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= Bill Adair (journalist) = Bill Adair is the founder of the Pulitzer Prize winning website PolitiFact and current Knight Professor of the Practice of Journalism and Public Policy at Duke University, where he specializes in journalism and new media, with an emphasis on structured journalism and fact-checking. He is also an adjunct faculty member at the Poynter Institute in St. Petersburg, Fla. and remains a contributing editor at PolitiFact.

Education

 * A.B., Arizona State University (1985)

Accolades

 * Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting (shared)
 * Manship Prize for New Media in Democratic Discourse
 * Everett Dirksen Award for Distinguished Coverage of Congress
 * Society of Professional Journalists Sigma Delta Chi Award

Journalism Career
Adair spent his career in journalism with the Tampa Bay Times (formerly the St. Petersburg Times), where he served as a reporter and editor. In 1997 he was assignment to the Washington bureau where he covered Congress, the White House, the Supreme Court, national politics and aviation safety. In 2004 he was appointed Washington Bureau Chief, a position he held until his transition into academic in 2013. In 2002, Adair’s experience in covering aviation safety led him to author and publish "The Mystery of Flight 427: Inside a Crash Investigation," a behind-the-scenes account of a National Transportation Safety Board investigation of the crash of a US Air Boeing 737 near Pittsburgh. In writing the book, Adair was  granted special access to the five-year inquiry by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB).

In 2007, Adair launched PolitiFact as a pilot project of the Tampa Bay Times, a national fact-checking site that has expanded to include 10 state-level sites and has served as a model for the proliferation of fact-checking sites across the globe. PolitiFact is known for its distinctive Truth-O-Meter, which rates officials' public statements on a scale ranging from "True" to "Pants On Fire.”  In 2009 the PolitiFact team was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting.  Thanks to support from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, Adair was also able to create the "Settle It! PolitiFact's Argument Ender” mobile app and conduct research on fact-checking as a faculty member at Duke University.

Professorships
Adair is an adjunct faculty member at the Poynter Institute, and in 2011 was appointed Knight Professor of the Practice of Journalism and Public Policy at Duke University, one of 25 Knight Chairs at universities around the country. The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation is an American private, non-profit foundation dedicated to supporting "transformational ideas that promote quality journalism, advance media innovation, engage communities and foster the arts.”

"Bill is a digital journalist with the courage to set audacious goals and take big risks," said Eric Newton, senior adviser to the president at the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, "He understands the urgent need to try new things, learn, and try again." According to Duke University, “The Knight Chair at Duke was established in 1990 by a gift from the Knight Foundation, which has established two dozen endowed chairs in journalism at top universities nationwide to teach innovative classes, create experimental projects and new programs and help lead journalism excellence in the digital age.”

Speaking Appearances
Adair has lectured at a variety of venues, including SXSW, TEDx Poynter, Harvard University, Columbia University, University of Texas, Louisiana State University, the College of William & Mary, the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, Beijing Foreign Studies University, Shanghai International Studies University, the University of Sydney, Netzwerk Recherche in Germany and the International Festival of Journalism in Italy. He has appeared on television as a guest on the Today Show, Nightline, Morning Edition, All Things Considered, Reliable Sources, C-SPAN’s Washington Journal and the Colbert Report.

The Duke Reporters' Lab
In 2013 Adair replaced Sarah Cohen, a Pulitzer Prize-winning Washington Post reporter, as the Director the Duke Reporters’ Lab, described by Duke as “an online forum for journalism innovation.”  Under Adair’s leadership, The Duke Reporters’ Lab has shifted its focus to structured journalism and fact-checking. Adair has said he would “like to continue experimenting with things that really take the power of the web and mobile devices in presenting information in new ways."

The Goat Must Be Fed
Adair’s first major deliverable with The Reporters’ Lab was a report entitled “The Goat Must be Fed,” co-authored by Mark Stencel, which found that “many U.S. newsrooms are not taking advantage of the emerging low-cost digital tools that enable journalists to report and present their work in innovative ways. Editors and producers cling to familiar methods and practices even when they know better, more engaging digital alternatives are available, often for free.”

Fact-Checking Census
In addition, under Adair’s leadership, The Reporters’ Lab published the 2015 Fact-Checking Census, which found 89 fact-checking sites that have been active in the past few years and 64 that are active as of January, 2015.

Category:American newspaper reporters and correspondents