Some familiar names on the list of performers for this event – sounds like it will be a great show! Don't miss it. Details below.
-mia

Some familiar names on the list of performers for this event – sounds like it will be a great show! Don't miss it. Details below.
-mia

Our friends at KALW are hosting a storytelling event on June 4 and they need your radio pieces! Contact Erica Mu mu.erica@gmail.com for details.
-mia
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Are you in the Bay Area? Ever wondered what extraordinary things the earth might say if we took a moment to listen to it?
Here’s your chance to grab a beer and join Jim Metzner of "Pulse of the Planet" to listen to some amazing audio, and to talk about the science and journalism behind it. (RSVP at http://soundsofscience.eventbrite.com)
Tuesday, May 10th, 2011
6:30 PM – 7:00 PM — Beer & Snacks
7:00 PM – 9:00 PM — Audio Salon & Science Discussion
at KQED Public Media
No one has captured the sounds of the planet and explored the science behind them like Jim Metzner, the award-winning host and producer of public radio’s “Pulse of the Planet,” one of the longest running programs about science and the environment.
A science & audio journalist for more than 35 years, Metzner has explored the world by conducting audio expeditions to remote locals such as the Australian Cloud Forests, the Pantanal Wetlands south of the Amazon, and the Gobi and Sonoran Deserts, among other fascinating places. He has interviewed hundreds of scientists and researchers along the way, developing a comprehensive grasp of current innovations in science, as well as a healthy respect for the cycles and rhythms of nature. His work is both timely and timeless.
In this Audio Salon & Science Café, Jim will play some of his rare, evocative recordings, and we’ll discuss story, science, audio, and life on earth. Bring your own tales of hard-to-gather sound and using craft to tell the story!
Join us for beer, snacks, listening and talking.
Presented by Stacy Bond & AudioLuxe
Co-Sponsored by KQED’s QUEST and SF Bay Area Journalists
Space is limited.
RSVP at http://soundsofscience.eventbrite.com/
BONUS OFFER FOR FREELANCE CAFÉ MEMBERS: We’d love it if you leave some quick love on the “Pulse of the Planet” FB page! If you have a quick (or long) story about trying to get good sound (or a great scoop), go to our FB page and share it – and I’ll put you in a hat drawing for a $10 iTunes gift card, and one of Jim’s new CD’s. This offer is only for Freelance Café peeps. The drawback is that you’ll also need to send me a quick email so I know which comments are actual FC folks, but that won’t take too long – plus, hey, free gift card.
Here’s our POTP page on FB: http://www.facebook.com/pulseoftheplanet
Here’s my email: stacyb@audioluxe.org
Hope to see you Tuesday!!!
XO,
Stacy
Join fellow Berkeley alumni and friends in the New York area for
Uncovering the Future of Investigative Reporting
Featuring Lowell Bergman, Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter and producer and professor of investigative reporting at the Graduate School of Journalism in conversation with veteran journalist Bill Moyers.
As traditional news organizations face decreasing resources and readership, how can investigative reporting be sustained? What new models are emerging? What role will nonprofits and universities play? How is new media changing the field? Join Professor Bergman, a producer/correspondent for the PBS documentary series Frontline, and Emmy award-winning journalist Bill Moyers, for this provocative conversation. Al Pacino played Bergman in The Insider, a 1999 film about his investigation of the tobacco industry for 60 Minutes.
Wednesday, May 4, 2011
Museum of Arts and Design
2 Columbus Circle
New York, NYNetworking reception from 6–7 p.m., 7th Floor
Program from 7–8:30 p.m., Museum Theatre$25 in advance only
Please note that at-the-door registration will NOT be available for this eventIncludes hosted hors d’oeuvres and wine
Please register now, as registration will close prior to the event.
For information, call 888.864.8225 or e-mail Catherine Brennan.
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY
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Copyright © 2011 UC Regents. All rights reserved.
For print writers AND audio producers – this promises to be a great event. Evite and details below!
-mia
http://new.evite.com/services/links/HJXAB6DQRC
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You are warmly invited to an informal gathering and professional discussion April 28 sponsored by the Journalism & Women Symposium (JAWS) and the Mills College journalism program. “The Art of Audio – for Nonfiction Writers in a Trans-media World” brings radio reporters Rachel Louise Snyder of NPR and Sarah Varney of KQED to talk about how the audio story is another element of a literary & journalistic calling and how radio reporting can complement other skills when building a journalism career. Please tell others about the event at Mills College in Oakland if you think they might like to attend. We will begin and end with a wine reception; the discussion will start at 7 p.m.
Rachel Louise Snyder is the best-selling author of "Fugitive Denim: A Moving Story of People and Pants in the Borderless World of Global Trade (WW Norton)." She is also the host and executive producer of the weekly public radio program "The Global Guru," which uncovers mysteries of global culture around the world, as well as hosting a new global affairs show in Washington, DC called "Latitudes." Her work has also appeared in the New York Times Magazine, Travel & Leisure, the New Republic, and Slate, among others, and she received a 2006 Overseas Press Award for her work on the public radio show "This American Life." She lived in London for two years, before moving to Cambodia for six, and she recently relocated to Washington, D.C., where she is an assistant professor of literature in the MFA program at American University. She earned her MFA degree in Creative Writing with a focus in fiction from Emerson College in Boston.
Sarah Varney covers health for KQED's statewide news programs The California Report and Health Dialogues. She has reported extensively on health policy, health disparities, public health and environmental health, including a series of stories on the safety of alternatives to banned substances like phthalates. She began reporting for KQED in 2002 and has covered a range of subjects and stories – from the ethics, politics and science of stem cell research to the religious and legal challenges over gay marriage to the inside workings of baseball park food vendors. Sarah also reports regularly for National Public Radio's Morning Edition and All Things Considered.
Kat
Katherine Ann Rowlands
Assistant Managing Editor for News, Bay Area News Group-East Bay
Metro Editor, Contra Costa Times
President-elect, Journalism & Women Symposium (www.jaws.org)
925-943-8379 office or 510-872-2007 cell
Another upcoming event for you NYC folks. This looks like a good one.
-Mia
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2011 Dart Awards for Excellence in Coverage of Trauma
Wednesday, April 27, 2011
5:30 – 8:00 pm
* Reception: 5:30 pm * Awards and winners' round table: 6:00 pm *
Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism
World Room, 3rd floor
116th Street and Broadway
New York, NY
Crusading Against Silence:
High Impact Reporting on Invisible Victims
The 2011 Dart Awards recognize searing, in-depth investigations which exposed how important institutions – schools, universities and the military – betray the very people they are supposed to protect: victims of teenage bullying and campus rape, brain-injured soldiers and families left behind by war. Please join us in celebrating the winners and engaging in a conversation on journalism that is both hard-hitting and humane.
Panelists:
Kevin Cullen, Columnist, Boston Globe
Sonya N. Hebert, Photographer, Dallas Morning News
Kristen Lombardi, Reporter, Center for Public Integrity
T. Christian Miller, Reporter, ProPublica
Daniel Zwerdling, Correspondent, NPR
Moderator: Bruce Shapiro, Executive Director, Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma
This event is free and open to the public.
Winners of the the 2011 Dart Awards are The Boston Globe for "A Tormenting Problem: An Exploration of New-Age Bullying"; The Dallas Morning News for "Private Battles"; NPR and the Center for Public Integrity for "Seeking Justice in Campus Rapes"; and NPR and ProPublica for "Brain Wars: How the Military is Failing its Wounded."
Established in 1995, the annual Dart Awards recognize exemplary journalism on the impact of violence, crime, disaster and other traumatic events on individuals, families and communities. The Dart Awards are administered by the Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma, a project of the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia.
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Please see below and share widely…
In addition to the Social Media Weekend May 13-15 (with limited 15% off tickets) described below, here are several other events at the J-school over next few days:
* Tuesday, April 26
4-5 pm: "Storycraft." Long-form narrative writing coach Jack Hart shares his trade secrets to help you develop, craft, structure and edit your work. Room 601B of the Journalism School.
5:30-7 pm J-School Debates. Round 2. SPJ hosts another debate for students, faculty and industry, with the motion: "This House would accept government funding to finance its journalism operations." Featuring Columbia President Lee Bollinger; Chen Weihua, the Editor of the U.S. Edition of the China Daily; John Bentley, CBS reporter, Political unit; Dan Pashman, formerly of NPR, host of the Sporkful; and students Linette Lopez, Bilal Lakhani and Jonathan Hall. Professor Richard Wald will be chairing. Lecture Hall of the Journalism School.
* Thursday, April 28
7-9 pm: Delcorte Lecutre by Amy DuBois, editor-in-chief, Ebony The Delacorte Lectures examine various aspects of magazine journalism, presented in the spring semester each week by a leader in the field of magazine publishing.
* Monday, May 9
12-2 pm Social Media in the Middle East
Rasha Abdulla, Chair of Journalism and Mass Communication, American University in Cairo, "The People Want to Tweet the Revolution: How Social Media Brought Down Egypt's Dictator." Journalism 601B
* Tuesday, May 10
The release of The Story So Far: What We Know About the Business of Digital Journalism
A special report byBILL GRUESKIN
Dean of Academic Affairs, Columbia Journalism School
AVA SEAVE
Principal, Quantum Media
Adjunct Associate Professor, Columbia Business School
LUCAS GRAVES
Ph.D. Candidate, Columbia Journalism School
Discussion moderated by
KEN AULETTA
"Annals of Communication" Writer, The New YorkerAuthor, Googled: The End Of The World As We Know It
Opening remarks by
NICHOLAS LEMANN
Dean, Columbia Journalism School
and
EMILY BELL
Director, Tow Center for Digital Journalism
Columbia Journalism School
6:00 – 7:00 p.m. Reception, World Room
7:00 – 8:00 p.m. Panel Discussion, Lecture HallRSVP REQUIRED: http://fs12.formsite.com/jschoolacademics/form15/index.html
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Social Media Weekend at Columbia Journalism School http://bit.ly/socmediaweekendMay 13-15 (Friday evening to Sunday afternoon), the Continuing Ed department of Columbia Journalism School (@columbiajourn) is hosting a weekend of workshops, panels and keynotes to help journalists, media professionals and others understand social media better. We expect about 200 people from around the country to attend various parts of the weekend, which will be a fun, interactive, multi-day learning experience filled with new-fangled tools and services and sprinkled with some old-fashioned networking, too.
The opening event will give you a flavor of the weekend:
Friday 6-9 pm Opening Keynote & Reception features Andy Carvin (@ACarvin) of NPR, whose innovative Twitter work during #Egypt, #Libya, #Japan, etc, have gotten attention around the world, including a Washington Post Style cover profile; and CJR asked, "Is this the world's best Twitter account?"
SAMPLE TWEET: JOIN US! @ColumbiaJourn’s first Social Media Weekend of LEARNING, May 13-15 (Fri-Sun): http://bit.ly/socmediaweekend #socmediaweekend
NOTE: 75 tix get 15% off the weekend pass! http://j.mp/h5BeFTProf. Sree Sreenivasan | sree@sree.net
Dean of Student Affairs, Columbia Graduate School of Journalismhttp://www.sree.net | http://www.journalism.columbia.edu
Contributing editor, DNAinfo: http://bit.ly/dnainfosree
LINKEDIN: http://linkedin.com/in/sreenivasanFACEBOOK: http://facebook.com/sreetips
TWITTER: @sree – http://twitter.com/sree
Another gathering of Bay Area audio/multi-media producers. Don't miss it! Details and contact info below.
-mia
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Interesting Bay Area event next week in SF. Contact Lila Hood info@journalistcensus.org, 415-846-5346 for details.
-mia
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Please join us for a presentation and discussion of the
San Francisco Bay Area Journalist Census 2000-2010
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
6 to 8 p.m.
World Affairs Council of Northern California
312 Sutter St., San Francisco
6 to 6:30 p.m. — Reception with refreshments
6:30 to 8 p.m. — Presentation of the report, followed by a panel discussion with audience participation.
Find out how job loss has affected journalists in the Bay Area since 2000, talk with a few who have navigated the rapidly shifting media landscape and hear employment experts discuss where the job market is headed.
RSVP at http://journocensusevent.eventbrite.com
We hope to see you there!
Preliminary report summaries available at http://journalistcensus.org.
The San Francisco Bay Area Journalist Census a workforce study assessing changes in the media industry and job dislocation among Bay Area journalists, is sponsored by NOVA, a federally funded employment and training agency based in Sunnyvale. This event is cosponsored by the Northern California chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists and the Renaissance Journalism Center at San Francisco State University.
Upcoming events at the UCB J-school. Details below.
-mia
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A brown bag lunch with Rebecca Hamilton
When: Monday, April 11, 12:00 PM
Where: North Gate Hall Library
Rebecca Hamilton will visit the Graduate School of Journalism to share her most recent work on Sudan from where she just returned. Bec is a New America Foundation Fellow and a Pulitzer Center journalist/Washington Post special correspondent who has reported in Sudan over the last year. Her reporting with the Pulitzer Center has led to a series of articles in The Washington Post, The New Republic and Christian Science Monitor, and can be seen in her latest project, Sudan in Transition. Her most recent articles, "What about Darfur?" (The New Republic) and "One Referendum, Two New Nations" (The International Herald Tribune) can also be found on her project page.
The Price of Sex
A private screening for students, faculty and local community members
When: Tuesday, April 12, 7:00 PM
Where: Sutardja Dai Hall, Banatao Auditorium
The Price of Sex is a feature-length documentary about young Eastern European women who've been drawn into a netherworld of sex trafficking and abuse. Intimate, harrowing and revealing, it is a story told by the young women who were supposed to be silenced by shame, fear and violence.
Photojournalist Mimi Chakarova, who grew up in Bulgaria, takes us on a personal investigative journey, exposing the shadowy world of sex trafficking from Eastern Europe to the Middle East and Western Europe.
Filming undercover and gaining extraordinary access, Chakarova illuminates how even though some women escape to tell their stories, sex trafficking thrives.
A screening and discussion with:
Mimi Chakarova, director and producer
Stephanie Challberg, editor
Adam Keker, director of photography
Steve Talbot, executive producer
Joe Davidson, retired FBI agent
Robert Rosenthal, executive director of The Center for Investigative Reporting
RSVP REQUIRED — EVENT IS FULL
Tomas Brunegård, World Association of Newspapers and CEO of the Stampen Group
When: Tuesday, April 19, 12:45 PM
Where: North Gate Hall Library
Tomas Brunegård will discuss the differences between the American and Scandinavian media market, press freedom issues internationally, and newspaper company management.
Brunegård is currently a Vice President of the World Association of Newspapers, Chairman of the Swedish Publishers Association, and CEO of the media Stampen Group – the largest publisher in Sweden.
Richard Koci Hernandez: Multimedia Journalist
When: Tuesday, April 19, 7:00 PM
Where: Pacific Film Archive
This installment in the lynda.com Creative Inspirations documentary series features Richard Koci Hernandez, a national Emmy® award-winning video and multimedia producer who is at the forefront of the next generation of journalism.
Event Contact: dwhite@lynda.com
Democracy in Nepal: The Local and the National
Journalist and Civil Rights Activist, Kanak Mani Dixit
When: Wednesday, April 27, 6:00 PM
Where: North Gate Hall Library
Nepal has become a republic. The People's Movement of 2006 demanded an end to violent politics and a return to democracy, but the path is not clear. Nepal is declared a federal country, but the debate on form and content of federalism has barely begun. The unique experiment in local governance ended amidst the political uncertainty. Will it be revived? Will the values of pluralism and participatory democracy thrive?
Kanak Mani Dixit is a journalist, editor and civil rights activist, recognized in Nepal and elsewhere in South Asia as a voice for pluralism and democracy. He has helped shape the debate about his country’s political direction over the last two decades, and worked across many fields to promote the principles of social justice. Founder editor of both Himal Southasian, the liberal and politically independent regional monthly, and the Nepali-language Himal Khabarpatrika newsmagazine, [MORE]
To End All Wars: A Story of Loyalty and Rebellion, 1914-1918
When: Monday, May 2, 6:00 PM
Where: North Gate Hall Library
With a slide show of photographs, posters and a little music, Adam Hochschild gives a preview of his new book, To End All Wars: A Story of Loyalty and Rebellion, 1914-1918. In part, this is a master class on storytelling as he tells how, for this unusual account of the First World War, he chose a narrative strategy, scenes to describe, and characters through whom to tell the story. These include cabinet ministers, generals, conscientious objectors, feminists, a circus lion-tamer turned antiwar activist, and a number of journalists—ranging from those who wrote government propaganda to a imprisoned editor who published a clandestine newspaper for his fellow war resisters on toilet paper.
****** EVENTS OF INTEREST ******
40 Years of Silence: An Indonesian Tragedy
Film Screening + Discussion with Director Robert Lemelson, Department of Anthropology, UCLA
When: Friday, April 8, 12:00 PM
Where: 221 Kroeber Hall, Gifford Room
In one of the largest unknown mass-killings of the 20th century, an estimated 500,000 to 1,000,000 people were secretly and systematically killed in 1965 when General Suharto began a bloody purge of suspected "communists" in Indonesia through a complex and highly contested series of events where he ultimately gained power and the presidency.
"40 Years of Silence: An Indonesian Tragedy" follows the compelling testimonies of four individuals and their families, located in Central Java and Bali, two regions heavily affected by the purge, as they break the silence with an intimate look at what it was like for survivors after the mass-killings, during Suharto's New Order regime. Through their stories, the audience comes to understand the potential for retribution, rehabilitation, and reconciliation in modern-day Indonesia within this troubled historical context.
Please RSVP to emily.ng@berkeley.edu
The Inaugural Maharaj Kaul Memorial Lecture
"Pay-to-print": How Media Corruption Undermines Indian Democracy
When: Monday, April 11, 5:00 PM
Where: Blum Hall, B100 (conference room on the Plaza Level)
Palagummi Sainath, the 2007 winner of the Ramon Magsaysay award for journalism, literature, and creative communication arts, is an award winning Indian development journalist – a term he himself avoids, instead preferring to call himself a 'rural reporter', or simply a 'reporter' – and photojournalist focusing on social problems, rural affairs, poverty and the aftermaths of globalization in India. He spends between 270 and 300 days a year in the rural interior (in 2006, over 300 days) and has done so for the past 18 years. He is the Rural Affairs Editor for The Hindu, and the website India Together has been archiving some of his work in The Hindu daily for the past six years. His work has won praise from the likes of Nobel Laureate Amartya Sen who referred him as "one of the world's great experts on famine and hunger." He is the author of Everybody Loves a Good Drought: Stories from India's Poorest Districts.
Civil Liberties in the Age of Obama
When: Monday, April 18, 4:00 PM
Where: Sutardja Dai Hall, Banatao Auditorium
The Institute of International Studies and the Institute of Governmental Studies at UC Berkeley cordially invite you to attend this event as part of UC Berkeley's Political Science Department Travers Program. U.S. lawyer, journalist and defender of Wikileaks, Glenn Greenwald will lead this lecture.
Greenwald worked as a constitutional and civil rights litigator prior to becoming a contributor to Salon.com, where he focuses on political and legal topics. He is the author of three books: How Would a Patriot Act? (2006) and A Tragic Legacy (2007), both New York Times bestsellers; and Great American Hypocrites (2008).
In March 2009 he was selected, along with Democracy Now's Amy Goodman, as the recipient of the first annual Izzy Award by the Park Center for Independent Media, an award named after famed independent journalist I.F."Izzy" Stone and devoted to rewarding excellence in independent journalism. The selection panel cited Greenwald's "pathbreaking journalistic courage and persistence in confronting conventional wisdom, official deception and controversial issues."
Event Contact: 510.642.2472
Documentary: Better This World
54th San Francisco International Film Festival at BAM/PFA
When: Tuesday, April 26, 6:30 PM
Where: Pacific Film Archive
Set against the backdrop of the 2008 Republican National Convention amid bomb plots, arrests, and subsequent trials, this portrait of two young activists caught in the web of an opportunistic mentor and a desperate justice system poignantly describes not only the problems of power and authority, but also the ultimate power of forgiveness and love.
Filmmakers: Kelly Duane de la Vega and Katie Galloway
To tickets: http://www.bampfa.berkeley.edu/film/FN19045
To the trailer: http://www.pbs.org/pov/betterthisworld/trailer.php
To a recent review of the film: http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117944805
Event Contact: 510.642.1412
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Julie Hirano
Event & Fundraising Coordinator
Graduate School of Journalism
121 North Gate Hall
University of California at Berkeley
(work) 510.642.3394