Category Archives: Freelance Cafe West

REMINDER – Hudson Valley freelancer gathering TONIGHT, Tivoli, 8pm

Hey folks. Just a reminder about tonight's Hudson Valley freelancer gathering at the Black Swan – 66 Broadway in Tivoli, 8pm. I know the weather is not looking good, but I'm planning on going regardless, defying this ridiculous endless winter.

This event is open to everyone, so feel free to invite friends, co-workers, anyone who might like a night out to socialize with fellow self-employees.

I've created a facebook invite if you want to see who's planning on coming, and again, it's an open invite, so please do spread the word.

http://www.facebook.com/freelancecafe?ref=ts#!/event.php?eid=196771733677837

See you soon!
Best,
Mia

845-444-4034

one open spot in this weekend’s Bay Area Soup-to-Nuts documentary radio training workshop

Another Bay Area opportunity to learn radio documentary from one of the best. One spot left in Claire Schoen's two day intensive!
-mia

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"From Soup to Nuts"

A 2-day intensive

on documentary radio production

offered in the San Francisco Bay Area

 

Logistics:

This seminar will be held March 26 and 27, 2011.

Each day's class will run from 10 am to 5:30 pm,

including 6 hours of class work, plus lunch and breaks.

 

It will be held at Claire’s studio in Berkeley, California

Class will be limited to 8 students.

The cost of the 2-day seminar is $250.

 

The Course:

Through lectures, group discussion, Q & A, written handouts, and lots of audio demos, this two-day class will explore the ins and outs of creating a long-form radio documentary. Designed to meet the needs of mid-level producers, this seminar will also be accessible to individuals who have little or no experience in radio production.

 

Compelling audio documentary incorporates a creative weave of elements including narration, interviews, music, vérité scenes, character portraits, dramatizations, performances, archival tape and ambience beds. Students learn how these elements serve to paint a picture in sound.

 

Emphasis will be put on the production process. To this end, the class will examine the steps of concept development, research, pre-production, recording techniques, interviewing, writing, organizing tape, scripting, editing and mixing required to create an audio documentary.

 

Most importantly, we will focus on the art of storytelling. We will discuss dramatic structure, taking the listener through introduction, development and resolution of a story. And we will explore how character development brings the listener to the heart of the story.

 

The Teacher:

Claire Schoen is a media producer, with a special focus on documentary radio. As a producer/director, she has created over 20 long-form radio documentaries and several documentary films, as well as numerous short works. As a sound designer she has recorded, edited and mixed sound for film, video, radio, webstory, museums and theater productions. Her radio documentaries have garnered numerous awards including NFCB Golden and Silver Reels, two Gracies, two Clarion awards, a PASS and a New York International Festival Silver. She has also shared in both a Peabody and a DuPont-Columbia.

 

Claire has taught documentary radio scriptwriting and production at numerous venues including U.C. Berkeley's Graduate School of Journalism, Duke University’s Center for Documentary Studies, Third Coast Audio Festival Conferences and AIR's mentorship program.

 

To Register:

Contact Claire Schoen

cschoen@earthlink.net  •  510-540-5106  •   www.claireschoenmedia.com

 

 

 

Second Kitchen Sisters Workshop added March 31st, 2-5pm

Bay Area folks interested in audio – this is not to be missed if you want to learn from the masters. Details below.
-mia

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Dear Friends,

We have added an afternoon workshop on March 31st from 2:00-5:00 PM. There are a few spaces still left. Email kitchen@kitchensisters.org if you'd like to come.

Original announcement:

Davia Nelson of The Kitchen Sisters is conducting a basic recording and interviewing workshop in San Francisco on Thursday, March 31 from 10:00 AM to 1:00 PM (this session is now full) and 2:00 PM to 5:00 PM. The three-hour workshop is for people who want to acquire and hone their skills for an array of projects–radio, online storytelling, oral histories, audio slide shows, family histories, and other multimedia endeavors.

We will cover miking techniques, sound gathering, use of archival audio, how to make interviewees comfortable, how to frame evocative questions that make for compelling storytelling, how to listen (which is harder than it looks), how to use interviews in conjunction with images, field recording techniques, recording equipment and more. The workshop is customized to fit the projects you are working on.

People who attend come from radio, film, multimedia, newspapers, photography, oral history, historical societies, farms, music, writing, libraries, archives, web design and beyond. The groups are always lively and good contacts are made.

The fee is $115. Of course, there will be a snack. The workshops are held in Francis Coppola's historic Zoetrope building in North Beach at 916 Kearny Street (at the corner of Columbus).

If you, or someone you know is interested, email kitchen@kitchensisters.org

Casey Medals for Meritorious Journalism honoring distinguished coverage of children, youth, and families, deadline April 15

Apply now for the 17th annual Casey Medals for Meritorious Journalism honoring distinguished coverage of children, youth and families. First-place winners receive $1,000 and are honored in an awards ceremony in Washington, D.C. Categories include newspaper, video, magazine, audio, multimedia and photojournalism. First-place winners will also be considered for the America’s Promise Journalism Awards for Awareness and Action, presented by the America’s Promise Alliance. Alliance winners receive $5,000 and will be announced in October. Work must be published or broadcast between Jan. 1 and Dec. 31, 2010. Entry deadline: Friday, April 15, 2011 at 5 p.m. EST.
http://www.journalismcenter.org/content/history-and-guidelines

The awards were created to inspire and recognize exemplary reporting on children and families. Winning stories offer a fresh take on a significant issue, show enterprise in research and reporting and demonstrate masterful storytelling and impact. Judging is conducted by respected journalists and journalism educators.

The Journalism Center on Children & Families is a nonprofit resource center based at the University of Maryland’s Philip Merrill College of Journalism. More than 4,500 journalists have competed for Casey Medals since 1994. The awards are funded by the Annie E. Casey Foundation.

Journalism Center on Children & Families
University of Maryland
Room 1100, Knight Hall
College Park, MD 20742-7111
www.journalismcenter.org

Getty Images Announces Grant Guidelines for Editorial Photography and Nonprofit Work, Deadline May 1

Hey folks. Funding opportunity below for photogs and filmmakers.
-mia

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Call for Proposals – Getty Images Announces Grant Guidelines for Editorial Photography and Nonprofit Work – Deadline: May 1

For more information or to apply, follow this link: http://imagery.gettyimages.com/getty_images_grants/overview.aspx

Getty Images has announced the guidelines for its 2011 Grants for Editorial Photography and Grants for Good programs.

The Getty Images Grants for Editorial Photography program is designed to provide professional photographers with the creative freedom to create compelling social, political, and cultural stories. Both individual photographers and those who work as teams may apply for the program, which will award five grants of $20,000 each to as well as additional resources such as project execution guidance from Getty Images photo editors and support from the Getty Images communications team. Applications will be accepted online beginning April 1, 2011, with a deadline of May 1, 2011. (Please note: The May 1 deadline is for professional photographers only; Getty Images will announce guidelines for student photographers later in the year.)

The Getty Images Grants for Good program is designed to support photographers/filmmakers and communications professionals who use imagery to promote positive change in the world. The program will award two grants of $15,000 each to cover photographer, filmmaker, and agency costs as they create compelling new imagery for the nonprofit of their choice. Teams or groups of photographers or filmmakers may apply for the grants in 2011.

For more information or to apply, follow this link: http://imagery.gettyimages.com/getty_images_grants/overview.aspx

UC Berkeley J-School Announces Competition for Two Investigative Reporting Fellowships

Great fellowship opportunity at my alma mater. Deadline April 25. Details below.
-Mia

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J-School Announces Competition for Two Investigative Reporting Fellowships
From the Graduate School of Journalism | March 1, 2011

BERKELEY – To help develop a new generation of investigative reporters in an era of cutbacks at major news organizations, UC Berkeley’s Graduate School of Journalism today announced a call for entries for its fifth-annual competition for yearlong fellowships in investigative reporting. Two fellowships will be awarded in June.

The fellowships are open to all working investigative journalists, but preference will be given to graduates of UC Berkeley’s master’s program in journalism. A strong track record of successfully reporting on complex subjects in the public interest is required.

Applicants will be chosen based on their qualifications, their proposed area of investigation and the strength of references. Candidates must have strong organizational skills as well as the ability to self-motivate and work both productively and independently in a congenial newsroom environment. Story proposals should involve subjects under-reported by traditional news organizations. Proposals may include print, broadcast and multimedia components.

This year’s fellowships are made possible by core grants from the Sandler Foundation and the Hellman Foundation along with donations from Scott and Jennifer Fearon, The Financial Times and Jerome and Hillary Simon.

“Forty years ago, when I got into the business of reporting, I dreamed that I would find a place, a paper, a school that would let me pursue a story without fear or favor wherever it led,” said Logan Professor Lowell Bergman, the director of the Investigative Reporting Program.

“Today, I have the privilege to able to raise and disperse funds to do that for a new generation dedicated to reporting in the public interest. These fellowships, I am proud to say, have been a great success for the participants and for me. They have opened me up to new stories and new ways of doing them in the digital age. And they have allowed me, and the others involved in the IRP to share our sources, our ‘tricks of the trade’ and the hard lessons that have come from decades in the business,” Bergman said.

Winners of the 2010-2011 fellowships were Trevor Aaronson and Lee Wang, a 2006 graduate of the journalism school. Mr. Aaronson was formerly a reporter for the Commercial Appeal in Memphis, Tennessee, and a staff writer for Village Voice Media in Miami and Fort Lauderdale. Ms. Wang, a documentary filmmaker, has worked for PBS’ “Frontline” and “Frontline/World”, MSNBC and Newsweek.

Mr. Aaronson’s project on sources in federal criminal investigations will run as a cover story for a national magazine in collaboration with a major broadcaster, and will air on television and radio this fall.

“By providing a year to carry out a deep investigation, the Fellowship is one of the best jobs in journalism,” says Aaronson. “Lowell knows how to identify the untold stories and how to tell those difficult stories with authority across platforms.”

Lee Wang, developing a broadcast investigation of the secret world of immigration courts says, “Working with IRP is not only an opportunity to dig deep into a subject, free of the ‘bottom line’. It’s a chance to be part of a unique community of thoughtful and tenacious journalists committed to the craft of investigative storytelling,” Wang says.

The IRP also occasionally awards grants to support journalists not selected for the fellowships. Applicants will be notified if they have been placed in a special category for consideration for one of these grants.

Tim McGirk, a veteran investigative reporter and former Time magazine bureau chief and graduate of UC Berkeley; cinematographer Zachary Stauffer, a 2008 graduate of the journalism school; and veteran print reporter Matt Isaacs, a 1999 graduate of the school were the applicants chosen to receive project-specific funding last year.

Mr. McGirk is currently contributing reporting to a PBS Frontline documentary on Afghanistan, and continues his investigation of intelligence gathering in South Asia for publication and broadcast this fall.

“The IRP is like a fantastic laboratory for stories,” McGirk says. “It gives you all the tools you need, contacts, technical know-how and sage advice, that enable you to experiment with different forms of storytelling. I wanted to try switching from print to making documentaries, and IRP has given me an invaluable assist in making that giant leap.”

Matt Isaacs continues his groundbreaking investigations into corruption in China in collaboration with Reuters, and is in preliminary development of both a documentary and a book. “At this point, I’ve gone beyond the deep-dive of reporting into entirely uncharted water; moving into books and television and developing material that actually leads to criminal investigations,” Isaacs said.

“I’ve never worked in a more supportive environment,” says Isaacs. “This is more than an opportunity to keep doing meaningful journalism. It’s a chance to get on board where the industry is going.”

Mr. Stauffer is working as a cinematographer and producer for the IRP. He served as director of photography for the PBS FRONTLINE documentaries “Post-Mortem: Death Investigation in America” and “The Card Game” and is currently in production on a film on college sports. He was also principal cameraman for the PBS NewsHour segment “Checkpoints.”

Stauffer says the IRP is a great example of what happens when hard-working, talented people get together.  “It’s been integral to my career development.  I’m constantly being pushed by the talented reporters around me and am able to produce better stories as a result.”

Additionally, Katie Galloway, a producer and Berkeley alum that received project-based funding in 2009 has received ongoing support and editing facilities for her production team as our Filmmaker in Residence. Ms. Galloway’s feature documentary “Better This World” on a domestic terrorism case will premiere at the SXSW Film Festival in March. The film will also air on P.O.V. on PBS nationwide later this year.

Fellowship Terms

Fellows will be employees of the University with an annual salary of $51,000 and are eligible for full UC benefits. Office space, basic expenses and up to $10,000 in funds for approved travel provided. No housing or relocation supplements provided. Fellows must refrain from outside journalistic projects, and to use the Berkeley offices as their base of operations.

Application Requirements (Please note applications will only be accepted via email)

·        Current resume or CV.

·        One-page cover letter.

·        Two-page memo outlining your proposed project and reporting strategy.

·        Two-page memo summarizing media coverage of your subject area over the last five years in print and broadcast and how you would advance the subject, if applicable.

·        Three letters of reference from current/recent supervisors, be they journalists or academics, on company letterhead, mailed to the attention of Professor Lowell Bergman. These letters should speak to your capabilities, potential and character. Emails will not be accepted.

·      Three work samples. For print/web samples, attach them as PDFs to your submission. For broadcast, include URLs for samples in your cover letter. Do not mail DVDs of broadcast samples unless links are unavailable.

·        One-page estimated travel/expense budget.

·        Note, proposals submitted in previous years’ competitions will not be considered.

The deadline for the academic year 2011-2012 is midnight on Monday, April 25. The yearlong tenure begins in September.

The Investigative Reporting Program at UC Berkeley
2481 Hearst Avenue
Berkeley, CA 94709
Questions and proposals may be emailed to: fellowapplicant@berkeley.edu

three funding opportunities for various do-gooder work

A few great opportunities courtesy of FC member Kara Andrade. Thanks, Kara!
-mia

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Nominations Open for the 2011 Purpose Prize Honoring Encore Social Innovators
Deadline: March 31, 2011
Nominate your favorite social entrepreneur over 60 for the Purpose Prize, which honors people combining their passion and experience for social good. The Prize awards up to $100,000 each to 10 people in encore careers creating new ways to solve tough social problems.  For more information, click here.

The Social Venture Network awards aim to support and connect the most influential social entrepreneurs on the planet. Past winners include US Fellows Willy Foote, Founder of Root Capital and Mark Hanis, Founder of the Genocide Intervention Network.  See details here.

Funding for Nonprofits Serving Low-Income Hispanic Families
Deadline: March 16, 2011
Grants of $50,000 are offered by AVANCE, Inc., a nonprofit organization that provides parent and early childhood education programs, is accepting proposals from nonprofit organizations serving low-income Hispanic families to enter into a grant agreement with AVANCE to integrate the AVANCE program model into their existing services. More info is here.

Berkeley Center for New Media Crossing Boundaries Conference, March 17-18, UCB

Early registration for this new media conference ends TODAY!! Details below.
-mia

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UC’s Berkeley Center for New Media
Early Registration Ends Monday March 7

03.17-18.11 / Conference: Crossing Boundaries: An International New(s) Media Conference / Banatao Auditorium, Sutardja Dai Hall, UC Berkeley


Crossing Boundaries: An International New(s) Media Conference
Thursday, March 17 & Friday, March 18, 2011
Banatao Auditorium, Sutardja Dai Hall, UC Berkeley
To register visit: crossingboundaries2011.org
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In an age of “Twitter and Facebook Revolutions,” Wikileaks, and cell phone reporting, how are journalists and governments adapting to the speed of content generated outside the traditional newsroom? What are the digital trends that are shaping international news and events? Journalists, scholars, and industry leaders will speak on timely, boundary-crossing news, audiences, and technology in a 2-day conference on March 17, 18 at UC Berkeley.

Crossing Boundaries features new research and scholarship on social media platforms, activism, the recent uprisings in the Arab world; gender and racial divides in new media; news distribution in the new media age; and other topics. Speakers examine changes in the technology and sourcing of breaking news to explore a new tangle of privacy, free speech and human rights issues raised by digital media. Prominent social critic and author Nicholas Carr is the keynote speaker on March 18.

Additional speakers include: Joaquin Alvarado, American Public Media / Katherine Corcoran, AP Bureau Chief Mexico City / Steven Fish, UC Political Science / Ken Goldberg, UC Engineering / Paul Grabowicz, UC Journalism / Marcia Hoffman, Senior Staff Attorney, EFF / Rich Jaroslovsky, Columnist Bloomberg News, BusinessWeek / Alan McClain, Wikileaks Team, The New York Times / Craig Newmark, craigslist / Xiao Qiang, China Digital Times / Jane B. Singer, U of Iowa Journalism / Eric Stover, Human Rights Center / James Wheaton, Environmental Law Foundation.

Early registration closes Monday, March 7.
Limited complimentary seating for students and faculty with id.
For information and to register, visit crossingboundaries2011.org
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Co-presented by Innovation Center Denmark, the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism, Center for Information Technology Research in the Interest of Society, the Berkeley Center for New Media, Aarhus University, and University of Southern Denmark.

For information about BCNM visit:bcnm.berkeley.edu

Follow Crossing Boundaries on Twitter #xb11
Photo Credit: Yasmin Moll & Ahmad Hammoud

Snap Judgment Happy Hour Salon, March 24, 5:30pm, Oakland

Hey Bay Area folks. Join the Snap Judgment crew for an informal networking event at their place in Oakland. They have a great show, plus they're a whole lot of fun! Details below.

-mia

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Evite link

DETAILS:

If you haven't heard, Snap Judgment is a brand new, smoking-hot NPR radio show. We work with writers, producers, performers and other creative folks to bring listeners storytelling with a beat. And now we want to meet YOU!

Join us next month for an informal salon at our offices. It's a chance for folks from all disciplines (audio/video/writing/music/design–whatever) to cross-pollinate ideas and chat about their creative endeavors/interests.

Later in the evening, we'll also invite you to share your talents.  Tell a story, read a poem, sing a song, strum your banjo. Anything goes. But five minutes tops!

Want to learn more about us? Check out www.SnapJudgment.org. Or join us on Facebook.

We can't wait to meet you!

Who: The SJ staff and you wonderful people.

What: Creative folks mixing it up and sharing what they got. Plus drinks and snacks.

Where: Snap Judgment Office
405 14th St. 9th Floor
Oakland, CA
(entrance on Franklin St.)

When: March 24, 5:30 p.m. – 7:30 p.m.

two not-to-miss photo show openings this weekend, SF and LA

If you're in SF or LA this weekend, step out and support long-time FC member and brilliant photographer Ann Marie Donahue. Details below.
-mia

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Ann Marie Donahue will have 2 photography pieces in 2 separate openings this upcoming weekend! 

If you are in the Bay Area, please stop by Rayko Photo Center for the 4th Annual Plastic Camera Show which opens on Friday, March 4th from 6 to 8 PM.  This is one of the most beloved photo shows in SF due to the uniqueness and beauty that comes from these toy cameras.   This show will be up from 3.4.11 – 4.30.11.

If you are in L.A.  stop on by 1650 Gallery in Echo Park for the Urban Landscape opening on March 5th from 7:30 to 10:30 PM.  The images were chosen by juror Joshua Hess http://www.joshuahessdp.com/ Joshua Hess is a Swiss born cinematographer and still photographer whose career has taken him to scores of cities around the globe where he has appreciated and photographed many different urban landscapes. He is currently based in Los Angeles working on films and commercials.  This show will be up for one month.

Coincidentally both pieces from Ann Marie are from the plastic camera.  Hope you can see the shows. 

Ann Marie Donahue

Photographer
Do you need a photo for your Facebook or LinkedIn profile or perhaps something for on-line dating? Let's have fun and capture the best YOU.  Please check out my website at http://www.annmariedonahue.com/.