There's a conference happening right now in Jerusalem — the Jewish News Syndicate, JNS, is hosting what they're calling an International Policy Summit. And their CEO got up on stage and said, quote, "We are on the front lines of a media battle since October seven." Not "we're covering a story." Not "we're reporting on a war." A media battle. That's the framing.
That framing tells you almost everything you need to know about what JNS is and why it matters right now. This isn't a news organization that sees itself as a neutral pipe for information. They see themselves as combatants in an information war — and they're explicit about it.
Which is where Daniel's prompt comes in. He sent us this one asking about JNS — what is it, how does it fit into the long tradition of Jewish newswires like the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, what's its editorial bent, who's running the show. And the timing couldn't be better, because this conference is basically JNS saying to the world: we're not a scrappy startup anymore, we're a player.
And to understand why that matters, you have to understand what a Jewish newswire has historically been. For nearly a century, the JTA — the Jewish Telegraphic Agency — was the backbone of how diaspora Jews got their news about Israel and about Jewish communities worldwide. Small-town Jewish newspapers in Cleveland or Johannesburg or Melbourne couldn't afford a Jerusalem correspondent. So they subscribed to JTA, and JTA's wire stories became the common text that shaped how millions of Jews understood what was happening.
The common text. I like that. It's the shared script everyone's reading from, whether they know it or not.
And JTA was founded in nineteen seventeen by a guy named Jacob Landau, specifically to counter what he saw as biased reporting on Jewish affairs in the general press. So even the original model wasn't born purely neutral — it was born to correct a perceived distortion. But over the decades, JTA settled into something closer to a traditional wire service: straight reporting, attribution, separation of news from opinion. It survived the Depression, World War Two, multiple ownership changes, near-bankruptcy in the two-thousands. And it remained the default.
A few things. The internet shredded the local Jewish newspaper business model — a lot of those small papers folded or went digital-only. The audience fragmented. And politically, there was a growing sense in some quarters — especially on the right — that JTA had drifted into what they'd call "establishment" coverage of Israel. Too critical, too much space given to Palestinian perspectives, not enough of what supporters would call advocacy journalism.
Enter JNS, launched in twenty twenty-one by the Jewish News Syndicate LLC. Founded by a group that included former JTA staffers and conservative donors. Their pitch was basically: the old wire is broken, it's too beholden to legacy funders and legacy thinking, we're going to build something that explicitly advocates for Israel and doesn't pretend to be neutral about it.
That's the key word, isn't it? JTA has editorial leanings — every newsroom does — but JNS doesn't bury the lede on where it stands. The advocacy is the product.
Which brings us back to that conference and the CEO's line about being on the front lines of a media battle since October seven. That's not a metaphor to them. The October seven attacks and the war that followed created an enormous demand in diaspora Jewish communities for news that framed events through an unapologetically Israeli and Jewish-victim lens. Not necessarily inaccurate — but framed a certain way. And JNS was perfectly positioned to meet that demand.
The war accelerated their relevance.
And it's not just about readership numbers. It's about influence. When a synagogue bulletin in Toronto runs a story about the war sourced from JNS, versus one sourced from JTA or the Associated Press, the framing is different. The choice of which wire to subscribe to is quietly shaping what millions of diaspora Jews think is happening.
Which is exactly why Daniel's question lands now. This isn't a niche media story. This is about who gets to define the narrative for a global community at a moment when that narrative is intensely contested.
The conference itself is part of that contest. It's being held in Jerusalem — not New York, not Washington. Israeli government officials are speaking. Diaspora leaders are in the room. This is a networking event that blends journalism with advocacy in a way that would make old-school wire editors uncomfortable. But JNS would say: that's the point. The old separation was a fiction anyway.
We've got a hundred-year-old wire service model, a scrappy ideological challenger that's now hosting government-attended summits, and a war that's turned the information environment into a battlefield. That's the terrain.
To really understand what JNS is doing differently, we need to go back to the original Jewish newswire — the JTA, founded in nineteen seventeen — and see how it built that common text for a century, and why JNS decided the model needed an overhaul.
Let's do it.
JTA, nineteen seventeen. Jacob Landau was a twenty-five-year-old journalist in The Hague, and he's watching the general press cover Jewish affairs during World War One with what he considered gross distortion. Pogroms in Eastern Europe were being downplayed or ignored. Zionist aspirations were caricatured. So he builds a wire service specifically to get accurate Jewish news into Jewish newspapers.
A corrective from day one.
Right, but the corrective was accuracy — not advocacy in the modern sense. Landau's pitch was: we'll give you the facts the general press won't. And it worked. By the nineteen-twenties, JTA had bureaus in London, Berlin, Warsaw, Jerusalem, and New York. It was syndicating to hundreds of Jewish papers in multiple languages. If you were a Jew in Winnipeg reading the local Jewish Post, your understanding of what was happening in Palestine came through JTA's Jerusalem bureau.
The common text wasn't just a convenience — it was the only text. Without JTA, those papers had no Israel coverage at all.
And that structural power is hard to overstate. When JTA's Jerusalem correspondent filed a story about, say, the nineteen twenty-nine Hebron massacre, that framing — the language, the emphasis, what got included and what got left out — became the definitive account for English-speaking Jews worldwide. There was no alternative.
Which makes you wonder: what happens when an alternative finally shows up?
That's the JNS story. And it didn't come from nowhere. By the twenty-tens, JTA had been through multiple ownership structures — it spent time under the umbrella of the same nonprofit that owned the Jerusalem Post, then went independent again. It relied on foundation funding, including major grants from the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Philanthropies. And its editorial approach, while still reporting-focused, had shifted in ways that frustrated conservative Jewish readers.
What kind of shift?
More space for Palestinian voices in conflict coverage. More critical reporting on Israeli government policy, especially around settlements and the peace process. The kind of coverage that mainstream American journalism would recognize as balanced, but that some Jewish readers experienced as hostile to Israel.
JNS saw an opening.
A wide-open lane. Launched in twenty twenty-one, JNS positioned itself as the answer to what its founders called a failure of the Jewish media establishment. They didn't just want to report the news — they wanted to frame it through an explicitly pro-Israel lens, and they wanted to be unapologetic about it. No hedging, no "on the one hand, on the other hand.
Which is a fundamentally different product. JTA says: here's what happened, you decide. JNS says: here's what happened, and here's why it matters for Israel and the Jewish people.
That distinction is what makes them a disruption, not just a competitor. The classic wire model treats editorializing as a contaminant. JNS treats it as the value proposition.
And that distinction has real-world consequences. Take the nineteen-thirties. JTA was one of the only outlets systematically reporting on what was happening to Jews in Germany and Eastern Europe as the Nazi regime tightened its grip. The wire stories it sent out — about the Nuremberg Laws in thirty-five, about Kristallnacht in thirty-eight — landed in hundreds of Jewish papers across America. And the framing mattered enormously. JTA didn't just report the facts; it framed them as a Jewish emergency demanding a Jewish response.
Which at the time was controversial. A lot of American Jewish leaders were worried about rocking the boat, about looking like they were pushing Roosevelt into a war. JTA's reporting made that posture harder to maintain.
When the rabbi in St. Louis read the same JTA dispatch as the editor in Brooklyn, it created a kind of distributed consensus. The community wasn't just receiving information — it was being mobilized, whether it wanted to be or not. That's the power of a common text.
The wire doesn't just describe Jewish opinion. It manufactures it.
That's the structural reality. And for decades, nobody really challenged JTA's monopoly on that manufacturing process. Then October seventh happens.
JNS is ready.
JNS's coverage of October seventh was immediate and distinctive. While major wires were still sorting through the chaos, JNS was already framing the story around Hamas atrocities — the deliberate targeting of civilians, the hostage-taking, the scale of the barbarism. Their headlines led with victim narratives: families massacred in kibbutzim, young people hunted at a music festival. The IDF response was covered, but the moral emphasis was unambiguous.
That's not inaccurate — those things happened. But the framing choices are real. What you lead with, what you bury, what adjectives you use.
Compare it to how, say, the Associated Press covered the same events in those first seventy-two hours. AP's style guide constrains its writers from using words like "terrorist" without attribution. JNS has no such constraint. So you get two very different accounts of the same atrocity — one that sounds like journalism, one that sounds like a community defending itself.
For a lot of diaspora Jews in that moment, the AP version felt like a betrayal. Here was the worst massacre of Jews since the Holocaust, and the wire service of record was hedging its language.
Which is exactly the gap JNS was built to fill. And their CEO's statement at the conference — "We are on the front lines of a media battle since October seven" — is the logical endpoint of that positioning. He's not saying they're covering a media battle. He's saying they're fighting one. The newsroom is a front line. The copy is ammunition.
That's a long way from Jacob Landau in The Hague.
It's a different species. Landau wanted to correct the record with facts. JNS wants to win a narrative war. Both are responses to perceived bias, but the theory of change is completely different. Landau trusted that accurate information would speak for itself. JNS doesn't trust the audience to reach the right conclusion without assistance.
That's where the former JTA staffers in JNS's founding group become interesting. They knew the old model from the inside. They concluded it wasn't just insufficient — it was failing.
Failing in their view because it was still playing by rules that the other side had abandoned. The argument goes: Hamas doesn't observe journalistic neutrality. Iranian propaganda doesn't observe it. Anti-Israel activists on campus don't observe it. So why should the Jewish wire service tie one hand behind its back?
Which is a seductive argument if you believe the information environment is a battlefield. Less seductive if you think journalism's value is precisely that it doesn't pick sides.
That tension is what makes JNS genuinely novel. It's not just a conservative JTA. It's a different theory of what a newswire is for.
That theory is embodied by the people running it. Let's talk about Jonathan Tobin, JNS's editor-in-chief. He's not a newcomer to Jewish media — he edited the Jewish Exponent in Philadelphia for years, he's been a conservative columnist forever, and he's spent a lot of ink criticizing JTA and what he calls the "establishment" Jewish press.
The guy running the alternative wire built his reputation partly by attacking the incumbent wire.
Tobin's appointment is a signal. You don't hire someone who's spent a decade writing columns about how the legacy Jewish media is failing Israel unless you want that critique baked into your editorial DNA. And he's prolific — he writes constantly, not just for JNS but for broader conservative outlets. His worldview is pretty consistent: Israel is under existential threat, the mainstream media is part of the problem, and Jewish institutions have been too timid.
Which puts JNS squarely in a particular ideological lane. Not just pro-Israel — lots of people are pro-Israel — but specifically aligned with the Republican Jewish Coalition's perspective. Skeptical of the two-state solution, critical of the Biden administration, hostile to what gets called "woke" politics.
And that's where JNS is distinct from JTA. JTA has opinion columnists across the spectrum. JNS's editorial voice is more uniform. Read their coverage of the twenty twenty-four US election — it was framed as a binary: Trump as the pro-Israel candidate, Biden as hostile. Democratic divisions on Israel, the fact that plenty of pro-Israel Democrats exist, got very little oxygen.
Which is a choice. It's not inaccurate to say the Biden administration had tensions with Israel — it did. But the framing flattened a complicated reality into a simpler story.
That simpler story serves a political purpose. It tells diaspora Jewish readers: the Democratic Party is no longer a safe home for you. That's not just news — that's a political argument delivered through news formatting.
The conference in Jerusalem becomes interesting in that light. You've got Israeli government officials in the room, diaspora leaders, networking happening — this isn't a press conference, it's a summit. It blurs journalism and advocacy in a way that would make old-school wire editors deeply uncomfortable.
JNS would say that blurring is honest. Their argument is that the old separation between journalism and advocacy was always a pretense — that JTA's "neutrality" was just a different kind of advocacy dressed up in wire-service conventions. So why not be transparent about where you stand?
The funding question makes this sharper. JTA is a nonprofit, supported by foundations — the Schusterman family philanthropy is a major donor, and that's public. JNS doesn't disclose its donors. We know it was launched with conservative backing, and its editorial line mirrors groups like the Zionist Organization of America, but the money trail is opaque.
That matters because if you're reading JNS coverage of, say, a Knesset vote on settlement policy, and you don't know who's funding the outlet, you can't fully assess the incentives. Not that foundation funding is pure — it isn't — but at least it's visible.
Here's the knock-on effect I find interesting. JNS's rise seems to be pushing JTA rightward.
In twenty twenty-five, JTA launched something called the "Zionist Futures" project — explicitly designed to counter anti-Zionist narratives. That's language JTA wouldn't have used a decade ago. It's a direct response to market pressure from JNS. If JNS is capturing readers who want unapologetic pro-Israel coverage, JTA has to compete for that audience or risk irrelevance.
You get a race to prove loyalty. Both wires competing to demonstrate they're sufficiently pro-Israel, and the range of acceptable discourse narrows.
That's the real stakes here. It's not just about which wire service wins. It's about whether the common text that shapes diaspora Jewish opinion becomes less diverse, less willing to hold internal debate, more uniform in its framing. The JTA of nineteen thirty-five could report critically on American Jewish leadership's response to Nazism. Would a wire service in a loyalty-competition environment feel the same freedom?
That's the question, isn't it? When the information environment becomes a battlefield, the first casualty might not be truth — it might be the willingness to argue with your own side.
If you're someone who reads Jewish news — and a lot of our listeners do — here's the practical thing. Next time your synagogue bulletin or local Jewish paper runs a story about Israel, scroll to the top or the bottom and look for three letters. JTA or JNS. That one detail tells you a lot about the framing you're about to read before you read a single paragraph.
Especially on conflict reporting. If it's a JNS piece about a terror attack, you're going to get victim narratives front and center, unambiguous language about who did what, and very little space for what you might call contextualizing the attacker. If it's JTA, you'll get attribution, more structural context, possibly a Palestinian perspective somewhere in the piece. Neither is lying to you. They're making different choices about what the story is.
The thing to remember is that the newswire model isn't neutral infrastructure. It's a gatekeeper. One editorial decision in Jerusalem or New York ripples out to hundreds of smaller outlets that don't have the budget to do their own original reporting. You're not reading the local paper's take on Israel. You're reading JNS's take, or JTA's take, repackaged.
Here's a concrete exercise. Pick a single event — a Knesset vote, a diplomatic development, a security incident — and pull up the JNS story and the JTA story side by side. Look at the headline first. Which details made it in? Then look at the first three paragraphs. Who gets quoted first? What's treated as established fact versus attributed claim? The differences are usually stark and they're never random.
It's the media literacy equivalent of checking your blind spot before changing lanes. Takes sixty seconds, and once you see the pattern, you can't unsee it.
Here's the open question I keep turning over. We've got JNS growing fast, JTA adapting to compete, and a war that's supercharged demand for what you might call loyal news. Does this ecosystem keep fragmenting — maybe a third wire, a fourth, each serving a narrower slice of the ideological spectrum — or does one model eventually dominate?
I think fragmentation is the more likely near-term path. The internet doesn't reward monopoly the way the old print-distribution model did. There's no technical barrier to launching a new wire service tomorrow. If a group of left-leaning Jewish journalists decided JTA had drifted too far right in response to JNS pressure, they could spin up a progressive alternative in months. The audience is already sorted into ideological channels. The wires will follow.
Which means the common text might be gone for good. No single dispatch shaping what the rabbi in St. Louis and the editor in Brooklyn both read. Instead, parallel realities.
That's the future implication that matters. October seventh accelerated something that was already underway — the demand for news that doesn't just inform but affirms. JNS may be the harbinger of a Jewish media landscape that looks more like American cable news: distinct channels for distinct worldviews, minimal overlap, and very little incentive to challenge your own audience's assumptions.
Which is a loss, I think. Not because the old JTA monopoly was perfect — it wasn't — but because a community that can't agree on a shared set of facts eventually stops being a community in any meaningful sense.
That's the tension. The old model had gatekeepers, and gatekeepers can fail. The new model has choice, and choice can fragment. There's no version of this that's purely good or purely bad.
That's probably where we should leave it — with the question, not the answer.
Now: Hilbert's daily fun fact.
Hilbert: Mantis shrimp eyes possess twelve types of photoreceptor cells — humans have three — and can detect both polarized light and ultraviolet wavelengths simultaneously. In the Yukon, the long summer twilight produces polarized light patterns in the sky that a mantis shrimp could read like a map, while a human just sees a pretty sunset.
...right.
If this episode gave you a useful lens for reading Jewish news, share it with someone who cares about media literacy. It's the kind of conversation that pays dividends. This has been My Weird Prompts. I'm Corn.
I'm Herman Poppleberry. We'll catch you next time.