FREE audio portraits workshop, May 28 and 30, 6-9pm, Athens, NY

Documentary interviewing and sound editing workshop by the the the fabulous ladies of the WAGE/WORKING series. May 28 and 30, Athens, NY. Details below Spread the word! -Mia

WAGE/WORKING JUKEBOX AUDIO PORTRAITS WORKSHOP and OPENING
Workshop sessions: May 28 and 30th, 6-9PM
Opening reception: May 31st, 5-7PM

The Athens Cultural Center and WGXC 90.7-FM announces an exciting participatory workshop, Audio Portraits: An Introduction to Interviewing, for ages 14-adult. In this workshop participants will produce a short audio portrait of the working life of an Athen's resident to be included in the Wage/Working Jukebox which will be on exhibit at the Athens Cultural Center, 24 Second Street from May 31-Dec. 1, 2014.

Wage/Working is a jukebox-based installation featuring stories and sounds from the working lives of residents of Greene and Columbia counties. The stories are edited to a length, corresponding with the amount of time it takes each interviewee to earn $1, creating an inverse relationship between monetary value and time. The project, which was first exhibited at the Cairo Public Library, was created by Tennessee Watson & Laura Hadden as a part of an AIR Live Interactive Residency during the Spring of 2013 at free103point9 Wave Farm, and WGXC 90.7-FM in Acra, NY, with financial support provided, in part, by the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA).

In this two-session workshop participants will learn the basics of documentary interviewing technique, digital audio field recording, story scripting and digital editing through guided tutorials and hands-on exercises; and with facilitator support will assemble a short audio portrait.

Session 1 will take place Wednesday May 28th 6 – 9 pm and Session 2 will be on Friday, May 30th, 6 – 9 pm. Please note that participants must attend both sessions. Participants will also be required to do work outside of class prior to Session 2, which involves interviewing a community member about their work, reviewing the recording and creating a brief outline. These workshops, co-sponsored by WGXC, 90.7-FM, will take place at the Athens Cultural Center, 24 Second Street, Athens, and are offered free of charge but pre-registration is necessary. Register on-line at info@athensculturalcenter.org or by calling 518-945-2136.

On Saturday May 31, from 5-7 PM, there will be an Opening Reception of the Wage/Working Jukebox at the Cultural Center featuring a listening session and celebration of pieces produced in the Audio Portraits workshop.

About Laura Hadden and Tennessee Watson:
Hadden and Watson were cited in 2011 by the International Documentary Challenge in the Best Film and Best Directing categories for a previous joint project, Matthew 24:14. The collaborators have a diverse history working in documentary film and radio. Laura Hadden is an independent media producer who spent the last three years producing projects for the storytelling organization The Moth in New York City. Before that, she facilitated workshops at The Center for Digital Storytelling and was an apprentice and community media producer at KPFA in Berkeley, CA. Tennessee Watson is an artist and activist based in Brooklyn, NY. Her work draws from the documentary and oral history tradition, but with an interactive and performative twist. Prior to moving to NY, she spent four years at the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University producing radio documentaries, instructing courses and coordinating Youth Noise Network, a radio project for teens in Durham, North Carolina.

Already have audio production skills and you'd like to submit a story to the jukebox?
Community members, who don't take the workshop, are also invited to submit Wage/Working stories from Greene or Columbia county as long as they follow the project format. To have your work considered for inclusion in theWage/Working jukebox, please contact wageworking@gmail.com for more information.

Workshop sessions: May 28 and 30th, 6-9PM

Opening reception: May 31st, 5-7PM

Registration Register on-line at info@athensculturalcenter.org or by calling 518-945-2136.

Resound call for stories

Re-air your existing work on Third Coast's Re:Sound for a small fee and a big audience. Details below!

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Once again we want to let you know about upcoming themes for Re:sound from the Third Coast Festival – our remix of audio docs, found sound, music and sonic treasures from around the world. We're looking for pieces that are already produced, and we pay a rebroadcast fee of $12/minute.

1. The Waiting Show
Stories about… wait for it… waiting.

2. The Shouldn't Have Pressed Send Show
Stories about emails and texts gone awry.

3. The Transport Show
Stories that take place in planes, trains, busses, cars, submarines(?) etc…

4. The Dinner Table Show
What we talk about when we sit down together to eat.

More about Re:sound, here:
thirdcoastfestival.org/broadcasts/re-sound

As always, send us a link to your work – and/or any questions – to resound [at] thirdcoastfestival [dot] org.

Can't wait to listen.

Yrs,
TCF

State of the Re:Union accepting applications for interns, deadline May 27

Great show – great opportunity! See below. -Mia 
State of the Re:Union is seeking interns for our next season. Please check out the description below and forward on to the aspiring radio-makers in your life. Deadline is May 27th! People anywhere in the U.S. can apply.

Each season, SOTRU welcomes a group of interns to assist with production. Duties include transcribing interviews, story research, pre-interviewing, and multimedia production.  Interns are invited to listen in on editorial calls with our host, editor and radio producers as we shape each episode, story by story.

To be considered for this internship, you should have a strong creative background, solid writing skills and be able to take direction. Self-starters who value attention to detail have particularly enjoyed interning with us.  Audio and video editing skills are a big plus. Our staff works remotely, and you can too; people anywhere in the U.S. can apply. This internship is unpaid, and we generally ask for about 10 hours a week, sometimes more during busy weeks.

Internships for our fall 2014 season will run from June 1, 2014, until September 30, 2014.

Applications will be accepted on a rolling basis until May 27, 2014.

To apply, send your resume and cover letter to: internships(at)stateofthereunion(dot)com

NYC Media-related event this Friday – Photo-Based Social Practice, 5/16, 10am-12pm

Hey NYC folks. There's an interesting event at Aperture this Friday 5/16, 10am-12pm. Details below. Thanks for the forward Will Coley! -Mia

"The Eventbrite registration page has been closed after 80 sign-ups. But, there’s space for walk-ins and allcomers. We don’t want to turn anyone away! Email info@asocialpractice.com to extend your interest. Thanks."

Photo-Based Social Practice

http://www.aperture.org/event/photo-based-social-practice-open-engagement/

Friday, May 16

10:00 am – 12:00 pm

Aperture Gallery and Bookstore547 West 27th StreetNew York, NY

FREE WITH REGISTRATION

A discussion of socially engaged, transdisciplinary, and expanded practices in contemporary photography. 

This panel, part of the 2014 Open Engagement conference, is offered in conjunction with the Spring issue ofAperture magazine, produced in collaboration with guest editor Susan Meiselas and the Magnum Foundation, which explores how the ground for socially engaged documentary storytelling has radically shifted over the last decade and how photographers might adapt. The panel is copresented by Aperture Foundation and Magnum Foundation’s Photography, Expanded initiative. Moderated by Eliza Gregory, panelists include: Pete BrookGemma-Rose TurnbullMark Strandquist, and Wendy Ewald. Preregistration is required. Register HERE.

About the Conference:
Open Engagement is an international conference that sets out to explore various perspectives on art and social practice, and expand the dialogue around socially engaged art-making. This year, the conference addresses the theme of Life/Work.

It will include two days of programming (Saturday, May 17–Sunday, May 18) at the Queens Museum, with pre-conference events on Friday at different locations around the city. These Friday events are meant to highlight groups, organizations, and institutions in the New York area that are supporting socially engaged art.

For more information, visit openengagement.info

UnFictional call for submissions

Call for pitches from KCRW's Unfictional. I've heard good things about them – drop a line if you want the inside scoop. -Mia
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Hello past and future UnFictional contributors!

We’re coming up on the 4 year anniversary of this radio program/podcast! Our audience is slowly building, we’ve won some awards, stories from the show have been featured on other radio programs both here in the US and around the English-speaking world. All in all it’s been an exciting and rewarding run, and it’s due in no small part to the contributions of fantastic audio producers like yourself. We hope we’ve made a fun place to make interesting and unusual stories. We want to do more!

We’re looking for great story ideas to produce over the next few months. We’re open to anything as long as it fits the show tone as laid out in submissions guidelines:

Strong sense of story, a little weird, emotional, funny, strange twists and surprises… First-person non-narrated stories are always great. If the story has good sound components that’s a big plus.

We pay decently for a local show!

If you have any friends or colleagues who produce great work, feel free to forward this message to them as well. You can send your pitches to me at this address or to unfictional@kcrw.org

Look forward to hearing from you!

Bob Carlson
UnFictional producer



UnFictional is a program of storytellers and documentaries that cover the ground between the sophisticated and the profane. Audiences will hear captivating stories of real life told by writers and performers with a talent for tales that will suck you in. The program also features documentaries created by the most talented producers from around the country.UnFictional is one part of the Independent Producer Project, an initiative to cultivate and support the work of independent radio producers and other writers and artists. The idea is to create a clearinghouse of creativity both online and on the air.

The program is hosted and curated by KCRW producer, Bob Carlson. He has an ear for compelling radio stories that are funny, sad, sincere and often dark. Listen for stories of hometowns and family secrets, as well as tales of drugs, sex, and aliens (both extraterrestrial and earthbound.) The stories on UnFictional will stick in your head like a memory.

pdf icon UnFictional-submission-guidelines.pdf

Latino USA call for pitches – special projects

Some great projects in the works from Latino USA. Details below. Pitch deadline May 16.

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Latino USA has several special projects coming up that we’d love to have pitches for.


The pay rate is $125 a minute, and pitch meetings take place on Friday mornings, eastern time.

Please send all pitches directly to: pitches@futuromediagroup.org.


If you’re pitching for the first time, please include some information about yourself and a couple of audio samples.

Thanks!

Leda

 

Leda Hartman

NPR’s Latino USA

919-542-0008

ledahart@mindspring.com

 

Outdoor Adventure and more

These stories are part of an ongoing series on outdoor adventure involving Latinos.

If the stories have an environmental angle to them, all the better. For example, LUSA recently ran a piece on an ice fisherman in Colorado who has had to seek out lakes at higher elevations because climate change is shortening the ice fishing season down below.

 

In-state tuition vox pops             

Florida just became the latest state to allow undocumented immigrants to pay in-state tuition for college.

LUSA would like to put together a montage of vox pops from students who can now afford to go.

We’re especially interested in hearing from Oklahoma, Utah, Minnesota, and Kansas – or other states that aren’t the “usual suspects” like Texas or California.

 

Stories from the heartland

LUSA is doing a special program on changing demographics in the heartland.

We’re especially interested in ideas from the Midwest and the West, but are open to hearing about what’s happening anywhere between the country’s urban coasts.

Possibilities include:

First-hand stories of Latinos living in rural areas or small towns – for example, a meatpacker or a cowboy;

A tour of a town that now has a Latino majority – including the back story of how and why immigrants came, and how the flavor of the town has changed;

Fresh angles on immigration in the heartland;

Lighthearted or positive stories;

Under-reported stories.


Please send all pitches for heartland ideas to LUSA before May 16.

60×60 Surround Sound Presentation at Harvestworks, this FRIDAY 5/16, 7pm, FREE

Cool (FREE) sound event this Friday at Harvestworks in NYC. Details HERE and below.

[May 16] VoxNovus 60×60 Surround Sound Works

Curated by Hans Tammen
Friday, May 16, 7pm
Admission: FREE

Location:
Harvestworks
596 Broadway, #602 | New York, NY 10012 | Phone: 212-431-1130
Subway: F/M/D/B Broadway/Lafayette, R Prince, 6 Bleeker

60×60 is a one-hour-long show made by sequencing 60 pre-recorded pieces by 60 different composers, each piece a minute in length or shorter. A unique collaboration between VoxNovus / Robert Voisey and Harvestworks in New York City to create a 5.1 surround sound mix, this 60×60 presentation will be premiered at Harvestworks’ multichannel TEAMLab listening room.

Every one-minute piece will be played continuously without pause. Each of the 60 pieces  will begin precisely at the beginning of the minute, this will mark the end of one piece and the beginning of another.

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Next City Announces Urban Economics Reporting Fellowship for Journalists of Color, deadline May 12

Hurry up to meet the deadline for this Next City economics reporting fellowship – MAY 12. Details HERE and below.

Call for Applications
Next City Urban Economics Reporting Fellowship 

Next City Urban Economics Reporting Fellowship
Deadline May 12, 2014

Next City is seeking a talented journalist of color for a one-year, full-time reporting fellowship. The fellowship, which includes a $40,000 salary and health benefits, offers the opportunity to work closely with experienced writers and editors to create compelling, idea-driven journalism about cities, with a particular focus on economic development.

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National Recording Registry is Open to Nominations

An unusual post for FC but I find this fascinating. Every year, the National Recording Registry (part of the Library of Congress), seeks nominations for recorded sounds (that are at least 10 years old) to add to their archive. This is an amazing resource, and, I think, something to strive for in your own work. You can browse the entire registry HERE.

And here's the call for nominations, along with a blog post by Steve Leggett, program coordinator for the National Recording Preservation Board of the Library of Congress. (I've highlighted my favorite bit below.)

In the weeks since announcing the annual 25 additions to the National Recording Registry the Library has been asked a few questions about rap and hip-hop and its representation on the list. These questions are valid and important to explore.

The 2013 list of 25 additions announced earlier this month did not include a recording in the rap and hip-hop genre. However, the genre has been represented on the registry since the registry’s very first list of 50 recordings was announced in January 2003. In that year, “The Message” by Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five was among recordings including Orson Welles’ radio drama “War of the Worlds” (1938), President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s D-Day radio address (1944) and Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech (1963).

The fact that those important and diverse sound recordings stand shoulder to shoulder on the same list is indicative of what the registry is about, and indeed illustrates the very important role sound recordings have played in our collective memory and consciousness since the very first recordings were captured in 1853.

With respect to rap and hip-hop, in addition to “The Message”, the registry also includes Sugar Hill’s 1979 “Rapper’s Delight” – widely credited with launching the genre – plus three others for a total of five. That means of the 17 music recordings in the Registry that date from 1979 or later, about 30 percent represent the rap genre, including the most contemporary recording in the entire registry, Tupac Shakur’s 1995 “Dear Mama.”

It is important to understand that the National Recording Registry is not a “best of music” list. Although much attention each year tends to focus on popular music, the registry is about sound recordings of all kinds – from political speeches to historic firsts, all deserving recognition and preservation.

Of course the registry includes music, but it also showcases Thomas Edison’s recording of 1888 for a talking doll prototype; 1890 recordings of Passamaquoddy Indians – considered the first field recordings; Booker T. Washington’s 1895 Atlanta Exposition Speech (1906 recreation); 1917′s the Bubble Book – the first book/record recorded especially for children; the first transatlantic radio broadcast (1925); the first official transatlantic telephone conversation (1927); Charles Lindbergh’s arrival in Washington, DC (1927); FDR’s fireside chats (1933-44); Neil Armstrong’s broadcast from the moon; and many other historic recordings.

You can view the entire list here.

The process for selecting new additions includes review of public nominations, and active discussions and review by the advisory National Recording Preservation Board, featuring representatives from the recorded sound, preservation and music industries.  The Board advises the Librarian of Congress on national preservation policy as well as the National Recording Registry.

Of course, selecting the recordings each year involves a lot of discourse and argument about current representation of various genres, time periods, artists and key cultural and historical themes.

Keep in mind, the National Recording Registry represents a very small slice of the Library’s collection of more than 3.5 million sound recordings or the 46 million recordings held in U.S. public institutions according to a 2005 survey.  Many of these recordings are in dire need of preservation, an alarming fact highlighted in the 2013 landmark national recorded sound plan published by the Library.  The good news is that virtually any published recording of a song registered for copyright with deposited copies is in the Library’s permanent collections: so much, however, yet remains to be preserved and made available

But the registry, in essence, represents a special category of recordings the Library would seek out and ensure are in our collections in the most pristine form available.  So we do like to think of it as an “honor” or recognition of the best of the best in addition to spotlighting countless other worthy recordings.  From that standpoint we welcome the fact that critics are looking, well, critically at what is on the list and what is not. Keep that dialogue going!

With only 25 additions each year, the selection process is mighty challenging. And there is no doubt the number of recordings that should be on the registry far exceeds the number of recordings already on the registry.

Along with rap songs that have been mentioned in recent blogs and the public – works by artists such as Lauryn Hill, Run-DMC, 50 Cent, Dr. Dre, Jay-Z, Eminem and Kanye West — this vast treasure trove of cultural importance awaiting recognition consists of radio broadcasts, technological breakthroughs, advertisements, ambient sounds and well-known standards by a stunning litany of music legends.

If you believe rap or hip-hop – or any other genre – is under-represented on the list, please nominate a recording…or several. We are accepting nominations for the next list here.

Remember the recordings must be at least 10 years old. We look forward to hearing from you!

Knight Center Announces Free Online Investigative Journalism Class, May 12-June 14

Starting May 12, the latest massive open online course (MOOC) from the Knight Center – this one on investigative journalism in the digital age. I took their last course on social media for journos and was pleasantly surprised by the content, the teachers, and the process overall.

From Media Bistro:

If you’ve ever wanted to learn the nuts and bolts of investigative reporting, here’s your chance, courtesy of the Knight Center for Journalism in the Americas.

 A five-week, massive open online course (MOOC) on “Investigative Journalism for the Digital Age,” will begin on May 12 and end on June 14, 2014. 

From Knight:

Investigative journalism is the most highly-regarded branch of the profession, often helping reveal corruption, shining a light on social plights, influencing public policy and triggering change. It takes time and effort, but also an understanding of the basic concepts and tools used to carry out investigations.

To help people interested in learning about the newest resources and techniques in the field, the Knight Center for Journalism in the Americaswill offer the free Massive Open Online Course (or MOOC) “Investigative Journalism for the Digital Age” with the support of the Knight Foundation.

The course will take place from May 12 to June 15, 2014. Click here to register.