This Saturday, October 5th at Roulette & the YWCA, 509 Atlantic Ave at 3rd Ave, Brooklyn NY. 11AM – 7PM FESTIVAL | 730pm – Midnight AFTER PARTY
1. Your stomach will love you for the rest of your life. We'll have a whole gallery of food venders including Bombay Sandwich Shop, Big Bao, Brooklyn Soda Works, Granola Lab, and Parantha Alley. And dumpling-making. 2. After a long week at work, don't you want to play? We're going to have stations where you can (yes) make your own dumplings, learn how to write a graphic novel, or learn how to write a poem–or just get one written for you. Origami. Poster-making. You can even bring your kids. 3. Your brain will explode from the sheer awesomeness. In a good way.Our line-up includes almost 80 writers, activists and artists over four spaces–like David Henry Hwang, Colorlines publisher Rinku Sen, Rumpus Founder Stephen Elliott, Monica Youn, Monique Truong, Mei-mei Berssenbrugge, Sergio de la Pava, Ayad Akhtar, Justin Torres, and Madiha Tahir, who's been interviewing drone attack survivors in Pakistan. And a guy dressed as a giant bao.
VISIT FESTIVAL SITE. // RESERVE YOUR SPOT.
![]() 20 MORE REASONS WHY YOU SHOULD GO.
![]() 1. I'm taking it you already know about the AAWW Dumpling-Making Room. 2. Guggenheim Fellow Mark Nowak will be running a MAKE-A-POEM booth, where you too can write a poem. 3. But if you're shy, emerging poets from Kundiman will be taking poetry requests. 4. X-Men writer Marjorie Liu will teach you how to write a graphic novel. 5. Novelist Alexander Chee will be doing Tarot card readings at the AFTER-PARTY. 6. Which will also include live poster-printing by Felipe Baeza and an interactive food art installation by Alison Kuo. 7. A pop-up gallery of pro-immigrant posters at the YWCA Gallery. 8. Live audio recordings by NPR's Latino USA. 9. Did you know that Chinese Americans made up like 50% of the workforce in many states in the 1800s? David Henry Hwang, Brian Leung, and Karen Shepard discuss the Chinese American 19th Century. 10. A sound installation based on poems by Rabindranath Tagore, curated by ((audience)). 11. Hear about the people who disappear with an artist who's been documenting those abducted by the Gaddafi regime, a Guggenheim poetry fellow, and an activist whose grandparents were interned during WWII. 12. A war-time writing panel with Flavorpill Top 100 NYC Writer Said Sayrafiezadeh, Jadaliyya co-founder Sinan Antoon, AAWW homie Amitava Kumar, and Madiha Tahir, who's been interviewing drone survivors in Pakistan. 13. Make wearable butterfly wings with immigration rights activist Sonia Guinansaca. 14. These peeps will help you interpret Muslim American identity: Suheir Hammad, Sohail Daulatzai, Lorraine Adams, and Ayad Akhtar. The last two both won the Pulitzer. All four are badasses. 15. We commissioned a video artist to make filmic walking tours of NYC Asian American neighborhoods. 16. We're fracturing landscapes with legendary avant-garde poet Mei-mei Berssenbrugge, Tamiko Beyer, Janine Oshiro, and Nicola López, whose art has been exhibited at MOMA, The Guggenheim and The Met. 17. The Dim Sum Warriors. 18. Did you know a little-known law requires that the US jail 34,000 immigrants a day? Rinku Sen and Jon Pineda discuss. 19. Is the City apocalyptic or utopian? Answered by Manil Suri, Jess Row, Youmna Chlala, and Tash Aw, the biggest writer of Malaysia. 20. Discover love with a gay manga artist, a biracial stoner, a gay desi, and a National Book Award finalist in poetry. Did we mention it's free? VISIT FESTIVAL SITE. // RESERVE YOUR SPOT.
![]() This Saturday, October 5th at Roulette & the YWCA, 509 Atlantic Ave at 3rd Ave, Brooklyn NY. 11AM – 7PM FESTIVAL | 730pm – Midnight AFTER PARTY
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Category Archives: Freelance Cafe West
KUOW Program Venture Fund Announces New Round of Grants
To kick-start your brain storming here are a few subject areas that KUOW would like to cover in the coming year. But do not feel tied to this list of subjects; this is just meant to give you a little inspiration. Feel free to submit ideas on completely unrelated topics, whatever catches your interest.
1) How We Get Around
We are a society that is on the move. It’s all about getting from here to there. We’re looking for stories about getting around: on foot, wheel, rail or whatever moves people or things. You can view this as broadly as you like. Feel free to take this notion and run with it or walk or blastoff or…
2) Foraging
The definition of foraging is “to search for what one needs or wants.” All living things have certain needs and these needs can range from essential to extravagant to anywhere in between. And many times the need can be fueled by obsession which is always fertile ground for good stories.
3) Innovators
Who are the people who are challenging the way that we think and live and how are they shaping our future? Who are the ones to watch and why?
Important: Before submitting a full application you need to send me a short description of your project, no longer than one page. Once the preliminary idea is approved then you can officially submit the full application.
For application information or to check out previous PVF funded projects go to: http://kuow.org/topic/program-venture-fund
The application deadline is Friday, November 8, 2013 at 5:00 p.m. (PT)
Jim Gates
Senior Editor
KUOW 94.9 – Puget Sound Public Radio
jgates@kuow.org
Journalism Training Opportunity in NYC, Nov 13
Public Radio News Directors Inc. is teaming up with WNYC and the Robert C. Maynard Institute for Journalism Education to help journalists and media outlets better connect with diverse communities. This FREE workshop was created by the Maynard Institute and is designed for reporters, student journalists, news managers, program directors, and sales/underwriting staffs. Institute President Dori Maynard will lead the program and present ideas to:• Use new tools to strengthen ties to previously underserved communities.
• Avoid technological/community mismatch.
• Create technology strategies to ensure that newsrooms are not inadvertently leaving potential audience members behind.
• Use the institute’s Fault Lines diversity framework to build a process of conceiving stories – business practices – that include a multiplicity of views across race, gender, generation, geography and class.
• Leverage diversity to increase the bottom line.
HERE ARE THE PARTICULARS:
Date: Wednesday November 13, 2013
Time: 10:30 am to 2:30 pm
Place: The Greene Space at WNYC and WQXR
44 Charlton St., New York, NY 10013Seating is limited. If you are interested in attending, please RSVP to PRNDI President George Bodarky at gbodarky@wfuv.org
Full Spectrum Storytelling Intensive, Dec 16-20, UnionDocs
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2nd Session of Radio Boot Camp – NY
Latino USA Call for Pitches
NPR’s Latino USA has several shows with special themes coming up in the next few months. They are:
- Neighbors
- Money
- Language
- Labor
- Sports (especially women and sports)
We’d love to hear your story ideas for these themes or anything else that you may have in the pipeline.
Please send queries to pitches@futuromediagroup.org.
And here’s a link to our reporter guidelines: http://latinousa.org/about/contributors/.
If you’re pitching for the first time, please include a few sentences about your experience and a couple of samples of your work.
Theme List for new NPR Science Desk Project
Anyway here are some of the themes we are thinking about – forgive the haste of the descriptions but we wanted to let y’all know what’s in the hopper as it’s hopping. Let us know if these themes jangle any of yo' bells.
Fear:
This is a show that looks at the way that fear affects our lives. The big ways that it affects us, and the small ways that it affects us and shapes what happens in our lives. We are looking at all kinds of fear from all kinds of angles, so if you have a story which involves someone facing up to a major fear, or someone realizing something about their fear, or something who learns something from an experience they've had with fear – or something who just has a great story about something that was genuinely terrifying to them – write us about it. At the moment, this is what we have: a story about a man who is biologically incapable of fear and how that affects his life. A sprawling (slithering?) story about fear that looks at fear bunch of different angles – including fear on the molecular level and the pentagon researchers that are putting it in a bottle, and also snakes. Also a “mapping fear” story about criminologists who look at how long fear lingers in a place after a death. Send your fear stories.
Struggle:
This show is trying to look at struggle. The main story is about a man who was born blind into a borderline abusive family, and how he believes struggling through that situation actually enabled him to become the bike-riding, free-walking, running, hiking blind man that he is. In other words, according to him? Struggle = good. No struggle = bad. He’s at the point where he believes helping disabled people is essentially like enslaving them. We’ve got a story about cross cultural struggle – how when a kid struggles intellectually in the West, people think the kid is weak because the kid doesn't have talent – but in the East – if you struggle you are just seen as strong – the WORST soccer player gets the award! — because greatness is seen as coming less from talent than from how hard you work. So we are looking for stories – which contradict the first story – maybe someone who was forced to struggle too much and gave up. Or a story where help… was really profoundly great and necessary for getting over a hump. Or maybe a story of how hard it is to watch your kid struggle and how you want to help them. Or any other story about struggling that you can think of – maybe you have a neighbor who went through unbelievable struggles (an immigrant) to come here, and now then set out to save their kids from struggle – and what they think of it now that their kids are grown up. If you can think of anything let us know.
100 Miles Apart:
There’s a strange thing in quantum physics where two particles, even if they are 100 miles apart, are still sort of… the same thing. Touch one, and the other one reacts in just the same way. It’s nearly impossible to comprehend… they are the same thing, the same particle, hopelessly and literally ENTANGLED… even though they are a hundred miles apart. Do you have anything that could fit thematically into this?
How Technology Changes Us
Alright. Maybe you’ve heard this topic on every show, magazine, and news program already… BUT! what story do you have about it? What’s the thing under your skin or that you’ve noticed or heard about as a result of the tide of computers, smartphones, internet, and apps taking over the way we communicate with each other. We’ve got a trilogy of cell phone deaths, how anonymity coaxes out our dark side, the weird things call centers are recording you do. What weird thing (good, bad, hopeful, unknown) have you been thinking about?
Maths
Or maybe “Paint by Numbers.” Stories of people putting numbers to the living world. If it can be done, what they can find out, what they can’t. Why you can’t divide by zero, but how, if you could you may gain entry to a secret universe– but really, a real one. How algorithms are controlling your world. Math stories in non-living world is ok too.
Storyhunters (When stories harm – medicine, reporting, therapy, trauma. When stories help.)
Grief Show (5 stages: denial – anger – bargaining depression – acceptance. Which one you got a story about? Doesn’t necessarily have to be about death.)
Upside-Down Show (there are more bugs than humans, there's a disease where a symptom is happiness, there is a town where the weird-crazies aren't weird or crazy. they are the norm!)
Alcohol Show
We are also looking for any absolutely fantastic story you know. With the one condition that it is fabulous.
So if something here hits a chord with something in your head or something you encounter in the world seems relevant, let us know. We are still figuring out how we might work with independent radio producers (actually we are still figuring out everything about what we are doing) so please have patience. I think that's all. Send ideas to Lmiller@npr.org and aspiegel@npr.org
Thanks and be good!
Lulu
Lulu Miller
NPR Science Desk
Soup to Nuts, Oct 26-27, SF Bay Area
Dear Radio People,
I'm offering my Soup-to-Nuts weekend again in the San Francisco Bay Area on:
October 26 & 27, 2013.
Please see the flier below.
AND... check out my website! <<claireschoenmedia.com>> Under “Teaching” you can find feedback from previous “Soup-to-Nuts” students. Under “Biography” you can find out more than you’d ever want to know about me. Under “Productions” you can listen to the past 25 years of my audio work.
If you are interested in attending, please let me know asap, as the class sometimes fills quickly.
I hope you can join us in October.
Best, Claire Schoen
Claire Schoen Media
======================================================
"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 October 26 & 27, 2013.
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 25 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 the SEJ, NFCB, Gracie, Clarion, PASS and New York International Festival. She has also shared in both a Peabody and a DuPont-Columbia award.
Claire has taught documentary radio production at U.C.
Berkeley's Graduate School of Journalism, Duke University’s Center for Documentary Studies, AIR's mentorship program, the Third Coast Festival Conference and other venues.
To Register:
Contact Claire Schoen
cschoen@earthlink.net • 510-882-6164 • www.claireschoenmedia.com
Radiovision 2013, Oct 19, NYC
Scholastic Auditorium
557 Broadway, NYC
Saturday, October 19th
Celebrating its 3rd year, Radiovision celebrates radio's future as it takes on new forms in the digital age for the medium's fans, tinkerers, and future thinkers. It includes a day of talks, panel discussions and performances, featuring keynote speaker Laurie Anderson.
Programming highlights: New Streaming services and Community platforms – Native advertising and content creation – New funding models for radio and independent producers, plus sessions on radio essays, comedy podcasts, DJ tools and more.
MORE INFO:
TICKETS:
http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/424428
GUESTS INCLUDE:
Laurie Anderson, Alexis Ohanian (Reddit), Julie Klausner (Comedian), Ken Freedman (WFMU), Starlee Kine (This American Life), Alex Blumberg (Planet Money), Jonathan Goldstein (WireTap), Rob Walker (Author), Tom Scharpling (Comedian, WFMU), Jake Fogelnest (Comedian), Elena Razlogova (McGill University), Jon Ronson (Radio 4), Diana Kimball (SoundCloud), Liz Berg (WFMU) & More to Come!
Request For Pitches – The Knowledge Drop
**A New Production**
compensation: $125 – $300+ depending on experience of the producer. (Most selected pieces will sit in the lower range because of our budget).
pitch: Send all pitches in email form to: autry@urrepublic.com