Category Archives: Freelance Cafe West

Bay Area sonic soiree, Sunday March 13, 5-7pm, Berkeley

Bay Area multimedia gurus David Dunaway and Lonny Shavelson are hosting a listening party in Berkeley on March 13. Don't miss it if you're in the area! Details below.
-mia

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The Bay Area is having its next Sonic Soiree, on Sunday March 13 in Berkeley, from 5-7pm at the Studio of Lonny Shavelson. For directions and more information, visit  http://www.photowords.com/map.htm. Bring a CD of your work, old or new, and meet local audio talent. MC for the evening will be David Dunaway,  the new professor of Radio and Documentary Studies at San Francisco State University's Broadcasting and Electronic Communication Arts program.

Kitchen Sisters Interviewing & Recording Workshop, March 31, SF

Learn from one of the best in the biz in this audio workshop. Details below.
-mia

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Davia Nelson of The Kitchen Sisters is conducting another basic recording and interviewing workshop in San Francisco on Thursday, March 31 from 10:00 AM to 1:00 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.

See you there,

The Kitchen Sisters

New Meetup Group – Current News Reading and Discussion – Bay Area

I thought this might be of interest to some Bay Area journos.
-mia

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New Meetup group!
Meetup

I'm starting this group to discuss current news.
I'm reading challenged to understand news and current affairs. I tried to understand news on TV and cable channels, but most news is presented as views, not as facts. The choices media make, as to what will be in headlines and how they decide to present facts, are interesting.
Then came news aggregators like google news. They do a better job of presenting… [read more]

Organized by:

Rahul

Meetup, PO Box 4668 #37895 New York, New York 10163-4668

Meetup HQ in NYC is hiring! http://www.meetup.com/jobs/

Making the Online Times Pay, Tuesday, March 1, 6:30pm, UC Berkeley

Interesting event this week at UC Berkeley. Details below.
-mia

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The Graduate School of Journalism is pleased to announced that Gerald Marzorati, Assistant Managing Editor of The New York Times for New Products and Strategies will be on UC Berkeley's campus, Tuesday March 1 6:30 – 8:30pm at the Banatao Auditorium in Sutardja Dai Hall. 


Mr. Marzorati will be discussing plans to monetize the Times' new media platforms in the coming months. He will be joined on-stage by Mark Danner, Chancellor's Professor for Journalism and Politics & Michael Pollan, Knight Professor of Science and Environmental Journalism at the Graduate School of Journalism, UC Berkeley. 


The event is free and open to the public. We look forward to seeing you there!

 

Sponsored by the Knight Program in Science & Environmental Journalism and the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism

Marzorati2011.jpg

-- Kristi Mitchell Director of External Relations School of Information U.C. Berkeley 102 South Hall #4600 Berkeley, CA  94720-4600 kristi@ischool.berkeley.edu (510) 643-4206  phone (510) 642-5814  fax http://www.ischool.berkeley.edu

SPJ panel discussion, “Journalism in the Age of Wiki-Leaks,” Feb 24, 6pm, SF

Interesting panel discussion happening at CNET, SF, next week. Details below.
-mia

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SPJ panel discussion, "Journalism in the Age of Wiki-Leaks"

Join us as we discuss the challenges journalists face in the current
environment, and consider questions like: How should news
organizations handle situations like the ones the New York Times et al
faced with WikiLeaks? And what's the role of professional news
organizations when anyone can publish the kind of information that
previously was only the purview of journalism? And what do you think
of how the New York Times handled WikiLeaks? (See Bill Keller's
"Dealing with Assange and the WikiLeaks Secrets:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/30/magazine/30Wikileaks-t.html)

Panelists:

   * Declan McCullagh, chief political correspondent, CNET
   * Lance Williams, award-winning investigative reporter, California Watch
   * Steve Proctor, managing editor, San Francisco Chronicle
   * Evan Hansen, editor-in-chief, Wired.com
   * Burt Herman, Hacks & Hackers
   * Moderator: E.B. Boyd, FastCompany.com and board member, SPJ-NorCal

Date: Thursday, Feb. 24, 2011

Time: 6pm: Registration. 6:30: Panel begins.

Location: The panel will take place in the ground floor meeting room
at CNET. Come to the front desk, and they will direct you.

Hosted by: The Society of Professional Journalists-Northern California
and CNET, part of CBS Interactive.

Sign up: http://spj-wikileaks-panel.eventbrite.com/

“From Soup to Nuts” 2-day intensive on documentary radio production, Berkeley, March 26-27

The lovely and talented Claire Schoen is once again offering her “Soup to Nuts” training on documentary radio production. Bay Area folks – you don’t want to miss this! Details below.
-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

pdf iconStoN’s Flier (March 2011).pdf

Upcoming events at the UC Berkeley J-School

The latest happenings at North Gate Hall – details below.
-Mia

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Basketball and Books

When: Thursday, February 10,  12:00 PM

Where: North Gate Hall Library

Three seasoned guests talk about reporting on the sport and its impact on race, education and society.

George Dohrmann, investigative reporter for Sports Illustrated and author of Play The Hearts Out: A Coach, His Star Recruiter, and the Youth Basketball Machine.
Tim Keown, a senior writer for ESPN the Magazine and author of several books, including Skyline One Season, One Team, One City.

Doug Merlino, a North Gate alum and author of the newly released Hustle: One Team and Ten Lives in Black and White.

The Future of Investigative Journalism

When: Wednesday, February 23,  12:00 PM

Where: North Gate Hall Library

As traditional news organizations drown in red ink, how can we sustain the critical work of investigative reporting?  There are some promising new models, including ProPublica, but will the future rely on private philanthropy?  What are the roles of private and public media in this work?  What new business models are evolving?  Where does the game changing Wikileaks fit in this landscape?  What about social media?  A conversation about the future of investigative reporting with:

Lowell Bergman
, Frontline
Daniel Zwerdling, National Public Radio
Megahnn Farnsworth, Center for Investigative Reporting/California Watch

Ellin O'Leary, Youth Radio
Jaxon Van Derbeken, The San Francisco Chronicle

Can Mainstream Journalism Survive? Making the Online Times Pay

When: Tuesday, March 1,  6:30 PM

Where: Banatao Auditorium, Sutardja Dai Hall

Gerald Marzorati, Assistant Managing Editor of the New York Times, for New Products and Strategies in conversation with Mark Danner, Chancellor's Professor of Journalism and Politics, UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism and Michael Pollan, John S. and James L. Knight Professor of Science and Environmental Journalism.

Opening Reception:
Photographs of South Africa in the 1950’s by Jurgen Schadeberg

AND

A Book Signing and Public Lecture:

American Soldiers and Torture
Joshua Phillips and Mark Danner in conversation about None of Us Were Like This Before, a book by Joshua Phillips

When: Friday, March 4

Reception: 6:00 PM
Discussion: 7:00 PM

Where: North Gate Hall Room 105

Joshua E. S. Phillips and Mark Danner will explore how soldiers and senior officials came to believe that torture was permissible, effective, and necessary.  Danner and Phillips will also discuss the impact of abuse and torture on detainees and soldiers.

Mark Danner has produced some of the most important essays and books about U.S. policies that led to detainee abuse and torture during the “war on terror.”  His most recent books are Torture and Truth: America, Abu Ghraib and the War on Terror and Stripping Bare the Body: Politics Violence War. He is Chancellor's Professor of Journalism and Politics at UC Berkeley.

Based on first-hand reports from the Middle East and Afghanistan, and years of interviewing ordinary soldiers, Joshua E.S. Phillips’s new book None of Us Were Like This Before explores how troops turned to torture and presents a shattering record of the impact of detainee abuse and torture on detainees and America’s veterans.


Will the Real Terrorist Please Stand Up
A screening and discussion with director Saul Landau and associate-producer Julia Landau

When: Thursday, March 10,  6:00 PM

Where: North Gate Hall Library

"Will the Real Terrorist Please Stand Up" is a new film by award-winning director Saul Landau about US-Cuba relations, The Cuban 5, and Miami terrorist groups who have attacked Cuba.

Saul Landau has produced over forty films. He has received numerous awards; including an Emmy with Jack Willis for "Paul Jacobs and the Nuclear Gang"; the Letelier-Moffitt Human Rights Award; the George Polk Award for Investigative Reporting; and the First Amendment Award.  Landau received an Edgar Allen Poe Award for Assassination on Embassy Row, an investigative book about the 1976 murders of Chilean Ambassador Orlando Letelier and his colleague, Ronni Moffitt.

He is a senior fellow at and vice chair of the Institute for Policy Studies. In 2008, the Chilean government presented him with the Bernardo O'Higgins Award for his human rights work.

Extended trailer can be viewed here.


********** EVENTS OF INTEREST **********

Doug Merlino reads and discusses The Hustle: One Team and Ten Lives in Black and White


When: Thursday, February 10,  7:30 PM

Where:  Pegasus Books Downtown Berkeley (2349 Shattuck Avenue)

Doug Merlino (MJ 2003) will read and discuss The Hustle: One Team and Ten Lives in Black and White. Merlino was part of a mid-80's, league-winning basketball team constructed for its diversity. He follows up with his teammates in this study of privilege, opportunity, race and class.

Event Contact:
 510.649.1320

RELATED EVENT: Doug Merlino at Book Passage (Corte Madera)




Julie Hirano
Event & Fundraising Coordinator

Graduate School of Journalism
121 North Gate Hall
University of California at Berkeley
(work) 510.642.3394
(fax) 510.643.2680
http://journalism.berkeley.edu

_______________________________________________
JSchoolEvents mailing list
JSchoolEvents@journalism.berkeley.edu
http://journalism.berkeley.edu/mailman/listinfo/jschoolevents_journalism.berkeley.edu

Participate in the SF Bay Area Journalist Census

For you Bay Area folks.
-mia

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Have you worked as a journalist in the Bay Area in the past decade? If so, we need your help with an important survey:

The San Francisco Bay Area Journalist Census 2000-2010 aims to assess the employment experiences of journalists working in the Bay Area and the opportunities available to them today both within the changing field of journalism and beyond. Our ultimate goal is to enhance the economic and professional prosperity of Bay Area journalists.

Please participate in this survey and share the link with other current and former Bay Area journalists. With your help, this study will gauge the real experience of media workers during a period of rapid industry transformation. As with any survey, the higher the participation, the richer the findings.

The survey will be live from Feb. 1 to 10. For more information, please visit www.journalistcensus.org. If you have any questions, send an e-mail to info@journalistcensus.org.

The Journalist Census is a project of the North Valley Job Training Consortium, also known as NOVA, a federally funded nonprofit employment and training agency based in Sunnyvale. NOVA will produce a public report on the Journalist Census findings and will use the study to plan and support future training and workforce development programs in the Bay Area.

Thank you for your participation.

Africa photo opening TOMORROW at Rayko in SF – 1/27, 6pm

Hey Bay Area folks. Come out tomorrow night to support my friend and FC member Chris Smith. Rayko has a gorgeous gallery and Chris' images are amazing. Details below.
-mia

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I'm one of four photographers taking part in Rayko gallery's next show, "4xAfrica." I've got 15-20 images in the show, spanning a full decade of work, from Cairo to Cape Town.

The opening reception is Thursday, January 27, from 6-8 pm, at Rayko in San Francisco (3rd @ Harrison). The show will be up until February 27. 

Details:
http://raykophoto.com/?page_id=38

For more about the images:
http://www.ca-smith.net/blog/2011/01/urban-africa/

Hope to see you there,
Chris

—–
Chris Smith
web: www.ca-smith.net
twitter: chrisasmith

next WAM workshop – Pro Tools studio workflow

For Bay Area audio folks who want to sharpen their PT skills. I took some workshops with Women's Audio Mission a while back and they are well worth it! Details below.
-mia

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Pro Tools Studio Workflow: Tips & Tricks for Speed and Efficiency in a Studio Tracking Environment

Monday, January 31st AND Monday, February 7th, 7-9:30PM
Location: WAM, 1890 Bryant Street, Suite 312, SF
$60 Members, $80 Non-Members
NOTE: you must be proficient in Pro Tools. This workshop does not teach introductory Pro Tools skills.

Tracking sessions in a professional studio environment move very quickly, use a lot of tracks, a lot of  I/O and require the ability to perform quick edits, punch-ins and processing. They also require much more data and archive management. This workshop will focus on how a Pro Tools HD 2 system is used in a professional recording studio. It will cover I/O management using 2 192 I/Os, templates, playlists, keyboard shortcuts, file management and tips and tricks to keep a session moving. If you only have experience using Pro Tools in an LE environment with only a couple of inputs then this workshop is a must if you plan to intern or work in a professional studio. Taught by Laura Dean.

Register

Cancellation-Rescheduling Policy

Women's Audio Mission | 1890 Bryant Street | Suite 312 | San Francisco , California 94110 | United States