All posts by MiaLobel

NYC social media courses (March-May) + Social Media Weekend

The latest social media workshops from Columbia's Sree Sreenivasan. Details below. -Mia

———- Forwarded message ———-

My next two social media workshops (one is four nights over two months) and the other is an advanced one-night class w/ two weeks of online coaching) are coming up as part of the J-school's Continuing Education program. In addition, we have the last 90 tickets or so for next week's Social Media Weekend. Details below. Please share. Hope to see you and your friends – or enemies! – at some or all of these sessions. As always, 10% discount for Columbia J-school alumni and 5% discount for former continuing ed students + discounts for groups of 5 or more.

All questions to ce@jrn.columbia.edu (ask to get on the mailing list, too).

SOCIAL MEDIA WEEKEND: Feb 15-17, at Columbia Journalism School – three days of panels, workshops, social-media doctors, social media headshots and more. http://bit.ly/smwknd #smwknd – ALL LEVELS WELCOME.

* If you can't make Friday evening through Sunday afternoon, we sell
   passes for each day – all for the best conference value in the country.
   Weekend pass $210; Friday night: $60; Saturday all events: $110; Sunday
   all events: $90

* Lots of the latest thinking and big-picture thoughts, along with tons of
   practical, hands-on tips and tricks that will change your work and
   personal use of social and digital media.

* We have a fab lineup with socmedia experts from FB, Twitter, Mashable,
   Quartz, ProPublica, Storyful, World Bank, RebelMouse, NYT, WSJ, NBC,
   NowThisNews, SoundCloud, MuckRack and many others. And we've just added
   to the program one of the Deadspin's co-writers of the biggest social
   media story of the year, the Manti Teo saga (he'll be hanging out,
   sharing his tips all weekend).

* No matter what your level of experience, you can benefit from a checkup
   with our Social Media Doctors – top folks who will give you one-on-one
   feedback, tips and coaching.

* Late last night, I got a tweet about my Twitter profile photo that said
   "Love your Twitter photo. Classy."  That's because it was a photo taken
   during last year's Social Media Headshots – professional portrait
   photographers donating their time and providing great pix for your
   social media use. Three fantastic photographers are back this year:
   Keith Barraclough (@kwbarraclough), Tony Gale (@tonygale) & Deidre Schoo
   (@deidreschoo). Just the headshots are worth much more than the cost of
   attendance.

* Fantastic networking opportunity with attendees from across the nation
   and around the world.

AND DON'T FORGET MY SOCIAL MEDIA WORKSHOPS IN MARCH, APRIL, MAY!

NYC: Smarter Social Media, four-night course over two months, March 14-May 2, 2013 – all levels welcome. Details: http://bit.ly/cjsm2013a #cjsm
– ALL LEVELS WELCOME.

NYC & ONLINE FROM ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD: Social Media One-night Stand – advanced social media workshop, Thursday, May 16, 2013. Details: http://bit.ly/cjsm2013b #cjsm – INTERMEDIATE and ADVANCED LEVEL.

Lots of other great courses by my colleagues, too, all listed at http://www.journalism.columbia.edu/page/843-training-program-offerings/638

All questions to ce@jrn.columbia.edu (ask to get on the mailing list, too).

Please pass along. Thanks.

cheers, sree
Sree Sreenivasan | sree@sree.net | http://sree.net | @sree
Chief Digital Officer, Columbia University
[ an explanation: http://bit.ly/sreejob3 ]

LINKEDIN: http://linkedin.com/in/sreenivasan
FACEBOOK: http://fb.com/sreetips or http://fb.com/sreenet
INSTAGRAM: http://instagram.com/sreenet
TWITTER: @sree – http://twitter.com/sree (tweeting tech, media & more)
->  SreeTips blog on CNET News: http://bit.ly/sreetips

may possibly take submissions

KCRW launched a new podcast and it looks like they may take submissions. I have NO idea if/what they pay, but it can't hurt to have another outlet possibility on the list, eh? Here are the relevant details from the Third Coast website.

Are you accepting submissions? If so, how should interested parties contact you, and what's the main guideline folks should keep in mind?

We would love to be buried in submissions. Right now the submissions are coming in more of a fine mist — make it rain, Third Coast readers! The best/only way is to email organist@believermag.com. (Though we do have a hotline we haven't yet figured out what to do with: I'm hoping we get some good rambling voicemails, at any rate. Call today: (573) 238-8453.)

The main submission guidelines are: the piece shouldn't have appeared anywhere else (unless that anywhere else is your blog, I guess, or your mom's backyard). More importantly: it should spark our curiosity, make us think, and, when we hear it, make us chortle with desperate glee.

See the links below for the rest of the details from the good people at Third Coast.
-Mia

Now in the Third Coast library spotlight:

The Organist from KRCW and producers Andrew Leland, Ross Simonini and Jenna Weiss-Berman
http://www.thirdcoastfestival.org/

Oh happy day! One of our favorite magazines, the Believer, has just launched a monthly experimental arts and culture podcast. Let's all welcome the Organist into the world with a round of applause and open ears.

Listen to the very first Organist (including the best two-minute podcast opening we've ever heard) and read an interview with host Andrew Leland about how and why the Organist came to be, and how and why to pitch YOUR story to him, Behind the Scenes.

http://www.thirdcoastfestival.org/library/1253-the-organist#extra

ANNOUNCING – The New Transom Traveling Workshops, application deadline March 8

Transom Workshops hit the road – first on Catalina Island this June (nice!). And if you get a chance to study with Rob Rosenthal, you're in luck. I learned more in a one-hour lecture by him than I have in some full-semester classes. Plus his How Sound podcast should be essential listening for all radio producers. Details below. Application deadline is March 8. -Mia

TRANSOM.org
a showcase & workshop for new public radio
February 8, 2013

* ANNOUNCING: The New Transom Traveling Workshops *

When we started up our eight-week-long, career-launching Transom Story Workshops, lots of people asked if we could do some introductory training in audio narrative in shorter bursts, and maybe in other locations besides Cape Cod. The answer is finally, yes.

Starting this summer, we will offer Transom Traveling Workshops in various parts of the country. These are short, one-day to one-week workshops suited to the needs of our collaborative hosts. Check here for all the details:

http://transom.org/?page_id=32311

Applications are now open for a one-week introductory course for beginning radio producers to be held on Catalina Island off the coast of Southern California, June 16th-21st. The workshop will be hosted by community radio station KISL and taught by Rob Rosenthal, the lead instructor of the Transom Story Workshop. Applications close on March 8th:

http://transom.org/?p=32331

We'll announce more workshops soon. If you'd like to talk with us about hosting a Traveling Workshop in your home town or to add your name to our Workshop email list, write to us at info [at] Transom [dot] org.

Drop over any time,

Jay Allison
Atlantic Public Media
Woods Hole, Massachusetts
www.transom.org

Public Insight Network announces funds for public media stations to engage local communities, deadline Feb 8

Here's where some creative freelancing comes into play… these funds are for stations to generate new content in their local communities, and they're going to need producers to make that content happen. Encourage your local station to apply for this grant (or check back to see if your local station got one of these since the deadline is THIS FRIDAY) and convince them to hire you to do the work. More details HERE and below. -Mia

The Public Insight Network is offering up to $2,500 in funds to support public media stations’ efforts at engaging their communities in conversation around topics important to them. The funding is intended to help stations generate content, organize events and meet the information needs of their communities through engagement.

We are offering these funds in an effort to encourage stations to involve their communities more directly in content and discussion around important local and national issues, and to encourage more newsrooms to adopt the PIN model of engaging communities in journalistically relevant ways throughout the editorial process.

Participants at a PIN community engagement event in St. Paul, Minn., sat in a wide circle, joined by event hosts and experts, to discuss how the political rancor of the 2012 election season was affecting their personal lives. (Photo by Meg Martin | PIN)

Participants at a PIN community engagement event in St. Paul, Minn., sat in a wide circle, joined by event hosts and experts, to discuss how the political rancor of the 2012 election season was affecting their personal lives. (Photo by Meg Martin | PIN)

PIN gives newsrooms the capacity to do smart, targeted crowd-sourcing on deadline. More than 180,000 PIN sources around the country shape news coverage at more than 70 partner news organizations. Sources sign up by responding to online surveys, participating in virtual and in-person forums, playing serious games and meeting PIN journalists in person.

Demographic information and insights are stored in a secure, searchable database. Participating journalists query the network to find knowledgeable sources, test hunches, identify trends and support production of major news projects.

APPLICATIONS DUE FEBRUARY 8.

Institute for Justice & Journalism 2013 fellowships, deadline Feb 22

The Institute for Justice and Journalism announced their 2013 fellowships. Details HERE and below. – Mia

The Institute for Justice and Journalism is accepting applications for its 2013 Immigration in the Heartland professional fellowship program, which will focus on children in immigrant families, who count for one in four of all U.S. youngsters. The program will explore the economic and educational challenges these children face and how immigration policies have deeply impacted them, even though about 88 percent are U.S. citizens.

At least 16 journalists will be chosen for the weeklong conference, “Immigration in the Heartland: Children and Families,” to be held April 21-25, at the University of Oklahoma’s Gaylord College of Journalism and Mass Communication. The application deadline is Feb. 22.

“Our program will provide journalists with information, context and reporting techniques so they can produce richer stories about immigrant children and families in their communities,” said Phuong Ly, IJJ’s executive director.

As part of their applications, journalists must propose an enterprise project on immigrant children to be undertaken through the fellowship for publication or broadcast. Each fellow will receive a $500 stipend upon completion of the story project and a “Story Behind the Story” account.

IJJ, a nonprofit based in Oakland, Calif., seeks to strengthen journalism on social justice issues through fellowships, reporting workshops, direct support of in-depth stories and the development of digital resources for reporters. Since its founding in 2000, IJJ has conducted 14 successful fellowship programs, involving more than 300 journalists and resulting in high-quality, award-winning stories and commentary.

This is the fourth year that IJJ has organized an “Immigration in the Heartland” conference in partnership with OU’s Gaylord College and its Institute for Research and Training. The Heartland programs explore national immigration topics, with special attention to Midwestern states, where immigrants are the fastest growing part of the population.

The Ethics and Excellence in Journalism Foundation has funded all four Heartland programs. The 2013 program also is supported by the Annie E. Casey Foundation, which is dedicated to helping build better futures for disadvantaged children in the United States.

This year’s program will include:

  • Discussions led by experts on the impact of immigration enforcement and state laws such as Arizona’s SB1070 on immigrant families; the economic and educational conditions faced by the children; and the political mobilization of immigrant youths.

  •  A session on data on immigrant children and families and how to find and use data to enhance reporting, led by researchers from the Casey Foundation’s Kids Count project.

  •  Hands-on training using investigative tools such as FOIA and the TRAC database to get information about immigration-related agencies. The session will be led by Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Martha Mendoza, of the Associated Press, and Dianne Solis, senior reporter at the Dallas Morning News.

  • A session on demystifying immigration laws and policies, led by noted immigration attorney Daniel Kowalski.

  • A visit to a charter school in Oklahoma City, where nearly all the students are from immigrant families.

 

Guidelines for Applicants

Eligibility

All journalists reporting stories or providing commentary for print, television, radio or online distribution are eligible. Applications are encouraged from those employed by news outlets as well as from independent journalists, including bloggers and other online content producers.

Applicants must be U.S. citizens, lawful permanent residents or non-citizens with unrestricted employment authorization. Students are not eligible.

Selection of Fellows: The selection committee will consider applicants’ professional accomplishments, individual and organizational commitment to the aims of the program, plus the quality of the story project proposal.

Terms: IJJ and the Gaylord College will provide the educational sessions, lodging and meals, and travel. IJJ also will award a $500 stipend to each fellow upon completion of the story project and “Story Behind the Story” account.

Fellows are expected to:

•   Participate fully in all scheduled activities and designated online offerings, including those before the start of the program.

•   Provide monthly progress reports on the status of the story project.

•   Complete fellowship project stories or commentary and a “Story Behind the Story.”

•   Commit to remaining involved with IJJ and sharing what they have learned with colleagues and others.

 

Fellows’ news organizations are expected to:

•   Publish or air fellowship project stories that meet their standards.

•   Provide time off for Fellows to take part in the Oklahoma sessions.

•   Agree to IJJ’s re-publication or broadcast of project stories (with appropriate credit).

 

Checklist for Applicants

 

Materials Required for Submission: Application materials must be submitted via email in two Word attachments.Include this material in the email:

Attachment 1.  A completed application form, which can be downloaded: Heartland 2013 application.

Attachment 2.

A. A description of the enterprise project you would like to pursue as part of your participation in the program. Be as specific as possible about the story angle, your reporting strategy and potential sources and data you envision for your project. Explain why this story topic or story framing is significant. Word limit: 400 words.

B. An assessment of what you would expect to gain from the fellowship experience, and what you would bring to it (e.g. how past accomplishments relate to current professional interests). 200 words.

C. For independent journalists only: Specify where you would expect to publish or broadcast your work. Has your work been published/broadcast in that media outlet before? Word limit: 100 words.

D. Work Samples: Relevant samples of your work that demonstrate your journalistic abilities. (For work published or broadcast in a language other than English, provide a short summary in English for each sample submitted.) See application for instructions.

 

Letter of Recommendation

A one-page letter of recommendation is required. It should be emailed separately by the person writing the letter to ijj@justnews.org. The same Feb. 22 deadline applies.

—For members of a news staff: A letter from your supervisor endorsing the application and story project, and committing to publish/broadcast the story project if it meets its standards.

—For independent journalists: A letter of recommendation from a person familiar with your professional work and describing the basis for the recommendation, or a letter confirming interest in the journalistic project you are proposing.

Application Deadline

The complete application packet, as outlined above, must be e-mailed before 11 p.m. (applicant’s local time) on Feb. 22. The deadline also applies to the letter of recommendation. Email toijj@justnews.org. No faxed or late applications will be accepted.

 

Questions

Questions may be directed via e-mail to ijj@justnews.org.


KUOW Program Venture Fund Announces New Round of Grants, deadline March 15

Time for the next round of these fantastic yearly grants from KUOW. Deadline March 15. Details below. -Mia

KUOW Program Venture Fund Announces New Round of Grants

KUOW is seeking project proposals for Round 23 of the Program Venture Fund (PVF). Projects funded by PVF can be a series of features, a long-form documentary or a variety of short audio pieces. There is no set format. This is your opportunity to dig into a subject, bring new voices to the air and share the history, culture and issues that impact the Puget Sound region.

To kick-start your brain storming here are a few subject areas that KUOW would like to cover in the coming year. But do not feel tied to this list of subjects; this is just meant to give you a little more direction. Feel free to submit ideas on completely different topics, whatever catches your interest.

1) Interstate Ties
What are some of the issues that tie the Puget Sound Region in Washington state with other bordering states or other states around the country? What are the issues that Seattle shares with other major northwestern cities such as Portland (OR), Anchorage, Vancouver (Canada), etc? The issues can be about anything of significance such as business, politics, culture, law, etc.

2) Native American Tribes
What are the issues that Native American Tribes are facing in or around the Puget Sound Region?

3) Interesting Places
Take us on a journey to an interesting place(s) around the Puget Sound Region that we haven’t been before. What’s unique and fascinating about it? What does this place tell us about our region, our history or the people that inhabit it?

Important: Before submitting a full application you need to send me a short description of your project, no longer than one page. Once the preliminary idea is approved then you can officially submit the full application. All instructions are at our website (see below).

The application deadline is Friday, March 15, 2013 at 5:00 p.m. (PT)

For application information or to check out previous PVF funded projects go to: http://www.kuow.org/topic/program-venture-fund


Contact: Jim Gates – jgates@kuow.org

Upcoming events at the UC Berkeley J-School

Here's the lastest from UCB J-school. Details below! -Mia

Isaac Lee, President of News at Univision


When:  Wednesday, February 13,  6:00 p.m.


Where: North Gate Hall Library


Isaac Lee is president of News for Univision Communications Inc., the leading media company serving Hispanic America. Mr. Lee is responsible for leading the Company’s news division, including strategic and editorial oversight of programming and production across the Univision Networks, Univision Local Media and Univision Interactive Media.


He most recently founded and served as chairman and editor-in-chief of influential magazine PODER. He spent the past 14 years in editorial roles leading top journalistic teams at prominent publications serving Spanish-speaking audiences in the U.S. and Latin America.


RSVP:
 juliehirano@berkeley.edu




Ken Schles Photography Exhibit: Opening Reception and Lecture


When:  Friday, March 8


Reception: 6:00 p.m.

Lecture:  7:00 p.m.

Where: Room 105 North Gate Hall (Reception in the Library)


First published in 1988, Invisible City still has the ability to transfix the viewer. A penetrating and intimate portrayal of a world few had entrance to—or means of egress from. For a decade, Ken Schles watched the passing of time from his Lower East Side neighborhood. His camera fixed the instances of his observations, and these moments become the foundation of his invisible city.

UC Berkeley Journalism Fellowship – Inside the Latino Vote and Immigration Reform, deadline March 8

Fellowship on immigration reform, May 2-5, UC Berkeley. Deadline is March 8. Details below. -Mia

The Changing Face of America: Inside the Latino Vote and Immigration Reform
Graduate School of Journalism, University of California at Berkeley
May 2-5, 2013

The UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism invites professional print, broadcast, and online journalists in the United States to apply to its third New York Times Institute on Immigration Reporting.

The 20 applicants selected as New York Times Fellows will learn about the new dynamics of America’s immigration debate and the country’s changing demographics. The intensive four-day training is designed for reporters and editors who have some background on immigration and seek to enhance their knowledge and skills.

The 2013 seminar will examine the impact of the growing Latino and Asian-American electorate on current immigration reform efforts in Congress. With our focus on developments in Washington DC, we’ve timed the institute to coincide with a Congressional recess. Participants will:

  • Receive hands-on training in demographic analysis and working with the latest Census data on voter registration and turnout;
  • Hear up-to-the-minute assessments of legislation in play in Washington and the power dynamics behind it;
  • Examine this year’s political debate in the context of history, current immigration law, state-federal battles and recent developments in immigration enforcement;
  • Get exclusive access to the first public release of a series of specially commissioned research papers the impact of the Latino and Asian vote, presented by their authors.

In past years, speakers have included high-ranking Homeland Security officials, immigration judges, leading journalists, scholars, legislators and immigrants themselves. We anticipate a line up of top-notch experts again this year. The institute will draw on its position in California – which has been at the leading edge on many aspects of immigration – and the wealth of resources at the University of California and beyond. Participants will leave the seminar well equipped with new perspectives and insights backed by solid research and data, new sources, essential reporting tools, and story ideas to deepen their coverage and to share with their newsroom colleagues.

The Changing Face of America is a New York Times Institute, supported by a generous grant from the Atlantic Philanthropies.

The application deadline is March 8, 2013.  Prospective fellows can apply online. More information can be found on the institute’s web page. For questions, contact Rachel Witte at rwitte@berkeley.edu.

Media Worker’s Guild Tax talk this Thursday, 2/7, 6:30pm, SF

The SF Media Worker's Guild is hosting this event TOMORROW, 2/7 at 6:30pm in San Francisco. Learn all you can about self-employment taxes. Details below. -Mia

Hi all, we're very fortunate to have an ace self-employment tax expert come speak to us this Thursday, Feb. 7, from 6:30 to 8 p.m.
For 25 years, Joe Weatherby has been helping writers, artists and other self-employed professionals keep up with changes in IRS rules and keep more of what they earn. 

Bring all your questions.
The talk and Q&A session takes place at the Media Workers Guild, 433 Natoma St. between Fifth and Sixth streets in San Francisco.  Shoot an email to me at rrosenlum@gmail.com if you think you will attend. A head count will help us arrange the room for maximum comfort.

See you there!
Best,
Rebecca Rosen Lum, Chair
Pacific Media Workers Guild Freelance Unit
TNG/CWA 39521

GuildFreelancers.org
510-472-3024

rrosenlum@gmail.com

new digital media competition from the Illinois Humanities Council, deadline April 30

Share your ideas on strengthening democracy as part of a new digital media competition. Details below. -mia

 

The Illinois Humanities Council, with support from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, is sponsoring a nationwide challenge called Looking@Democracy. The purpose of this competition is to generate short, provocative digital media content designed to spark a national conversation about how we can all come together to strengthen American democracy. A total of $100,000 in prize money in 5 categories will be awarded.

Submissions may take the form of short videos, audio clips, animation, music videos, public service announcements, infographics, graphic art, and even Facebook and iPhone apps. They all just need to be digital so they can be shared electronically.

For more details, see the competition page: http://www.LookingAtDemocracy.org.

Submissions will be accepted beginning February 4th, 2013. The deadline is April 30, 2013.

We are hoping you might help to build awareness for this national competition – by featuring this challenge on your website, sending this note to your email lists, through social media, etc. Our hope is to generate interest and encourage thinking about possible projects.

If you have any questions, please contact us at lookingatdemocracy@prairie.org.

Sincerely,

Geoffrey Banks
Director of Programs & Partnerships
Illinois Humanities Council