professional consequences, especially when the critique challenges someone who remains powerful. Tarantino’s response is a reminder that public criticism of former collaborators, even decades later, can damage relationships and close doors.

The counterpoint: staying silent also carries costs, particularly when the work conflicts with your current values or public positioning. Neither choice is cost-free. That’s the actual story.

What This Means

Every corner of media is hedging. Publishers are organizing collective licensing structures while journalism schools prepare students for solo careers. Netflix invests in multi-season series while other platforms contract.

For professionals, the implication is straightforward: don’t wait for a single structural solution to emerge. Build optionality into your own career, whether that’s developing licensing expertise, building direct audience relationships, positioning for sustained production roles, or deciding when to speak up about past work.

If you’re looking for where the stable jobs are, production and licensing roles at streaming platforms and publishers represent areas of active hiring. If you’re building a solo career, focus on infrastructure: audience development, revenue diversification, platform fluency.

If you’re hiring, post a job on Mediabistro to reach professionals already navigating this landscape.

The industry is recalibrating. Make sure you are too.


This media news roundup is automatically curated to keep our community up to date on interesting happenings in the creative, media, and publishing professions. It may contain factual errors and should be read for general and informational purposes only. Please refer to the original source of each news item for specific inquiries.

Topics:

media-news
Hot Jobs

Today’s Top Media Jobs: Editorial Leadership & Entry-Level Opportunities

hot media and creative jobs
Miles icon
By Miles Jennings
@milesworks
Miles Jennings is CEO of Mediabistro and its parent CognoGroup. He previously founded and led Recruiter.com through its NASDAQ listing, executing more than 10 acquisitions over nearly a decade as CEO and COO.
2 min read • Originally published February 10, 2026 / Updated March 20, 2026
Miles icon
By Miles Jennings
@milesworks
Miles Jennings is CEO of Mediabistro and its parent CognoGroup. He previously founded and led Recruiter.com through its NASDAQ listing, executing more than 10 acquisitions over nearly a decade as CEO and COO.
2 min read • Originally published February 10, 2026 / Updated March 20, 2026

The media industry continues to prove that its strongest investments lie in two critical areas: nurturing tomorrow’s talent and elevating editorial leadership. Today’s media job landscape reveals organizations doubling down on both ends of the career spectrum, from internship programs designed to build the next generation of storytellers to senior editorial roles that demand seasoned expertise.

What stands out most prominently is how organizations are crafting roles that bridge traditional media boundaries. Companies are seeking professionals who can navigate multiple platforms, understand diverse audiences, and contribute to both content creation and strategic thinking. The emphasis on collaborative editorial work and cross-departmental support suggests media companies are moving away from siloed operations toward more integrated approaches to content and community building.

Standout Opportunities Today

Poets & Writers, Inc. – Deputy Editor, Poets & Writers Magazine

What Makes This Special: We’re excited to post this role because we discussed this prestigious organization as one of our top resources for writers. This senior editorial position offers the rare opportunity to shape literary culture across multiple platforms. The role combines traditional magazine editing with digital strategy and oversight of premium newsletters, making it perfect for editors who want to influence how literary content reaches and engages modern audiences.

What They’re Seeking:

  • Senior editorial experience with flagship publication oversight
  • Cross-platform content strategy capabilities
  • Collaborative leadership skills for editorial team guidance
  • Flexibility for hybrid office and remote work arrangements

Apply to the Deputy Editor position →

Hearst Television – News Intern (Summer 2026)

Why This Matters: KCCI 8 News is offering comprehensive newsroom exposure across News, Sports, and Weather departments. This internship stands out for its emphasis on community-impact storytelling and hands-on experience in daily news operations, providing invaluable foundational training for a career in broadcast journalism.

Key Focus Areas:

  • Direct support for producers, reporters, anchors, and meteorologists
  • Research and story development assistance
  • Multi-departmental newsroom operations experience
  • Community-focused journalism approach

Apply to the News Intern program →

Market Insights for Strategic Job Seekers

The current hiring patterns reveal that media organizations value professionals who can wear multiple hats while maintaining expertise in their core areas. Companies like Hearst Television are investing heavily in talent development, while specialized publications like Poets & Writers are seeking leaders who understand both editorial excellence and audience development across platforms.

For job seekers, the actionable insight is clear: develop your cross-platform storytelling abilities while deepening your specialized skills. Whether you’re entering the field or advancing your career, demonstrate how you can contribute to both content creation and audience engagement. Organizations are hiring for roles that require editorial judgment, collaborative leadership, and the ability to adapt traditional media skills to evolving digital landscapes.

Looking for more opportunities? Browse all media jobs on Mediabistro and keep in touch with our hot job roundups for additional openings.

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Hot Jobs
Advice From the Pros

Why Creative Portfolios Are Failing ATS Screening — and the Two-Document Fix

A 47-page award-winning portfolio scores zero keyword matches. The system isn't broken, it was never built to read your work.

online creative portfolio
Miles icon
By Miles Jennings
@milesworks
Miles Jennings is CEO of Mediabistro and its parent CognoGroup. He previously founded and led Recruiter.com through its NASDAQ listing, executing more than 10 acquisitions over nearly a decade as CEO and COO.
6 min read • Originally published March 11, 2026 / Updated March 20, 2026
Miles icon
By Miles Jennings
@milesworks
Miles Jennings is CEO of Mediabistro and its parent CognoGroup. He previously founded and led Recruiter.com through its NASDAQ listing, executing more than 10 acquisitions over nearly a decade as CEO and COO.
6 min read • Originally published March 11, 2026 / Updated March 20, 2026

A designer submits a portfolio PDF containing 47 pages of award-winning campaign work. The applicant tracking system scores it at zero keywords matched.

Not because the work is bad. Because the system extracted zero readable text.

Creative professionals communicate visually. The gatekeeping technology at most employers, however, usually communicates exclusively in plain text. These two languages are fundamentally incompatible, and the gap is widening as more creative employers adopt enterprise ATS platforms for application volume management and AI-assisted screening.

Inside the Machine: How ATS Parsers Process Your Files

Enterprise ATS platforms like Workday, iCIMS, Greenhouse, and Lever process uploaded documents through text extraction. They strip formatting, ignore visual elements, and read raw text strings.

Your portfolio PDF hits the parser. The system attempts to extract characters. If your file contains heavy image content, layered graphics from InDesign exports, or embedded fonts rendered as graphics, the parser produces nothing.

Think of it as handing a beautifully designed poster to someone who can only read Braille. The visual information doesn’t register.

Critical Reality: ATS parsers don’t “see” your design. They scan for extractable text. Images, graphics, and certain PDF export settings produce zero parseable content, meaning your portfolio registers as a blank document.

In many employer configurations, the portfolio upload field feeds into the same parser as the resume field. Your visual PDF gets treated like a text document. The system expects words, sentences, standard formatting. It encounters image layers and vector graphics instead.

The parser fails silently. No error message. Your application enters the queue with a keyword match score of zero.

Why External Portfolio Links Don’t Save You

ATS platforms do not crawl URLs. Your Behance profile, Dribbble gallery, or personal website link might be visible to a human reviewer, but the automated screening that determines whether a human ever sees your application ignores those links entirely.

File size creates another barrier. Systems often cap uploads between 5 and 10 MB, though limits vary by employer and platform. High-resolution portfolio PDFs blow past these thresholds routinely. Many systems discard oversized files without notification.

Even text you believe is extractable may not be. Headers, footers, content inside tables, text boxes: the parser frequently skips or scrambles all of them. Project descriptions embedded as text overlays on images? Rasterized. To the parser, they’re pixels.

The hiring manager sees a list of candidates ranked by keyword match. Your name sits at the bottom, flagged as “incomplete application” or buried under hundreds of candidates whose documents parsed cleanly.

This is the documented technical behavior of text-extraction-based ATS platforms, and it explains why qualified creatives applying for creative director jobs, UX designer roles, and art director positions report submitting dozens of applications with zero responses.

The Keyword Gap You Don’t Know You Have

ATS keyword matching scores candidates on exact or close-match terms pulled from job descriptions. The system looks for software proficiencies (Figma, After Effects, Sketch), methodologies (design thinking, agile, user testing), deliverable types (wireframes, prototypes, style guides), and industry-specific terms.

Portfolios are built to show. ATS scores what you say.

If your portfolio demonstrates Figma mastery through screenshots and case studies but never contains the word “Figma” in extractable text, the system doesn’t register it. Visual proof is irrelevant to the algorithm.

How Creative Role Vocabulary Is Shifting

A designer who built a portfolio around “brand identity” and “visual design” finds that postings now emphasize “design systems,” “component libraries,” and “design ops.” The work is the same. The vocabulary has changed. The ATS filters on vocabulary.

Employers increasingly describe outcomes and business impact in job descriptions. Your portfolio might showcase stunning work, but if the accompanying text doesn’t frame projects in terms of conversion rates, engagement metrics, or user retention, you’re missing the keywords the ATS was told to prioritize.

The consequence: creatives who excel at visual storytelling but neglect written framing face a structural disadvantage in automated screening, regardless of portfolio quality. The fix isn’t to make your work less creative. It’s to frame your projects in language that maps to how employers describe these roles.

The Two-Document Strategy That Gets You Past the Filter

The solution separates what the machine needs from what the human needs. Two documents, two audiences, one application.

Strategy 1: Separate Your Portfolio from Your Application

Submit an ATS-optimized plain-text or simple-format resume as your primary document. Keep your portfolio as a supplementary link or attachment.

A UX designer applies for an in-house role. She creates a .docx resume with project titles, tools, and deliverable types in plain text. The resume includes a portfolio URL in the header and again in the work experience section, contextualized with project descriptions.

The ATS parses the resume cleanly, scoring keyword matches on “Figma,” “user research,” “A/B testing,” and “responsive design.” She advances to human review. The hiring manager clicks the portfolio link and evaluates the visual work.

The portfolio still matters enormously. But it matters at the right stage, after the automated filter has already passed you through.

Strategy 2: Add a Plain-Text Portfolio Summary to Your Resume

Include a dedicated section listing project names, client names where permitted, deliverable types, tools used, and measurable outcomes. This gives the parser extractable content that maps to job description keywords while pointing the human reviewer to the visual work.

Portfolio Summary Example: “Redesigned onboarding flow for fintech SaaS client using Figma and Maze; conducted 12 moderated user tests; reduced drop-off by 34% in first two screens.” One line. Parseable. Keyword-rich. Specific.

The portfolio shows how beautiful the redesign looks. The resume tells the ATS what tools you used, what methods you applied, what impact you delivered. Both documents work together.

Strategy 3: Test Before You Submit

Run your documents through a tool like Jobscan, or copy-paste your PDF into a plain text editor to see what the parser will see. If the text editor shows garbled characters, blank space, or only metadata, the ATS will encounter the same problem.

A graphic designer discovers her InDesign-exported PDF renders as 200 characters of metadata in plain text. She re-exports using the “accessible PDF” option with text layers intact and recovers 1,400 words of project descriptions. The file size drops from 12 MB to 4 MB. She tests again. Clean extraction. The ATS scores her at 78% keyword match. She advances.

Testing takes three minutes. That’s the difference between invisibility and consideration.

Five Application Mistakes That Trigger Auto-Rejection

  • Mistake 1: Submitting a portfolio PDF as your only application document. The system may parse it as blank, scoring you at zero keyword matches before a human ever sees your name.
  • Mistake 2: Relying on external portfolio links without supporting text. ATS platforms don’t crawl URLs. Your Behance page is invisible to automated screening. The link only helps after you’ve passed the filter.
  • Mistake 3: Embedding project descriptions as text within images or graphic layouts. Rasterized text isn’t text to a parser. The system extracts nothing.
  • Mistake 4: Using creative section headers that don’t map to standard field recognition. “My Superpower” instead of “Skills” may charm a reader, but the parser expects standard resume structure.
  • Mistake 5: Ignoring file size limits and assuming a rejected upload will trigger an error. Many systems silently discard oversized files. You submit, receive a confirmation email, and never realize your portfolio didn’t reach the database.

Every one of these is fixable. The fix requires accepting that your application faces two evaluators: an algorithm that reads text, and a human who appreciates design. Optimize for both.

For additional guidance on structuring portfolio content, consider how project framing and case study structure can serve both audiences simultaneously.

What to Do With This

Two documents. Two audiences. One application.

Create an ATS-optimized resume with a portfolio summary section. Test it in plain text. Include your portfolio URL. Submit the resume as your primary document. Let your visual work speak when it reaches human eyes.

The demand for creative talent remains strong. Recent creative leadership appointments across major agencies signal continued growth in creative director jobs and similar roles. The market for visual skills matters as much as ever. But getting your work in front of decision-makers requires navigating automated screening. The best portfolio in the world doesn’t help if the system never sees it.

Browse creative jobs on Mediabistro where you can put this two-document strategy into practice. If you’re hiring creative talent, post your open roles to connect with qualified professionals.

The technology isn’t changing. Your approach can.

Topics:

Advice From the Pros
Advice From the Pros

The Media Buying Careers That Are Actually Getting Hired Right Now

Ad budgets are scattering into streaming, DOOH and experiential. The roles in demand look very different than they did a year ago.

professional resume for your first job
Miles icon
By Miles Jennings
@milesworks
Miles Jennings is CEO of Mediabistro and its parent CognoGroup. He previously founded and led Recruiter.com through its NASDAQ listing, executing more than 10 acquisitions over nearly a decade as CEO and COO.
5 min read • Originally published March 19, 2026 / Updated March 20, 2026
Miles icon
By Miles Jennings
@milesworks
Miles Jennings is CEO of Mediabistro and its parent CognoGroup. He previously founded and led Recruiter.com through its NASDAQ listing, executing more than 10 acquisitions over nearly a decade as CEO and COO.
5 min read • Originally published March 19, 2026 / Updated March 20, 2026

If your media career was built on mastering a single platform, the job description has changed.

Advertising budgets are scattering. Social feeds are crowded. Brands are pouring money into digital out-of-home, streaming, experiential and live-event campaigns, and they want people who can connect all of those pieces. The job now is figuring out how DOOH drives mobile behavior, how streaming fits into a broader video strategy, and how first-party data shows up in places it never has before.

That shift is visible in the listings on Mediabistro. Roles that once read as straightforward “paid media manager” or “media planner” positions now routinely ask for cross-channel fluency, programmatic experience, and the ability to tie campaign performance back to business outcomes. The single-channel specialist posting hasn’t disappeared, but it’s no longer the default.

noahTo understand what these shifts mean for the people actually doing the work, we talked to Noah Everist, VP of Sales Development at Brkthru, a digital media solutions company that works across 25+ platforms for mid-market agencies and brands. Brkthru has landed on the Inc. 5000 list for four consecutive years and serves more than 1,000 active brands. Everist has spent two decades in digital advertising, including nearly a decade at Goodway Group, where he oversaw strategy, P&L and a team of 16 for one of the agency’s largest accounts.

His read on where things are heading? The roles in demand look different than they did even a year ago.

Cross-Channel Thinking Is the New Specialty

The biggest hiring shift Everist sees is a move away from channel-specific experts and toward people who can think across the entire media plan.

“It’s less about being ‘the DOOH person’ or ‘the streaming expert’ and more about understanding how those pieces actually work together,” Everist said. “For example, planners who can connect a DOOH placement to mobile behavior or retail outcomes are really valuable right now.”

He also pointed to growing demand for people who can activate first-party data in channels where it hasn’t traditionally lived, like out-of-home and experiential. “That’s creating roles that feel a little more like systems thinkers than classic media planners,” he said.

This tracks with what’s happening across digital marketing management more broadly. The role of a digital marketing manager has expanded from managing a handful of channels to orchestrating an entire ecosystem, and media buyers are feeling the same pressure. The professionals who can speak fluently across paid search, programmatic display, CTV, and social are the ones getting callbacks.

For anyone wondering what “channel-agnostic strategy” actually looks like on the ground, Everist kept it simple: start with the audience and the outcome. Figure out the platform after.

“Platform expertise still matters, but it’s not the main thing anymore,” he said. “The more valuable skill is being able to connect the dots. How does streaming support social? What role does DOOH play in incremental reach?”

AI Is Reorganizing Teams From the Inside

On the AI side, Everist described something that should be encouraging for media professionals worried about automation. Teams are getting restructured, and the new shape actually has more room for strategic thinking.

“AI is taking a lot of the repetitive work off people’s plates, things like versioning creative, managing bids, or pulling basic reports,” he said. “What happens in practice is teams spend less time executing and more time actually thinking.”

The new roles emerging around AI are focused on guiding the tools. People who know how to get the right outputs from AI systems, train those systems on brand voice, and sense-check what they produce are increasingly in demand. It’s a pattern showing up across media and marketing: the creative director role, for instance, has evolved from primarily art-directing campaigns to orchestrating workflows where AI handles production and humans handle judgment.

“The teams aren’t necessarily smaller,” Everist said. “They’re just built differently, with more focus on oversight and orchestration.”

Your Short-Form Skills Travel

For media pros who built their careers on short-form social content, platform turbulence can feel personal. TikTok’s uncertain regulatory status is the latest example, but it applies to any channel that could shift overnight. Everist’s advice: stop identifying with a single platform.

“The skill was never really TikTok,” he said. “It’s understanding how to capture attention in a short-form environment. That translates pretty easily to Reels, Shorts, and whatever comes next.”

That’s a useful reframe for anyone in a social media management role who feels tethered to a single platform’s algorithm. The underlying skill set, audience instinct, content pacing, trend responsiveness, translates across every short-form surface. The platform is just the distribution layer.

He added that the professionals in the strongest position are the ones pairing creative instinct with analytical chops. “Knowing what works is great. Knowing why it works and how to adapt it quickly is what sets people apart.”

Live Events Are Creating Flexible Work

With major cultural tentpoles (the World Cup, the Super Bowl, award shows, major league playoffs) driving precision-targeted campaigns, brands are rethinking how they staff around live moments. Everist said it’s producing a blend of permanent and project-based work.

“Live moments need people who can move quickly, monitor what’s happening, and adjust in real time,” he said. “That often leads to more project-based or flexible support around big events.”

At the same time, brands are investing in core teams that build the strategy and playbooks in advance. The result is a steady foundation with surge capacity layered on top when the moment hits. For freelancers and contract media pros, that’s a real pipeline of work, and it’s one of the reasons influencer marketing and event-driven media roles have grown so quickly. Brands need people who understand both the creative and the logistics of activating around a live moment.

The Biggest Misconception in Media Buying Right Now

When asked for the single biggest misconception advertisers have right now, Everist didn’t hesitate: “Probably that things are going to settle down.”

“The reality is fragmentation across channels, data, and consumer behavior is still accelerating,” he said. “Waiting for things to simplify isn’t really a strategy.”

For media professionals, that fragmentation is the opportunity. The more complex things get, the more valuable the people who can make sense of it become.

“The brands doing this well are the ones staying flexible,” Everist said. “They’re testing more, moving budgets faster, and building plans that can actually adapt.”

Same advice applies to careers. The professionals who will thrive are the ones willing to move across channels, pick up new tools, and get comfortable with the idea that things will keep shifting. The ones who adapt will be the ones who get hired.

Browse open media buying and planning jobs on Mediabistro, or explore roles in marketing and communications. If you’re hiring for media roles, post your job on Mediabistro to reach candidates with the cross-channel experience Everist describes.

Topics:

Advice From the Pros
LA

Biggest plays in San Francisco Giants history

Biggest plays in San Francisco Giants history
By Stacker Feed
2 min read • Published March 20, 2026
By Stacker Feed
2 min read • Published March 20, 2026

RCPPHOTO // Shutterstock

Biggest plays in San Francisco Giants history

Major League Baseball history is built on moments — swings, pitches, and split-second plays that reshaped seasons and, in some cases, entire franchises. From walk-off home runs in winner-take-all games to clutch hits under October pressure, the biggest plays often came when the stakes were highest. Stacker identified the most impactful plays in San Francisco Giants history using data from Stathead. Plays were ranked by their Championship Win Probability Added (cWPA), a metric that measures how much a single play changed a team’s odds of winning the World Series.

#10. October 10, 1924 (WS Gm 7)
– Score: down 3-1 (8th inning, 1 out)
– Opponent: WSH
– Event: Out
– Play Description: Flyball: LF (Short LF)
– cWPA: 14.64%

#9. October 08, 1962 (WS Gm 4)
– Score: tied 2-2 (7th inning, 2 outs)
– Opponent: NYY
– Event: HR
– Play Description: Home Run (Fly Ball to Deep RF); J. Davenport Scores; M. Alou Scores; E. Bowman Scores
– cWPA: 15.59%

#8. October 29, 2014 (WS Gm 7)
– Score: down 3-2 (9th inning, 2 outs)
– Opponent: KC
– Event: Out
– Play Description: *ENDED GAME*:Foul Popfly: 3B (3B into Foul Terr.)
– cWPA: 15.90%

#7. October 03, 1962 (Gm nan)
– Score: tied 4-4 (9th inning, 2 outs)
– Opponent: LAD
– Event: BB
– Play Description: Walk; Alou Scores; Mays to 3B; Bailey to 2B
– cWPA: 16.41%

#6. October 16, 1912 (WS Gm 8)
– Score: down 2-1 (10th inning, 0 outs)
– Opponent: BOS
– Event: Out
– Play Description: Flyball: CF (Deep CF)
– cWPA: 16.48%

#5. October 06, 1933 (WS Gm 4)
– Score: down 2-1 (11th inning, 1 out)
– Opponent: WSH
– Event: Out
– Play Description: *ENDED GAME*:Ground Ball Double Play: SS-2B-1B
– cWPA: 19.86%

#4. October 10, 1924 (WS Gm 7)
– Score: tied 3-3 (9th inning, 1 out)
– Opponent: WSH
– Event: 3B
– Play Description: Triple to CF (Line Drive to Deep CF-RF)
– cWPA: 22.78%

#3. October 16, 1912 (WS Gm 8)
– Score: tied 1-1 (10th inning, 1 out)
– Opponent: BOS
– Event: 1B
– Play Description: Single to CF; R. Murray Scores; F. Merkle to 2B (Advanced on throw) on E8
– cWPA: 29.15%

#2. October 10, 1924 (WS Gm 7)
– Score: tied 3-3 (9th inning, 1 out)
– Opponent: WSH
– Event: Out
– Play Description: Ground Ball Double Play: SS-2B-1B
– cWPA: 32.81%

#1. October 03, 1951 (Gm nan)
– Score: down 4-2 (9th inning, 1 out)
– Opponent: LAD
– Event: HR
– Play Description: *WALK-OFF*:Home Run (Line Drive to Deep LF); Hartung Scores; Lockman Scores
– cWPA: 35.56%

Topics:

LA
LA

Biggest plays in San Diego Padres history

Biggest plays in San Diego Padres history
By Stacker Feed
2 min read • Published March 20, 2026
By Stacker Feed
2 min read • Published March 20, 2026

Grindstone Media Group // Shutterstock

Biggest plays in San Diego Padres history

Major League Baseball history is built on moments — swings, pitches, and split-second plays that reshaped seasons and, in some cases, entire franchises. From walk-off home runs in winner-take-all games to clutch hits under October pressure, the biggest plays often came when the stakes were highest. Stacker identified the most impactful plays in San Diego Padres history using data from Stathead. Plays were ranked by their Championship Win Probability Added (cWPA), a metric that measures how much a single play changed a team’s odds of winning the World Series.

#5. October 17, 1998 (WS Gm 1)
– Score: tied 2-2 (5th inning, 2 outs)
– Opponent: NYY
– Event: HR
– Play Description: Home Run (Line Drive to Deep RF); Q. Veras Scores
– cWPA: 7.72%

#4. October 07, 1984 (NLCS Gm 5)
– Score: down 3-2 (7th inning, 1 out)
– Opponent: CHC
– Event: RoE
– Play Description: Reached on E3 (Ground Ball); C. Martínez Scores/No RBI
– cWPA: 9.94%

#3. October 06, 1984 (NLCS Gm 4)
– Score: tied 5-5 (9th inning, 1 out)
– Opponent: CHC
– Event: HR
– Play Description: *WALK-OFF*:Home Run (Deep CF-RF); T. Gwynn Scores
– cWPA: 10.09%

#2. October 10, 1984 (WS Gm 2)
– Score: down 3-2 (5th inning, 1 out)
– Opponent: DET
– Event: HR
– Play Description: Home Run; G. Nettles Scores; T. Kennedy Scores
– cWPA: 10.89%

#1. October 07, 1984 (NLCS Gm 5)
– Score: tied 3-3 (7th inning, 1 out)
– Opponent: CHC
– Event: 2B
– Play Description: Double to CF; T. Flannery Scores (Unearned run); A. Wiggins Scores; T. Gwynn to 3B (Advanced on throw) on throw to Hm
– cWPA: 14.04%

Topics:

LA
NYC

Biggest plays in New York Yankees history

Biggest plays in New York Yankees history
By Stacker Feed
2 min read • Published March 20, 2026
By Stacker Feed
2 min read • Published March 20, 2026

RCPPHOTO // Shutterstock

Biggest plays in New York Yankees history

Major League Baseball history is built on moments — swings, pitches, and split-second plays that reshaped seasons and, in some cases, entire franchises. From walk-off home runs in winner-take-all games to clutch hits under October pressure, the biggest plays often came when the stakes were highest. Stacker identified the most impactful plays in New York Yankees history using data from Stathead. Plays were ranked by their Championship Win Probability Added (cWPA), a metric that measures how much a single play changed a team’s odds of winning the World Series.

#10. October 13, 1960 (WS Gm 7)
– Score: down 9-7 (9th inning, 1 out)
– Opponent: PIT
– Event: 1B
– Play Description: Single to RF (Line Drive to Short CF-RF); B. Richardson Scores; D. Long to 3B
– cWPA: 21.38%

#9. October 05, 1952 (WS Gm 5)
– Score: down 4-2 (5th inning, 2 outs)
– Opponent: LAD
– Event: HR
– Play Description: Home Run (Fly Ball to Deep RF); G. McDougald Scores; P. Rizzuto Scores
– cWPA: 21.47%

#8. November 04, 2001 (WS Gm 7)
– Score: tied 1-1 (8th inning, 0 outs)
– Opponent: ARI
– Event: HR
– Play Description: Home Run
– cWPA: 23.12%

#7. October 16, 1962 (WS Gm 7)
– Score: down 1-0 (9th inning, 2 outs)
– Opponent: SFG
– Event: Out
– Play Description: *ENDED GAME*:Lineout: 2B
– cWPA: 24.13%

#6. November 01, 2001 (WS Gm 5)
– Score: down 2-0 (9th inning, 2 outs)
– Opponent: ARI
– Event: HR
– Play Description: Home Run; J. Posada Scores
– cWPA: 24.19%

#5. October 12, 1964 (WS Gm 5)
– Score: down 2-0 (9th inning, 2 outs)
– Opponent: STL
– Event: HR
– Play Description: Home Run (Fly Ball to Deep CF-RF); M. Mantle Scores (Unearned run); T. Tresh Scores (Unearned run)
– cWPA: 24.29%

#4. October 05, 1941 (WS Gm 4)
– Score: down 4-3 (9th inning, 2 outs)
– Opponent: LAD
– Event: 2B
– Play Description: Double to RF (Fly Ball); T. Henrich Scores (Unearned run); J. DiMaggio Scores (Unearned run)
– cWPA: 25.08%

#3. October 09, 1958 (WS Gm 7)
– Score: tied 2-2 (8th inning, 2 outs)
– Opponent: ATL
– Event: 1B
– Play Description: Single to CF (Ground Ball); Y. Berra Scores
– cWPA: 26.27%

#2. October 15, 1923 (WS Gm 6)
– Score: down 4-3 (8th inning, 2 outs)
– Opponent: SFG
– Event: 1B
– Play Description: Single to CF (Ground Ball thru SS-2B); H. Haines Scores; E. Johnson Scores; J. Dugan Scores (Advanced on throw) on E8 (throw to 3B)/No RBI (Unearned run); B. Meusel to 3B
– cWPA: 26.85%

#1. October 13, 1960 (WS Gm 7)
– Score: down 4-2 (6th inning, 1 out)
– Opponent: PIT
– Event: HR
– Play Description: Home Run (Fly Ball to Deep RF Line); T. Kubek Scores; M. Mantle Scores
– cWPA: 34.32%

Topics:

NYC

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