Category Archives: Freelance Cafe East

NAM Weekly Newsletter (15 April 2011)

Just a reminder that the NAM newsletter has a ton of great resources/information in it. There are a bunch of great upcoming events/workshops/fellowships listed below, so check it out!! (FYI – FC has no affiliation with NAM. I'm just a fan.

-mia

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

 

NAM Access Washington
 

15 April 2011

 

DEADLINE EXTENDED! Attention California ethnic journalists! Four of you could win $1,000 each, and three of you could win $500 each. Seriously.

This is an easy-to-enter essay contest. Here is what you need to know:

California is gearing up to redraw state and congressional district lines to ensure fair representation for all Californians. But how should those lines be drawn?  For the first time a citizen's commission will make those determinations drawing on recommendations from people across the state about what constitutes "community."   As the story tellers and advocates for our audiences, ethnic media practitioners have an important responsibility to help identify, explain and describe the communities our media organizations serve. With that in mind, we at NAM are offering a contest that is open to all ethnic media reporters and content producers in the state… enter it and you could win $1,000 for describing the community your ethnic media organization serves.

NAM will select four winners and three runners-up. Deadline extended to April 22. So do it now. For complete details and entry form, go to this page.

If you have some questions or concerns about the state's redistricting effort, we have been covering it a lot recently. Please look these stories over:

New Panel Holds Key to Minority Political Power in California

In Redistricting Debate, What Role Should Citizenship Play?

Why Asians (and Other Minorities) Must Get Involved in CA Redistricting

Tracking The Crackdown: On Wednesday April 20th, New America Media and The Opportunity Agenda will be holding a teleconference call to discuss the most recent developments in immigration policy efforts at the state level. Now that efforts for comprehensive reform at the federal level have taken a backseat on the federal policy agenda, states around the country are dealing with the issue directly. Please join us on the call on April 20, 2011 at 10am PST/1pm EST.

NAM partner Azizah Magazine celebrated their 10th Anniversary in Atlanta, GA on April 9th. From everyone at New America Media to everyone at Azizah Magazine–Happy 10th Anniversary! We are proud to partner with a publication that does such great things for the community.

Last week's New York Ethnic Media Watchdog Workshop: About 60 reporters and editors from the ethnic media in the New York area attended the IRE Ethnic Media Workshop last weekend at the New York Times. The two-day boot camp, which took place from April 8 to 9, taught the journalists new investigative skills, including utilizing Web resources, using multi-media, and developing award-winning police and disaster stories. Speakers at the workshops include reporters and editors of the New York Times, IRE and El Nuevo Herald.

Follow the Money: Tracking Stimulus Dollars and Covering the Budget Crisis in Your Community is a free workshop for reporters — May 9-12, 20011 at the New England Center for Investigative Reporting in Boston — that will provide you with the tools and the expertise you need to for insightful coverage of the next big story taking shape in post-stimulus America — the budget crises gripping communities and states nationwide. You’ll also learn how to track the stimulus dollars that have flowed into your community in an effort to revitalize the economy.

Deadline to apply for the workshop is April 10. Tuition and travel underwritten by the McCormick Foundation. For details, click here or contact Joe Bergantino, Director/Senior Investigative Reporter, New England Center for Investigative Reporting at 617-353-4546.

And now for our weekly news roundup. Here are this week's most read stories:

Letter from Fukushima: A Vietnamese-Japanese Police Officer's Account This letter, written by a Vietnamese immigrant working in Fukishima as a policeman to a friend in Vietnam, has been circulating on Facebook among the Vietnamese diaspora. It is an extraordinary testimony to the strength and dignity of the Japanese spirit, and an interesting slice of life near the epicenter of Japan's current crisis, the Fukushima nuclear power plant.

Is Japan's Elite Hiding a Weapons Program Inside Nuclear Plants? One logical reason for the chain of lies about the Fukushima disaster: the nuclear industry is trying to prevent the discovery of weapons research facilities.

Eye on Arab Media: Facebook Loses Face After Intifada Page Is Pulled Facebook has outraged Arabs by shutting down “The Third Palestinian Intifada” page, based on questionable Israeli-government claims that the page incited violence.

Every workday, our stories are packaged up and sent to inboxes around the globe. They could just as easily come to yours. Sign up here for our new home delivery service. And remember for instant gratification, you can also follow us on Twitter or Facebook. And we have a lively presence on Tumblr.

If you are living close to Washington, D.C. or if you have the means to travel there, consider attending World Press Freedom Day. Focusing on "21st Century Media: New Frontiers, New Barriers," the event will be held May 1-3, 2011, in venues in throughout the capital city. Information is available here.

Events

Hmong National Conference
Apr 22-24 Marriott City Center Hotel in Minneapolis, Minnesota

San Francisco Diasporic Vietnamese Film Festival
Apr 23 SF State University in San Francisco, San Francisco

Asian Law Caucus' 39th Anniversary Dinner
Apr 29 Marriot Marquis in San Francisco, California

The American Arab Media 10 Years since Sept. 11
Apr 29 – May 1 Hyatt Regency Hotel in Dearborn, Michigan

Playground Raising
Apr 30 Wade Johnson Park in Oakland, California

A Place Of Her Own
May 5 SOMArts Cultural Center in San Francisco, California

Follow the Money
May 9 New England Center for Investigative Reporting in Boston, Massachusetts

15th Annual Immigrant Day
May 24 State Capitol in Sacramento, California

Netroots Nation
Jun 16-19 Minneapolis, Minnesota

 

Competitions

San Francisco Latino Film Festival's Cine+Mas
Deadline: Jun 3

Daniel Pearl Awards
Deadline: Jul 1

 

Career Opportunities

California Documentary Project Grant
Deadline: April 29

National Health Journalism Fellowship at USC Reporting Grants
Deadline: May 2

Beyond The Border: Covering The Immigration Phenomenon through Digital Media
Deadline: May 2

Coastal Impacts: A Marine Science Seminar for Journalists
Deadline: May 9

California Council for the Humanities: California Story Fund
Deadline: June 15

NAM Ethnic Media Directory | Advertise With Us | NAM Newsletters
New America Media | 275 9th Street, San Francisco, CA 94103 | Tel. 415-503-4170
www.newamericamedia.org

Magnetic Media Preservation Internship Opportunity, NYC

Skill-building internship in Manhattan/Long Island. Small travel expense voucher available. Details below.
-mia

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

Magnetic Media Preservation Internship

The Standby Program is seeking an intern to apprentice in our video and audio preservation program. Interns will gain valuable hands on experience and participate in the day-to-day workings of a magnetic media preservation facility designed specifically to address the needs of the arts and cultural community.

Standby is a non-profit media arts service organization founded 28 years ago that provides artists with access to a variety of media technology by forming partnerships with commercial post-production facilities. Standby preservation clients include:

Anthology Film Archives, Appalshop, Barcelona Museum of Contemporary Art (MACBA), Dia Arts, Estate Project for Artists with AIDS, Experimental Television Center, Franklin Furnace, Hallwalls Contemporary Arts Center, The Kitchen, Mix Festival NYC, Muse TV, Museum of Modern Art, Museum of the Moving Image, New York Public Library, Orphans Symposium, The Poetry Project, as well as a host of individual artists.

Intern candidates should have an interest in experimental film and video, time based art, and social issue media. Work will take place in both our Manhattan and Long Island facilities. A small stipend will be provided to offset travel expenses.

Skills acquired may include:

• Archival handling of magnetic materials

• Tape inspection and evaluation

• Operation of waveform monitors, vectorscopes and audio meters

• Operation of time base correctors and proc amps

• Equipment maintenance and repair

• Tape migration

• Metadata collection and database entry

Preferred qualifications:

• Understanding of basic audio and video production

• Familiarity with Mac based editing systems

• Knowledge of signal flow and connectors

• Experience in a library, archive, museum, post-production or media access facility

• A desire to learn about the technical aspects of magnetic media preservation and conservation

Interested applicants should e-mail a resume and cover letter to:

Maria Venuto

Executive Director

Standby Program

245 W 55th St., 10th Fl.

New York, NY 10019

info@standby.org

Tel: 212.206.7858

GROW THOSE EARS – Apply for Sounds Elemental in NYC, deadline May 6

This week-long audio workshop in NYC comes highly recommended by my colleagues. Details below.
-mia

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

=GROW THOSE EARS=
Apply for Sounds Elemental in NYC!
June 13 – 17, 2011

Take a sonic plunge and spend a week this summer at Harvestworks in NYC immersing yourself in sound with our popular Sounds Elemental intensive. Our winter 2010 session focusing on ”sky” received rave reviews from producers, including "I feel like my ears grew over the course of the week… I have a stronger, deeper sense of locating myself in the world in relation to sound." This time around, we're taking on Metal (June 13 – 17). Are you up to the challenge? We're looking for ten producers to step up who are open to learning unconventional approaches to assembling sound and telling story.

The deadline is less than a month away: applications are due Friday, May 6, 2011. Please forward this along to anyone who wants to spend a week giving their ears a work-out. We're also accepting applications for our winter intensive, Wood (December 12 – 16).

This opportunity may be especially appealing to those working primarily in traditional narrative and documentary formats eager to experiment with unconventional approaches to assembling sound and telling story. Producers benefit from intensely individualized attention from renowned sound artists-teachers, NYC-based composer and performer Michael Schumacher, Harvestworks’ Hans Tammen, and public radio producer and musician Brenda Hutchinson. New York Times new media editor Amy O’Leary will also lead an afternoon mini-dive into audio slideshows – called "fascinating," "awesome," and "the highlight of the week" by participants.

The cost is $700. A non-refundable $350 deposit is required upon acceptance. AIR members who live outside of New York City are eligible for a small stipend to help underwrite the cost of the intensive and travel to NYC. _Attendance is mandatory for all sessions. If you are unable to attend each day of the intensive, please do not apply._

Learn more:
http://www.airmedia.org/PageInfo.php?CatID=5&PageID=562

Listen to instructor and AIRster Brenda Hutchinson's audio

montage of Sounds Elemental: Sky:
http://airmedia.org/audio/SE_SKY_LongFinalMIX.mp3

Apply:
http://www.airmedia.org/PageInfo.php?CatID=5&PageID=563

> THE DEADLINE FOR APPLYING IS FRIDAY, MAY 6. <<

Questions? Contact AIR's Membership Director Erin Mishkin at
erin@airmedia.org.

+++AIR is everywhere.+++
www.airmedia.org

Funding for AIR comes from our members and the generous support of the
Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the New York State Council on the Arts (NYSCA), the Robert E. Davoli and Eileen McDonagh Charitable Foundation, Recovery.gov, and the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), which believes that a great nation deserves great art.

Association of Independents in Radio
P.O. Box 220400
Boston, MA 02122
Phone: 617-825-4400

roommates sought for commercial live/work loft space in SF’s SOMA

From one of our Bay Area members – sounds like a great opportunity for the right person/people.
-mia

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

I've just signed a lease for a commercial loft in SOMA that I plan on building out into live/work studios AND I'm looking for roommates. It's a really unique setup in S.F. and I'd love to get some creative people in there (like writers and radio producers!).  PLUS, I'm planning on building in a recording studio.

I'm looking to have 5 people total, and I have 2 guys signed on already so it would be great to get some gals in the mix.

Call for Pitches–Snap Judgment

Snap Judgment needs your stories. Details below!
-mia

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


Hey folks, Snap Judgment is calling for another round of pitches. You know the deal, we want first-person, dramatic, true stories. They must have a beginning, middle and end, strong dramatic tension and a narrative arc. No news hooks. Submit brief story ideas to pitches@snapjudgment.org

Upcoming Episodes…

Spaceman:
Stories about NASA, space camp, life on mars, marrying the rocketman, finding a piece of shuttle in your swimming pool, crashing down to earth or inventing astronaut ice-cream. Examples include the story of a man building his own spacecraft, and a NASA pilot in trouble.

Infestation:
Stories about bugs, insects and things that crawl into your sleeping bag at night. Has an insect taken over your life? Are you the owner of a pet millipede, attacked by ants in central Africa or bitten by a scorpion? Did a spider bite give you super-powers? Did you find your way home in a Malaria-induced fever hallucination? Examples include a love story based on a termite infestation, a flying Japanese cockroach and accidentally jumping into a pool of spiders.

Cheaters:

This one speaks for itself–stories about getting something unfairly. Cheating in love, sports, school, or work. Cheating the system, cheating the man, cheating yourself or cheating death, it's wide open folks.

Villains:
Stories about the bad guy, or good people forced to do bad things. Confronting an evil first grade teacher, escaping a brutal island kingdom, hatching a plan with a criminal mastermind, getting your ex-lover fired,  or having coffee with a warlord. Examples include the stories of a rebel-leader turned taxi driver, a toxic polluter giving local residents cancer, and the discovery of medical malfeasance.

Big Poppa
This is our father's day episode and we want stories about dads. Becoming a dad unexpectedly, losing a dad, finding a dad, shoving a dad off a cliff. Examples include one father saving his daughter from religious persecution and a father's dying wish for a bowling game.

The Wiz: Stories with a Wizard of Oz theme. Think creatively, not just searches for brain, heart and courage, but stories about going home, emerald cities, fake wizards, good witches, tornadoes and your little dog too. Examples include the story of a heart transplant recipient experiencing the memories of his donor.

Thanks so much, if you're unclear on what we want, please check out the "IS YOU STORY RIGHT FOR SNAP JUDGMENT" flowchart.

Anna

 


Anna Sussman
510-501-5959
www.Snapjudgment.org
www.backpackjournalist.org

WEBCASTS Today – Meet Ira Glass + NYT’s Arthur Sulzberger & Janet Robinson discuss the pay wall

Two FREE webcasts happening TODAY (Tuesday, 4/5) at the Columbia jschool. Links below.
-mia

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

Dear colleagues: Today, we are hosting two major webcasts at @ColumbiaJourn.

The first, at 5 pm, is being hosted by Alex Hotz, one of our Digital Media Associates – a conversation with Ira Glass of "This American Life." If you have questions for Glass, you can ask them live or email Alex in advance. See announcement below.

The second, at 7 pm, is a live VIDEO simulcast of our in-person event with NYT's top two biz-side folks, Arthur Sulzberger and Janet Robinson, in conversation with Bill Grueskin, our Academic Dean: http://bit.ly/nytpaidcontent (seats still available if you show up early – otherwise, catch it on the web.

SAMPLE TWEET: Webcast & live event w/ NYT's Sulzberger & Robinson, with @ColumbiaJourn's @BGrueskin: http://bit.ly/nytpaidcontent

⇒ TIP: Want to get an automagic email one hour ahead of every Columbia J-school webcast? Create a free account at http://blogtalkradio.com/columbiajournalism and hit the "fav" for favorite button.

==>   Tuesday, April 5, 5-6 pm ET  [ see local time around the world: http://timeanddate.com/s/2064 ] http://bit.ly/cjglass

Meet Ira Glass, creator, host and producer of WBEZ’s “This American Life.” Columbia Journalism School (@ColumbiaJourn) presents a conversation with legendary radio producer Ira Glass. Glass will discuss his career in public radio, what he looks for in a narrative, the changes taking place in public radio and the future of This American Life. If you have any questions you’d like Ira to answer contact Alexander Hotz, alum and Digital Media Associate at alexandermhotz@gmail.com or tweet him at @hotzington. Moderated by Hotz & Prof. Sree Sreenivasan (@sree). LISTEN LIVE OR LATER TO A RECORDING: You can also call-in live via phone, Skype, etc: +1-646-915-9583 (to listen or ask questions) or http://bit.ly/cjglass

SAMPLE TWEET: Meet @IraGlass of @ThisAmerLife via @ColumbiaJourn webcast, Tues 5p, interviewed by @hotzington and @sree: http://bit.ly/cjglass #cuj11

⇒ TIP: Want to get an automagic email one hour ahead of every Columbia J-school webcast? Create a free account at http://blogtalkradio.com/columbiajournalism and hit the "fav" for favorite button.

Two upcoming online micro-conferences from Webbmedia Group

Interesting concept. Tickets are $59 for the first conference, and $175 for the second. Details and links below.
-mia

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

Hi everyone. Just wanted to give you a heads up that we're planning two micro-conferences in May and June. We're experimenting with a new conference format, which includes a panel session, a Twitter attendee lounge, tech tools demos and virtual swag bags.

The first is our Mid-Year Tech Trends Micro-Conference on Saturday, May 21. Full details: http://www.webbmediagroup.com/10-tech-trends-microconference.html 
The second is our QR Code Micro-Conference on Wednesday, June 22. Full details: http://www.webbmediagroup.com/qr-code-microconference.html
Tickets officially go on sale tomorrow. We do have a limited number of press passes for those interested in covering the events. Please let me know if you have any questions. Meantime, we're available to talk more about tech trends, barcodes and why we're producing virtualized micro-conferences if you'd like…

Cheers,
Amy
____________________
Amy Webb
CEO + Principal
Webbmedia Group, LLC

Philadelphia workshop on covering veterans this Friday/Saturday – FREE

Not sure if there are any Philly-based folks on this list, but this FREE workshop sounds pretty good. Pass it on to your colleagues!
-mia

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

The Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma of the Columbia Journalism School invites you to a two-day professional training workshop April 1 & 2, 2011 in Philadelphia on covering returning veterans.

In-depth reporting on veterans, especially at the local and regional level, poses special challenges – from navigating the VA and local agencies to understanding the psychological injuries many soldiers carry home. We’ve designed this free workshop (funded by Philadelphia’s Scattergood Foundation) to help reporters and editors in the greater Philadelphia region both develop a rich array of authoritative expert sources,  and learn ideas and strategies for high-impact local stories and projects on veterans from award-winning colleagues.  


The workshop will offer practical tips and expert sources on issues including among others:

·      PTSD, TBI and mental health

·      Soldiers and families

·      Navigating the VA and vets’ culture

·      Women veterans

·      Suicide

·      Veterans, violence and the criminal justice system

·      High-impact local stories on veterans’ issues

Speakers include T. Christian Miller of Pro Publica; Helen Benedict, author of The Lonely Soldier; Iraq veteran and former U.S. Congressman Patrick Murphy; the Hon. Patrick Dugan, Philadelphia Veterans’ Court; Kelly Kennedy, USA Today and author, They Fought For Each Other; and many others, including a wide range of experts on veterans issues.


There is no cost to attend.

More information can be found at: http://dartcenter.org/content/upcoming-workshop-in-philadelphia-on-veterans-reporting

To register, please contact Kate Black at kate.black@dartcenter.org

TAL Theme List

The latest call for pitches from This American Life, courtesy of the Association of Independents in Radio. Good luck!
-mia

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

Dear This American Life friends and contributors,

We've got a new round of themes-in-progress and we're coming to you
for story pitches, thoughts and suggestions for our upcoming shows.

How this process works: When you send in a story idea to me, I'll
respond with a generic email letting you know that I received your
pitch and that I've read it. I promise. I read every pitch. (I
won't send you the auto response until I've read your pitch so expect
a bit of a delay getting that email.) If we think the pitch is right
for us, or if we need more information from you, I'll send you another
email asking for more info on the story or letting you know we'd like
to commission the story. But if you don't hear back from us within two
weeks, beyond the initial auto-reply email, it means the story just
isn't right for us or for the needs of that particular show. The idea
of doing it this way is just to get through pitches and get back to
everyone a little more quickly.

Like always, these themes are shows we're actively pursuing right now
but we're always on the lookout for new stories or ideas. So if
you've got a story that you think would work especially well for us
but doesn't fit a specific theme listed below, please send it along
anyway.

Thanks so much for your pitches. All of us here are very appreciative.

Best,
Julie
(julie@thislife.org)

SEE NO EVIL: We have one story for this show about the aftermath of a
murder in a family. Actually within the family. Two brothers are
struggling with the death of their mother and the additional difficult
layer that it’s their other brother who killed her. He’s in prison now
and the brothers and their families are trying to figure out what
place he’s going to have in their family once he’s out. Everyone
acknowledges that the murder was an unspeakable act, but their mother
was abusive to all of them, particularly to the brother that killed
her. They’re not trying to justify it, they’re just not sure how they
look past this act of evil that’s at the center of all their lives
now. Or whether they should. In another story, an employee at the
Kennedy Center gift shop tries to figure out why the register is
coming up short every month … they’re actually losing money. It
takes the employee a really long time to see the obvious culprit
that’s staring him in the face. The See No Evil show is coming up
soon, but we’re still looking for some smallish things to fill out the
show. We sent this out before, but we’re still on the lookout for
parents and children who have basically the same political views as
their parent (liberal or conservative) but as their parent ages – and
has the time to watch more and more cable TV news – the parent's views
have become more extreme. And, to the kid, more annoying. In order
for this to work, we’d need you to have very specific anecdotes. What
are the sound bites you’ve heard from your parents? What was the last
issue you talked about where you thought your parents were just
parroting a talk show host? We’re also considering a small segment
that would feature people talking about something annoying that
happens in their lives that they try desperately to ignore. Like say
the person on the bus next to you who doesn’t seem to mind that their
leg is brushing up against yours. Forcefully. Or the parent on your
kid’s soccer team who won’t stop talking about the incredible teeth
whitening product they’ve just discovered. If you have suggestions for
any kind of moment where you have to put your head in the sand and
pretend like everything is ok, we’d love to hear from you.

KNOW WHEN TO FOLD ‘EM: Stories about trying to figure out when it’s
time to give it up. Or get over it. We have one story about a
tragedy that spurs an entire family – aunts, uncles, cousins and all –
into nearly full-time political activism. But now, several years on,
the family has to take stock and look at what has been gained and what
has been lost. And they have to ask themselves whether or not it’s
been worth it. In another story, a guy spends years itching for a
fight with his dad but finally realizes, when it’s almost too late,
that he should just give it up. So we’re looking for more stories
about people who fail to assess when it’s time to give up and move on.
 Funny stories would be great for this show and, of course, stories
about relationships. Maybe someone who is just willfully blind to how
incompatible they are with their partner? Or maybe a story about
someone who consistently gives up too soon? Poker stories (people who
stubbornly hold on to ridiculous hands?) would, of course, be perfect
for this show.

GOSSIP: We'd like to do a show about the strange and surprising ways
that gossip works. We've got one possible story about American
researchers in Malawi, who track the way local communities think about
AIDS. For more than a decade, they've been giving notebooks to certain
women in Malawi, who are tasked with writing down whatever gossip they
hear about AIDS in their villages – who's got it, how they got it, why
they got it, whether they're getting treated, etc. In this way,
they've figured out how people's ideas, and misconceptions, about the
disease have changed – and how to better fight it. We'd love to have
more pitches about the good side of gossip, the utility of gossip. Or
perhaps well-meaning gossip that went very wrong. Or stories about how
gossip spreads in unexpected ways — maybe you told the guy sitting
next to you in an airplane a top-secret story, and then heard it
repeated back to you at a party three years later. That kind of thing.
Stories about how gossip has changed history would be great, too. We'd
probably like to avoid stories of straight-up mean gossip that had
awful consequences – just because we're all familiar with those
stories. That said, if there's a really great one, we'd certainly
consider it.

WOULD YOU RATHER: There is a growing movement in addiction programs
called “wet houses.” A wet house is essentially a homeless shelter
for alcoholics where they can go and drink, often until they die. Most
of the residents are lifetime alcoholics with multiple DWIs, arrests,
injuries, hospital stays, and failed trips to rehab. The idea is that
they will cost the state less money drinking with a roof over their
heads and being looked after by an in-house nurse than they would if
they were out on the street. It’s a program that fills many people
with a mixture of empathy and outrage but also raises the question of,
really, what is the ultimate priority here? Asking the question
“Would you rather x or y” is often an incredibly precise way to
prioritize preferences and we’re looking for more stories where – when
faced with a choice – the right answer becomes clear. It’s also a
really fun game that I play a lot with my family. Like, to my
brother: “Would you rather live in a housing project in Manhattan or
in our hometown in Western Illinois? The project might be a little
scary but you’d get real estate in Manhattan” vs. the sort of hometown
drawbacks that my brother understands but I don’t need to list here.
Or to my husband: “If you HAD to be married to one of my friends, ‘x’
or ‘y’, who would it be?” Then I know exactly who my husband wants to
leave me for. See? Endless fun! Stories that will work for this
show are stories where there are two (maybe three) clear choices and
each has its benefits and drawbacks. A political, economic, or
budgetary story would be great for this show (what is gained and what
is lost). Or a story about being stuck between a lofty ideal and a
pragmatic solution. Maybe stories about choosing a career or a
relationship or a school?

GOOD OL’ BOYS: A few years ago, at a hospital in a small town in West
Texas, two nurses filed complaints against a doctor who, they charged,
was acting unethically. They said the doctor would sometimes advise
patients to stop taking their prescribed medications and switch,
instead, to homeopathic remedies. And it just so happened the doctor
himself SOLD these remedies on the side! They said the doctor would do
unsanctioned operations in non-sterile rooms, perform unnecessary GYN
exams and other questionable things. Within a few months of filing the
complaints, though, the nurses themselves were brought up on charges
of somehow violating patient confidentiality by reporting the doctor’s
actions to the state Medical Board. The charges against the nurses
were pretty dubious and the nurses were quickly acquitted but what was
remarkable was simply the fact the nurses were charged at all. It
would suggest pretty outrageous actions on the part of the doctor, the
hospital, the sheriff and, even, the District Attorney. The nurses
say their story may seem crazy but it wasn’t all that surprising to
them – they say they knew what would happen if they went up against
the Good Ol’ Boys. “Good Ol’ Boy network” is a term that’s used a lot
in small towns – particularly in the South – but it exists in various
incarnations all over the place. We’re now looking for more stories
about powerful cliques that seem impenetrable and often-times above
the law. Wall Street seems like ripe ground for a GOB kind of story.
Or schools or clubs. Just because this Texas doctor story is sort of
large and sprawling, smaller and more personal stories would be great
for this show. Maybe a group of girls that make all the decisions?
Or a seemingly innocuous group that actually has huge influence?
Unexpected gatekeepers? It’d be great to hear from a person who
suspects that s/he is actually part of a “good ol’ boys” network.

THE MISSING PIECE: On the second day of her first job as a social
worker, a woman meets a 12 year old boy who, she thinks, everyone else
has given up on. He’s been in and out of juvie, never had a stable
home, been pushed around the state system. So she makes the kid her
first project: she helps his mother find a job, relocates the family
to a better neighborhood with better schools, gives the boy
self-confidence and a sense of responsibility by having him baby-sit
her kids. The boy thrives, gets better grades and stops getting into
trouble. Until one day, five years later, the boy shoots and kills a
college cheerleader and leaves her boyfriend for dead. For the last
15 years, the social worker has been wracked with the feeling that
this shouldn’t have happened – there must have been something she
could’ve done that would have saved the boy. The social worker now
has three kids of her own and has adopted her four nephews after they
were removed from her sister’s home, and she is worried that whatever
mistake she made with the boy, she’ll now make raising her own kids –
what’s to keep them from going off the rails, too? What could make
the difference? For this show, we’d like to find more stories about
people searching for a piece that could solve a puzzle. Or searching
for the answer to something or a missing ingredient. Science stories
would be great for this show, or business stories. Or maybe just a
story about losing something? We also have a hilarious story about a
guy getting his appendix removed so even just talking about the thing
that is missing could work for this show, too.

MY CHURCHILL MOMENT: We keep seeing the phrase “Churchill moment”: in
British politics, American politics (Obama has had at least two
already), Israeli politics….someone is always declaring or wondering
if some speech or some crisis is so-and-so’s “Churchill moment.” When
we started poking around on the web, even individual people talk about
Churchill moments. But there seems to be some confusion about what IS
a Churchill moment. Does it refer to moments where someone looks the
nation straight in the eye and delivers bad news, like when Churchill
told the British at the start of WW2 “I have nothing to offer but
blood, toil, tears and sweat?” Or does it refer to moments where
someone who has been in the political wilderness for years (as
Churchill was) suddenly gets their day in power? Or does it describe
moments where someone has an especially witty comeback, like Churchill
always seemed to? Does it encompass all these? So the idea for the
theme would be “My Churchill Moment.” Possible Churchill moment
stories: small-scale, personal Churchill moments where the story has a
speech in it that rallies everyone in spite of being full of bad news
(“The second half of this game is going to suck even worse than the
first half, but bear down and let’s beat these bastards!”); or maybe a
missed opportunity to make such a speech; a union story could work—a
leader or member trying to tell other members something they don’t
want to hear; maybe a story about the fallout from making a witty but
mean comment, i.e. what happens after a Churchill moment. Failed
Churchill moments would also work: the rousing speech that did not
rouse people; etc.