All posts by MiaLobel

Two Job opportunities with SoundVision Productions, based in Berkeley, CA

Hey CA producers. SoundVision Productions is looking for two new hires, one full time and one part time. I've attended one of their Science Literacy workshops and can vouch for their talent and professionalism – plus they produce some really phenomenal radio. Details attached and pasted below.

Good luck!
-mia

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SoundVision Productions® is looking for a managing editor/senior producer
for The Public Radio Energy Project (working title), an integrated,
cross-platform journalism initiative that will use community projects,
concept art and other public engagement means to extend informal education
about the science, technology, engineering, and social context of energy and
to tap community knowledge for innovation. This is a two-year position,
based in Berkeley, California
. The Public Radio Energy Project is funded by
the National Science Foundation.

The managing editor/senior producer will be responsible for leading a small
editorial staff as well as freelance writers, reporters, editors and
producers. The ME/SP will work in conjunction with other team leaders
overseeing the technical, digital, outreach, community engagement, research,
evaluation, development & marketing areas.

Looking to fill as soon as possible.

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SoundVision Productions® is looking for a Digital Media Producer/Social
Media Coordinator
for The Public Radio Energy Project (working title). This
part-time, two year position is located in the San Francisco Bay area. Start
date is as soon as possible.

The Public Radio Energy Project is an integrated, cross-platform journalism
initiative that will use community projects, concept art and other public
engagement means to extend informal education about the science, technology,
engineering, and social context of energy and to tap community knowledge for
innovation. The Public Radio Energy Project is funded by the National
Science Foundation.

This is a unique opportunity for the right person who lives for the Internet
yet needs the flexibility of a part-time position.

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SoundVision Productions Managing Editor/Senior Producer

 

SoundVision Productions® is looking for a managing editor/senior producer for The Public Radio Energy Project (working title), an integrated, cross-platform journalism initiative that will use community projects, concept art and other public engagement means to extend informal education about the science, technology, engineering, and social context of energy and to tap community knowledge for innovation. This is a two-year position, based in Berkeley, California.  The Public Radio Energy Project is funded by the National Science Foundation.

 

The managing editor/senior producer will be responsible for leading a small editorial staff as well as freelance writers, reporters, editors and producers. The ME/SP will work in conjunction with other team leaders overseeing the technical, digital, outreach, community engagement, research, evaluation, development & marketing areas. 

 

Looking to fill as soon as possible. 

 

Qualifications

 

The ideal candidate will have experience in:

 

  • Shaping and developing an hour of public broadcast programming such as documentaries, news magazines, or series;
  • Covering or managing coverage of energy/environmental science; 
  • Producing, editing or reporting broadcast features;
  • Managing a diverse group of media professionals, including independents and freelancers;
  • Digital technologies including social networking.

 

The characteristics of the ideal candidate are:

 

  • Ability to generate benchmarks and deadlines and motivate team members to meet them;
  • Ability to transform the mission of the project into a process that keeps everyone moving forward;
  • Detail-oriented yet flexible;
  • Leadership, collegiality, calm under pressure, and a sense of humor.
  • Excellent writing and communication skills.

 

Duties include

 

  • Maintain and communicate SoundVision's editorial vision of sound journalism values, quality production and accuracy in science;
  • Coordinate hiring of freelance and independent writers, editors, producers and reporters in consultation with senior leadership team;
  • Make assignments and manage freelance and independent writers, reporters, producers and editors;
  • Lead team meetings using appropriate brainstorming, problem-solving, decision-making, and project planning techniques;
  • Delegate team tasks as needed;
  • Coordinate editorial review process, from treatment to final;
  • Edit program components as needed;
  • Lead ongoing self-evaluation of the team’s effectiveness;
  • Coordinate with other team leaders and the executive producer to assure timeliness and coherence across project elements such as digital, outreach, evaluation, etc;
  • Collaborate with partners in the ethnic media, local radio stations and universities.

 

Salary negotiable and commensurate with experience.  Some benefits offered.

 

Please submit cover letter and resume/cv with links to three examples of your work, with a description of your specific role in each, to jobs@svproductions.org.  Write editor/producer in the subject line.  No phone calls, faxes or snail mail.  Candidates invited to the next round will be contacted.

 

SoundVision has more than a decade of experience in producing exceptionally substantive, impact-oriented science journalism.  Its NPR-distributed series The DNA Files won numerous awards and aired internationally.  SoundVision produces The Really Big Questions with NPR’s Lynn Neary, which explores the dynamic boundary between science and the humanities and achieved wide carriage. SoundVision also conducts the annual Science Literacy Workshop, a weeklong science and production training for public radio producers, reporters and editors.

 

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SoundVision Productions Digital Media Producer/Social Media Coordinator

 

SoundVision Productions® is looking for a Digital Media Producer/Social Media Coordinator for The Public Radio Energy Project (working title). This part-time, two year position is located in the San Francisco Bay area.  Start date is as soon as possible.

 

The Public Radio Energy Project is an integrated, cross-platform journalism initiative that will use community projects, concept art and other public engagement means to extend informal education about the science, technology, engineering, and social context of energy and to tap community knowledge for innovation. The Public Radio Energy Project is funded by the National Science Foundation.

 

This is a unique opportunity for the right person who lives for the Internet yet needs the flexibility of a part-time position.

 

Qualifications

 

  • Degree in journalism with an online or multimedia emphasis or equivalent experience;
  • Social media aficionado who lives and breathes all things digital and loves learning new technologies;
  • Extreme familiarity with multiple blogging programs;
  • Ability to adapt to changes in equipment, software and workflow;
  • Willing to explore or develop new methods for creating and distributing digital content;
  • Excellent storyteller and writer experienced with video and audio recording, editing and production;
  • Basic skills with Photoshop, iMovie, Final Cut, Pro Tools, Flash and other similar or complementary software;
  • Familiarity with Microsoft Office (Excel, Word, Outlook, PowerPoint);
  • Interest in science in general and energy science in particular;
  • Able to work independently and as part of a team;
  • Cool and efficient under deadline pressure;
  • A sense of humor.

 

The successful candidate for this hybrid position will be responsible for:

 

  • Updates to website and social media communities including, Facebook, Twitter, Foursquare etc;
  • Conceiving and quickly producing compelling digital features and multimedia packages such as slide shows, galleries, audio presentations and/or videos;
  • Reporting and writing original story elements;
  • Editing topic pages, writing and editing headlines for blog posts and other display copy;
  • Providing suggestions for home page treatment of material;
  • Maintaining online content across multiple platforms, including websites, newsletters, social media and mobile;
  • Support social media presence by integrating tools, apps and widgets from different networks;
  • Integrate Energy Project-branded content into social media sites including Facebook, YouTube, Flicker, Tumbler, Twitter and wikis, etc;
  • Promoting Energy Project-branded content on blogs and aggregator sites;
  • Updating digital databases;
  • Conduct ongoing evaluation of keywords, content and meta data, campaign performance tracking and link building.

 

 

Salary commensurate with experience.

 

Please submit cover letter and resume/cv to jobs@svproductions.org.  Write digital in the subject line.  No phone calls, faxes or snail mail for this digital position.  Candidates invited to the next round will be contacted.

 

SoundVision has more than a decade of experience in producing exceptionally substantive, impact-oriented science journalism.  Its NPR-distributed series The DNA Files won numerous awards and aired internationally.  SoundVision produces The Really Big Questions with NPR’s Lynn Neary, which explores the dynamic boundary between science and the humanities and achieved wide carriage. SoundVision also conducts the annual Science Literacy Workshop, a weeklong science and production training for public radio producers, reporters and editors.

 

SoundVision is an equal opportunity employer.

 

 

 

 

doc iconsvp_job_openings.doc

Justine Sharrock reading at Revolution Books November 11th

Fabulous author and Freelance Cafe member Justine Sharrock is reading from her new book in NYC on November 11. Details below.
-mia

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World Can't Wait presents a book talk and discussion with Justine Sharrock:

Tortured: When Good Soldiers Do Bad Things

Thursday November 11, Veteran's Day @ 7:00 pm
Revolution Books 146 West 26th Street, NYC

Justine Sharrock, an investigative journalist, writes for Mother Jones, Alternet, and San Francisco magazine.  Her 2010 portrait of U.S. soldiers is "an eye-opening exposé of America’s torture regime."

“Powerful and important. Justine Sharrock talks to soldiers whose patriotic duty was warped by the Bush administration, making torturers out of ordinary men and women. A must-read for all Americans concerned by the corrosive impact of the Bush administration’s “War on Terror” policies on the US military.” –Andy Worthington, journalist and author of The Guantanamo Files

Debra Sweet, reporting from Berkeley Says NO to Torture Week, October 2010: "Justine read from her book about Chris Arendt, an anarchist, Jack Kerouac-reading punk from the Midwest who somehow ended up in a National Guard unit sent to Guantanamo. As he learned the pattern of detainee abuse, like the “frequent flyer” program where detainees were moved every few hours to a different cell for months, he began folding the order forms into origami birds which spilled over his whole desk.  Then he tried to kill himself."

Fellowship opportunities for ethnic media journalists in New York

Two fellowship opportunities for NYC producers. Details below.
-Mia

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For those of you who don't know, Feet in Two Worlds brings the work of immigrant and ethnic media journalists from communities across the U.S. to public radio and the web. We're happy to announce two new fellowship opportunities for immigrant journalists in New York. 


Call for Applications

Business and Economics Reporting for Immigrant and Ethnic Media Journalists in New York

Feet in Two Worlds is offering a limited number of fellowships to immigrant and ethnic media journalists in New York City who want to improve their online reporting and social networking skills while covering business and economics issues in immigrant communities in New York City.

Fellows will receive training in blogging and multimedia presentations (audio slide shows, videos, podcasts), as well as on social networking sites such as Twitter and Facebook.  They will produce stories for the Feet in Two Worlds blog (news.feetintwoworlds.org), and for the news organization for whom they normally report.

This three-month fellowship runs from December 1, 2010 to March 1, 2011.  In addition to media training, fellows will receive a $500 stipend and the opportunity to have their work featured on http://news.feetintwoworlds.org and other online news sites.

The training is open to staff and freelance reporters and editors who work in any language. The training will be conducted in English, although the actual reporting may be in a language other than English.  The training will focus mainly on work in the field, although there will also be a limited number of group workshops.

Applications are due by 5 PM on Friday, November 12, and should include the following:

  • Three story ideas for coverage of business and economic issues in New York’s immigrant communities or directly affecting immigrants in New York City.

  • Your resume.

  • Samples of your work.

  • The url of the media outlet(s) for whom you report.

To apply or for more information please contact Anna Schneider at schneida@newschool.edu.

Feet in Two Worlds is a project of the Center for New York City Affairs at the New School which brings the work of immigrant and ethnic media journalists to public radio and the web.

Feet in Two Worlds is supported by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, the New York Community Trustand the Mertz Gilmore Foundation.

Call for Applications

LGBT Reporting for Immigrant and Ethnic Media Journalists in New York

Feet in Two Worlds is offering a limited number of fellowships to immigrant and ethnic media journalists in New York City who want to improve their online reporting and social networking skills while covering LGBT issues in immigrant communities in New York City.

Fellows will receive training in blogging and multimedia presentations (audio slide shows, videos, podcasts), as well as on social networking sites such as Twitter and Facebook.  They will produce stories for the Feet in Two Worlds blog (news.feetintwoworlds.org), and for the news organization for whom they normally report.

This three-month fellowship runs from December 1, 2010 to March 1, 2011.  In addition to media training, fellows will receive a $500 stipend and the opportunity to have their work featured on http://news.feetintwoworlds.org and other online news sites.

The training is open to staff and freelance reporters and editors who work in any language. The training will be conducted in English, although the actual reporting may be in a language other than English.  The training will focus mainly on work in the field, although there will also be a limited number of group workshops.

Applications are due by 5 PM on Friday, November 12, and should include the following:

  • Three story ideas for coverage of LGBT issues in New York’s immigrant communities.

  • Your resume.

  • Samples of your work.

  • The url of the media outlet(s) for whom you report.

To apply or for more information please contact Anna Schneider at schneida@newschool.edu.

Feet in Two Worlds is a project of the Center for New York City Affairs at the New School which brings the work of immigrant and ethnic media journalists to public radio and the web.

Feet in Two Worlds is supported by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, the New York Community Trustand the Mertz Gilmore Foundation.

Several all-star events over next few days

Hey NY folks. List of FREE upcoming events at Columbia j-school.
-Mia

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Thought you and your NYC-area friends might like to know about three free all-star events we are having over the next few days at Columbia Journalism School – just three of many listed at http://bit.ly/columbialectures

* Thursday, Nov. 4, 4:30-6 pm: Knight News Challenge info session, with
  Jennifer 8. Lee Details below and at http://twtup.com/8knc

* Tuesday, Nov. 9, 6:15-9 pm: Our annual Changing Media Landscape panel &
  receptions (and live webcast), presented with the Hearst Foundation.
  Panel features the global managing editor of Reuters; the founder of
  Tumblr; the national innovations editor of the Washington Post; the
  editor in chief of Mashable; the editor of El Diario La Prensa. Learn
  about the names behind the titles and other details below and at
  http://bit.ly/columbiajh10

* Thursday, Nov. 11, 6:30-8 pm: "The Science of Storytelling” – Dean
  Nicholas Lemann in conversation with Professor and Pulitzer Prize winner
  Jonathan Weiner for a discussion of the practices and pitfalls,
  techniques and triumphs of long-form science writing focusing on
  Professor Weiner’s critically acclaimed new book, "Long for This World."
  Details below.

NON-COLUMBIA-J-SCHOOLERS! Signup to get alerts about future Columbia Journalism School events and webcasts: http://bit.ly/columbiajsignup * We list the school's in-person events at http://bit.ly/columbialectures (lots of spring events coming). Our events as a Google Calendar: http://bit.ly/columbiajcal

[ A quick note to remind any experienced journalists looking to earn a Master's degree that Columbia J-school's new nine-month M.A. program (which allows you to specialize in business, arts, politics or science/health/environment reporting) is a great option. Along with in-depth specialization, you can also learn the digital skills that are in such demand in newsrooms today. We also have launched a new joint Master's degree in journalism and computer science with with the Columbia Computer Science Department. These programs program are in addition to our more traditional M.S. and Ph.D. programs. Details at http://www.journalism.columbia.edu/admissions …. Questions to admissions@jrn.columbia.edu ]

o o o o o

Knight News Challenge info session, with Jennifer 8. Lee Thursday, 11/4, 4:30-6 pm in Stabile Student Center
Columbia Journalism School, 116th St & Broadway (#1 train to 116th St)

Optional RSVP via Twitter: http://twtup.com/8knc
hashtag: #cjknc

JENNIFER 8. LEE, a reviewer and consultant with the Knight News Challenge [ http://newschallenge.org ], will discuss and answer questions about the competition, which launched Oct. 25 with a deadline of December 1. In last year's awards, the News Challenge received more than 2,300 applications and gave out 12 grants totaling $2.74 million. In a previous year, alum David Cohn, received a $300,000 grant for his http://spot.us crowdfunding project. Lee will discuss the technicalities of the contest — including the categories, the open-source requirements, and different funding mechanisms. Lee, a journalist focused on investments in the frontiers of news and information in communities, worked for nine years as a reporter for the New York Times and is author of "The Fortune Cookie Chronicles," a book on Chinese food in America. She helps organize Hacks/Hackers NYC and spearheaded the crowdsourced journo-tech glossary, which has been translated into Arabic and French.

o o o o o

All are invited to this in-person event (with two free receptions) or video webcast (you provide your own snacks)…

{SAMPLE TWEET: All-star @ColumbiaJourn media panel+webcast, Nov. 9:
http://twtup.com/columbiajh10 #cjhearst }

"Changing Media Landscape, 2010" Columbia J-school & Hearst Foundation's annual look at the journalism revolution, with several fascinating influencers. This is a different kind of panel, with a real conversation among the participants and audience – and no Powerpoint in sight. FREE IN-PERSON EVENT + WEBCAST

The Hearst Foundation & Columbia Journalism Digital Media Program present…

Columbia-Hearst Journalism Dialogues

Tuesday, November 9, 20010
6:15-9 pm (live webcast at 7 pm on http://livestream.com/columbiajournalism
see local time around the world here: http://timeanddate.com/s/1v9h )

SPEAKERS:

HILDA GARCIA, VP, multiplatform news and information of Impremedia, the largest
Hispanic news and information company & editor of El Diario La Prensa, the
oldest Spanish-language daily in the United States. FOLLOW ON TWITTER:
http://twitter.com/garsiknews

DAVID KARP, founder, Tumblr, a leading microblogging site, with more than two billion pageviews a month, eight million publishers and 7.4 million posts a day. FOLLOW ON TWITTER: http://twitter.com/davidkarp

MARK LUCKIE, national innovations editor, Washington Post; founder of 10,000
Words blog (which was just bought by Mediabistro); author of "The Digital
Journalist's Handbook." FOLLOW ON TWITTER: http://twitter.com/marksluckie

ADAM OSTROW, editor-in-chief, Mashable, a leading news and information site
about social media; and a new media consultant and entrepreneur. FOLLOW ON
TWITTER: http://twitter.com/adamostrow

BETTY WONG, global managing editor, Reuters, one of the world's most
influential media companies. FOLLOW ON TWITTER: http://twitter.com/DestinationRTRS

MODERATOR: Prof. Sree Sreenivasan, Columbia J-school's Dean of Student Affairs
FOLLOW ON TWITTER: http://twitter.com/sreenet

HASHTAG FOR THE EVENT: #cjhearst
OPTIONAL: RSVP via Twitter – http://twtup.com/columbiajh10

Tuesday, Nov. 9, 2010
6:15 – doors open
6:15-7:00 pm – networking reception – drinks & light food
7-8:30 pm – discussion
8:30-9 pm – reception and networking  continue

No RSVP required. No charge. Open to the public. Add yourself to this form to
be kept posted about future events like these: http://bit.ly/columbiasignup

Columbia Graduate School of Journalism Lecture Hall, 3rd Floor – 116th St &
Broadway [ #1 train to 116th St or get directions:
http://www.hopstop.com/route?city=New+York&county2=Manhattan&address2=2950+broadway&mod

e=s
]

LIVE & ARCHIVED WEBCAST OF THE EVENT WILL BE AVAILABLE VIA LIVESTREAM AT
http://livestream.com/columbiajournalism

NOTE: Free, open wi-fi available in the lecture hall for blogging, tweeting, etc. Please use the #cjhearst hashtag.

This program is dedicated to Hossein "Hoder" Derakhshan, Iranian-born blogger/Internet activist, who spoke at this panel in 2007; he was arrested in Iran in 2008 and has been sentenced to 19.5 years in prison. More info: http://www.freetheblogfather.org/

FUTURE DATES:
Thursday, April 7, 2011, 6:30-9 pm: The annual Hearst New Media Lecture will be
delivered by Krishna Bharat (@KrishnaBharat), founder of Google News & Hearst
New Media Professional-in-Residence at the J-school: http://bit.ly/b7UGuv

Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011, 630-9 pm: Hearst "Changing Media Landscape, 2011" Panel

MANY THANKS TO THE HEARST FOUNDATION FOR ITS CONTINUED SUPPORT OF THE
COLUMBIA JOURNALISM SCHOOL'S DIGITAL MEDIA EFFORTS. Some video and links from this series at http://bit.ly/hearstprograms

o o o o o

The Columbia Graduate School of Journalism
invites you to an evening event: 

“The Science of Storytelling”

Dean Nicholas Lemann
in conversation with
Professor and Pulitzer Prize winner Jonathan Weiner

for a discussion of
the practices and pitfalls, techniques and triumphs
of long-form science writing

focusing on Professor Weiner’s critically acclaimed new book

Long for This World  

Thursday, November 11, 2010
6:30 p.m.
World Room, 3rd floor
Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism
116th and Broadway
New York City

Register here: http://bit.ly/aY04i9

o o o o o

NEW-ISH WAYS CONNECT WITH COLUMBIA JOURNALISM SCHOOL:

Facebook: friend "Columbia J-school" –
http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=611726581

Twitter: http://twitter.com/columbiajourn

Audio webcasts with faculty, alumni and more:
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/columbiajournalism (set automatic e-mail
reminders there for yourself)

YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/columbiajournalism

Blip.tv: http://cujs.blip.tv/ (five- and 12-minute mini-documentaries about the school + events at the school)

MAIN WEBSITE: http://www.journalism.columbia.edu

Call for Audio / Multimedia Submissions – Storyscape

No $ for this, but it's a very cool site. Might be good for that project you just want to see light.
-mia

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Storyscape, an online literary and arts journal that is “story centered,” is actively pursuing audio, art, mixed media, and multi-media works that explore the concept of “story” from a non-textual perspective. The mission of Storyscape Journal is to collect stories in all their forms and formats. We get particularly excited when we publish stories that have no… you know… words. Or, at least, no words you can SEE.

We’re looking for audio, and this is where you come in.

Submit your audio, video, multimedia, and thing-we-can’t-describe-because-we’ve-never-seen-it-before (gasp) by link or by .mp3 or by whatchamacallit HERE:

storymaster@storyscapejournal.com

To check out the site: www.storyscapejournal.com

Our mission statement: www.storyscapejournal.com/mission.html
Our submission guidelines: www.storyscapejournal.com/submit.html

Past contributors include: Amber Boardman, Ken Cormier, David Shapiro, Stephanie Chambers, Tereza Swanda, Ryan Scammell, and many more.

Request for Reporting Proposals

Hey all – help spread the word about this LA-based project, based on an award-winning story reported out of Oakland last year. This from one of the producers:

The basics: Newsdesk.org is teaming up with Spot.Us to iterate the production and funding formula that won us an SPJ SDX award for our pollution and public-health reporting in Oakland. This time, we're taking it to Los Angeles, and welcome proposals from reporting teams looking to do new coverage of pollution and public health in the region.

Details follow.
Best,
Mia

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Request for Reporting Proposals: The Los Angeles Toxic Tour

View online: http://newsdesk.org/2010/10/the-los-angeles-toxic-tour-request-for-proposals/

Download as a PDF: http://newsdesk.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/LA-Toxic-Tour-RFP.pdf

Would you like to bring the award-winning "Toxic Tour" reporting project to Los Angeles? Newsdesk.org and Spot.Us welcome proposals from journalists interested in developing new coverage of pollution and environmental health in Los Angeles communities.  

  • Proposals are due Nov. 12 for short-term projects using text and multimedia to document pollution and communities in greater Los Angeles. Topics include neighborhoods, economics, industry, land use, transportation, politics, activism, environment and health.
  • Spot.Us is seeding the LA Toxic Tour with a $1,000 mini-grant; the rest of the budget will be crowdfunded from local, regional and national communities. 
  • Finished work will be published and promoted by Newsdesk and Spot.Us, and shared with regional and national media partners, including the Investigative News Network.
Proposal Requirements: Budget & Personnel
  • The maximum proposed budget we can accept is $6,000. The majority of project funding will come from individual donors, so be realistic when budgeting. 
  • Project must include two or more journalists with complementary skills (i.e., reporter, editor, multimedia producer), who can collaborate to finalize reporting for publication. 
Project Goals
  • Produce quality coverage serving overlooked Los Angeles communities
  • Strengthen crowdfunding as a tool to finance independent journalism
  • Create a replicable model for funding, producing and publishing coverage by small, independent reporting teams in underserved communities
To Apply (Deadline Nov. 12) 
Proposals can be modeled on the first Toxic Tour (see below), or can take an entirely fresh approach. Send an email to latoxictour@newsdesk.org with the following details pasted in as text only: 
  • Proposal title & primary contact information
  • Production timeline and number of proposed reports
  • 100-word summary outlining: pollution issue/s, geographic region, community impacts and responses, links to previous coverage of issue/s (if any)
  • 30-word bios of reporters (minimum two reporters) with links to published work
  • Are you willing to help promote the crowdfunding campaign to your networks? 
  • Line-item project budget (maximum: $6,000)
Proposal evaluation criteria 
  • Relevance to underserved L.A. communities
  • Quality of the producing team's work
  • Viability of the project budget for crowdfunding. 
Background 
Newsdesk.org's 2009 series "The Bay Area Toxic Tour: West Oakland" covered the impacts of pollution from the Port of Oakland on adjacent communities. The project was produced by three independent journalists, financed by Spot.Us, and won the Society of Professional Journalists Sigma Delta Chi Award for Excellence in Journalism. 

Questions? Drop us a line at: latoxictour@newsdesk.org

Dual Meetings at Third Coast – Radio Guild Wage Standards followed by Freelance Cafe East meets West soiree

Hey FC folks. The Third Coast International Audio Festival is coming up THIS WEEKEND!! I'm so excited to see a bunch of you there, and in hopes of connecting with as many of you as possible, we've scheduled an East meets West FC gathering. First – we'll meet up with the Radio Guild to discuss setting wage standards for freelancers (details below), then meld into a purely social drinks/dinner for as long as y'all care to hang out.

Hope you can join us!
Friday, October 29
5:45pm
followed by drinks/dinner (place TBD)

Meet at the Wyndham Chicago Hotel 2nd Floor Lounge and we'll go from there.
Best,
Mia
845-444-4034

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Going to Third Coast? We thought this would be a great time to meet folks to discuss an issue dear to every producer who's ever done any freelance work – setting wage standards.

Please join us Friday, Oct. 29, at 5:45, for a quick, pre-dinner brainstorming session. Location to be announced, at Third Coast or sooner. Drop us a line to add your name to the email list so we can keep you in the loop.

Thanks and looking forward to seeing you soon,

Sally Herships
sally@sohosally.com
Cell: (718) 938-0576

Laura Friedman
Lrahip@aol.com

Cell: 646-721-4651

Open Call for EMPAC Artist Residency Applications, Troy, NY

Hey Hudson Valley folks. Just learned about this artist-in-residence program in Troy – it looks fantastic! Details below.
-mia

++++++++++++++++++++++++

EMPAC Open Call for Artist in Residence Proposals: Troy, N.Y. – Since 2005, the Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center (EMPAC) has established a vibrant residency program that has hosted over 40 artists and their collaborators, spanning theater, dance, music, video, and installation. While EMPAC will continue its open call residency program, EMPAC is pleased to announce four additional focused initiatives:

‐ Audio Production / Post‐Production

For sound recording, development of multichannel sound works, documentation, mastering, mixing, film scoring, or any other task involving microphones, speakers, consoles and computers.

‐ Creative Research

Provides artists, writers, and theorists with the opportunity to conduct research over extended periods of time (minimum six weeks).

‐ Dance / Theater

To rehearse, workshop or finalize a production. Provides a group of up to six individuals a two‐week rehearsal period in a 3,300 sq. ft. black box space with full production support.

‐ Video Production / Post‐Production

For multiple camera shoots, documentation of a performance, development of multichannel video projection, digital video post‐production, or any project involving HD video cameras, computers, and projectors.


EMPAC’s unique facilities offer four major venues including a Concert Hall, Theater, and two black box Studios, in addition to artists in residence studios, and a state of the art infrastructure. To apply, please include a letter of intent, a project description, a resume or CV for all major collaborators, as well as works, samples, and other supporting materials. Proposals are reviewed by EMPAC curators four times a year. Upcoming reviews will take place on October 15, January 14, April 15, and July 15. In general, residencies are scheduled six months to one year in advance. 

For more information, go to: http://www.empac.rpi.edu/residencies/artist/

Freelance Cafe West October Gathering, Thursday Oct 28, 6:30pm SF

Come one, come all to our October Social gathering Thursday, October 28 at 6:30 p.m. at Bruno's in the San Francisco Mission District.

It's your chance to connect and meet up with some of the coolest Bay Area freelancers who have tons of experience working the freelance market–whether it's writing for an online news site, doing audio reports for radio, or trying to get a consulting business off the ground.

We'll chat about the freelance life, waiting for checks from editors, and cool spots to celebrate Halloween.

So come have a drink and some tasty treats in the City.

Any questions, contact Jen Ward, West Coast party director, at jennifer.wrd@gmail.com or 510.393.7544.

Bruno's Info:

2389 Mission St., San Francisco, CA
(415) 643-5200
Map


Jennifer Inez Ward
Contributing Editor
Oakland Local
510.393.7544
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Knight Fellowship deadline Nov 7th

I've done one of the KDMC fellowships and it was phenomenal. Go for it!
-mia

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The Knight Digital Media Center at UC Berkeley J-School is hosting a training session/fellowship on data journalism aimed at unpacking the 2010 Census. The training is in December; the deadline to apply is November 7th.

KDMC fellowships are wonderful opportunities to meet other journalists, learn new, cutting-edge skills, and frankly, eat awesome food. And Berkeley's not bad, either…

Data Visualization is a growing piece of the journalism innovation pie , another possible skill that can enhance your audio storytelling.

One of the trainers, the wonderful Jerry Monti, has written about data journalism here: http://bit.ly/aTBsUb

More information about the workshop and links to applications are here: http://multimedia.journalism.berkeley.edu/workshops/39/

BTW, One of the presenters at this session is from public media. It's Dante Chinni, the award-winning creator of Patchwork Nation, a project now affiliated with PBS Newshour.