Digital Storytelling Competition for Students, deadline Feb 22

Pass this along to your students! Deadline Feb 22.

News Action is teaming up with the Pulitzer Center and American Student Radio to host a global media storytelling competition for middle/high school students. If you or someone you know works with students, I encourage to pass on the following details about participating. The top three entries will be featured by the Pulitzer Center and receive $200 to submit to a featured charity.

http://newsaction.org/contest/

The deadline for submissions is February 22, 2013.
Students can submit work earlier for edits from American Student Radio producers. Early submissions are due January 18, 2013.

Shoot News Action a line if you have any questions/comments (info@newsaction.org), and in the meantime, round up some brilliant young mediamakers. Let's watch the future of media happen here and now.

Cheers,
Barton
President, American Student Radio

Guidelines for submissions:
Your goal is to tell a great story. Focus on one person and tell how his or her story relates to a bigger global issue. Your reporting must be original, factual and true, and it should consider multiple sides of the story. It should feature at least three voices: an in-person interview with the individual affected, an expert on the topic (like a researcher, a teacher, a doctor, or a professor), and any other third voice of your choice. That third person can be you, the narrator.

Stories can be told using any combination of infographics, audio, video, photography and text. Think carefully about the media you use to tell yours to an audience of peers around the world.

Articles must be no longer than 2,000 words. Video and audio stories must be no longer than 5 minutes. A photo gallery or infographic collection must contain no more than 10 captioned photographs.

Making Contact Call for Pitches

From the good people at Making Contact. Pitch away! -mia

Hi Freelancers,


Making Contact is an award-winning, 29-minute weekly magazine/documentary-style public affairs program heard on 140 radio stations in the USA, Canada, South Africa and Ireland.
Showcasing voices and perspectives rarely heard in mainstream media, Making Contact focuses on the human realities of politics and the connections between local and global events, emphasizing positive and creative ways to solve problems.

We are seeking pitches for some specific themes for the first part of 2013. Please scroll down for more detail on each theme.


1. Collective Bargaining and “Right to Work”

2. Domestic Use of Drones
3. Reproductive Health and Justice

4. Transit Justice
5. LGBTQ Healthcare Issues

1. Collective Bargaining and “Right to Work”


What is collective bargaining, anyway? Fights over collective bargaining in Wisconsin and Ohio have hit the front pages over the past couple of years.  But what are we actually talking about—do Americans understand? The same goes for “Right to Work”—another phrase tossed around all the time in stories about unions.  What does it mean?

We are seeking sound-rich pieces that ‘show’ the audience, through story telling, what ‘collective bargaining’ and ‘right to work’ are and how they function (or don’t function, depending on who you ask). We are not seeking academics, or even union leaders, to explain these concepts.  Instead, these stories might take us through an ongoing labor struggle (or perhaps one that you have archival tape from) which makes these concepts clearly understandable.  Or we might follow a worker as he or she transitions from a union to non-union job (or vice-versa) and starts experiencing the difference.  Think creatively. Also note: by making clear why people support ‘collective bargaining’ or ‘right to work’, we also want to make clear why others are in opposition.

2. The Domestic Use of Drones

We already have a piece in the works from Alameda County, CA, where the sheriff wants drones and is facing resistance from the community.  It will deal with the surveillance of protesters, and the ‘slippery slope’ between what law enforcement agencies say they want to use drones for, and what they could potentially be used for in the future. We are looking for stories that take on other angles in regard to drones being used on US soil.  Some possibilities:

– Drones near the US/Mexico border

– The potential usage of armed drones in the US

– Ways in which local communities have successfully organized to change local government’s drone policy, or to force them to create such a policy


3. Reproductive Health and Justice


We’re looking for stories that find the human dimension in policy-heavy battles for access to birth control, abortion and the economic resources needed to choose to bear and raise a child.  We especially want to explore the specific impact of reproductive health access on women of color and young women–people most affected by public policy debates that often don’t include them. We are not looking for a specific format or angle, but some possibilities are:

– “Crisis Pregnancy Centers”: their genesis and history, which neighborhoods are they most prevalent in, and their connection to larger political movements.
– Hormonal birth control and the role of the large pharmaceutical companies in the development and promotion of certain methods over others. Natural methods of birth control/fertility awareness–what are the structures and obstacles to that?
– How is the Affordable Care Act, and various state’s responses/revisions to health reform, affecting women’s access to reproductive healthcare?
– How do women resist restrictions of access to reproductive health services and abortion? Before Roe v. Wade, the Jane Collective created a safe, underground abortion network for women in Chicago. What alternatives exist currently for women/girls who lack access to safe, legal abortion?


4. Transit Justice


Issues relating to public transportation policy intersect with issues of economic inequity, air quality/climate change, race and regional demographics, mobility, age and gender.
We're looking for stories that examine systems and structures together with individual characters/community members and how their lives are affected by their region's transit policies.


Possible themes:

– Urban organizing around transit justice–eg: On the Move/Boston, Portland OPAL’s Bus Riders Unite/Portland, Bus Riders Union/Los Angeles
– Challenging “car culture” in urban communities of color

– Coalition-building between transit users and transit workers


5. LGBTT2IQQ Healthcare

We’re looking for pitches about healthcare issues for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, transsexual, two-spirit, inter-sex, queer and/or questioning people (LGBTT2IQQ). We’d like to hear how the current healthcare sector does, or doesn’t meet LGBTT2IQQ needs, and alternative models that are being tried, perhaps outside the mainstream medical system. Some possible ideas:

– The campaign against "therapy" that claims to "convert" people’s sexual orientation. In California, a bill banning this kind of practice was signed into law but blocked by an appeals court.
– Struggles for healthcare equality in health plans

– Access to LGBTT2IQQ appropriate healthcare in rural and poorer areas.


This call for pitches is for segments of about 8 minutes, but we also occasionally take longer pieces (12 or 26 minutes). For shorter pieces we generally pay about $300 per story, depending on the producer’s experience. As with any pitches you send us, please check out our show and read our guidelines before you pitch. http://www.radioproject.org/production/submission-guidelines/

Consider the following. Does the story:

  • Link grassroots issues and human realities to national or international trends?

  • Give listeners a historical, political, or social context of major national and international events?
  • Shed light on social and economic inequities?
  • Explore any alternatives or solutions?


Send pitches to pitches@radioproject.org. Please be detailed but succinct, and include a description of your idea, narrative/story arc, interview subjects, scenes, and sounds/ambi. If you’re pitching to us for the first time, please include a brief bio and relevant audio clips.

We look forward to hearing from you!


Jen Chien, Andrew Stelzer & George Lavender

Making Contact producers

Enter the 2013 Casey Medals Competition, deadline March 1

$1-5K for stories about children and families. Details below! -Mia

Apply now for the 19th 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/nondaily, audio, multimedia, photojournalism and youth media. 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, 2012. Entry deadline: Friday, March 1, 2013 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 5,000 journalists have competed for Casey Medals since 1994. The awards are funded by the Annie E. Casey Foundation.

Sincerely,
Julie Drizin
Center Director

Latino USA Call for Pitches

2013 call for pitches from a great show – details below! -mia

 

NPR’s Latino USA, produced by the Futuro Media Group, is a nationally broadcast, half-hour weekly newsmagazine that explores the politics, arts and ideas of the nation’s fastest-growing demographic group.

 

http://www.futuromediagroup.org/lusa/

 

Our main focus is on Latino communities around the country. But we are also interested in stories of Latinos intersecting with other communities.

 

For 2013, the program is also seeking specific pitches on these topics:

  • Social and civic justice
  • Economic fairness
  • Sexual and reproductive health and rights
  • Accordion music of the Americas in the U.S.
  • Youth and stewardship of the environment

The program is also seeking pitches from California on these topics as related to health:

  • Environmental justice
  • Food/park/gym deserts and possible solutions
  • Urban planning and the challenges of unincorporated places
  • LGBT issues for Latino youth

Payment is $125 per broadcast minute; most features range from 4-7 minutes.

 

To pitch, please send a description of your idea and the story arc, characters, scenes and sound you envision to: pitches@futuromediagroup.org. If you’re pitching for the first time, please include a brief summary of your experience and a couple of audio samples of your work.

google journalism fellowships, deadline Jan 31

For students working with a host organization – proposal deadline Jan 31. Details below. -Mia

Students Invited to Apply for Google Journalism Fellowships

In an effort to help develop the next crop of reporters working to keep the world informed, educated, and entertained, Google has created the Google Journalism Fellowship.

The ten-week summer program is designed for undergraduate, graduate, and journalism students interested in using technology to tell stories in new and dynamic ways. The program's focus is on data-driven journalism, online free expression, and rethinking the business of journalism. The fellows will get the opportunity to spend the summer contributing to host organizations working on a variety of subjects, including investigative journalism, press freedom around the world, and journalism's future in a digital landscape.

Host organizations include the Center for Investigative Reporting, the Committee to Protect Journalists, Investigative Reporters & Editors, the Knight Foundation, Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journalism, Poynter, Nieman Journalism Lab, and ProPublica.

http://foundationcenter.org/pnd/rfp/rfp_item.jhtml?id=402800030

•••••••••••••••••••••••••
Rob Rosenthal
Shunpike Media
30 Spurwink Ave.
So. Portland ME 04106
207-615-1773

Sound Science audio workshop, Jan 22, 10am-1pm, NYC

Hey FC NYC folks. I'm teaching a 3-hour audio workshop at the CUNY jschool in Jan and would love to see some friendly faces there. Here's the info:

Tuesday, Jan. 22, 10 a.m.-1 p.m.

Sound Science – Mia Lobel – Room 434 (25 students max)

In this hands-on audio workshop, you’ll learn to take a complex scientific idea or story, break it down into character, plot, and setting, and develop it into an engaging narrative for a wide audience. We’ll discuss how to find and talk to scientists, how to get scientists to talk to you in a language everyone can understand, and how to make science sing. Plus, you’ll learn how to fact-check science stories for accuracy and balance. Students will workshop and pitch their ideas in class. The “winning” pitch may be produced for Distillations, the chemistry podcast. The class will be taught by freelance producer Mia Lobel, who is an adjunct instructor at the CUNY J-School and senior producer of Distillations.


The course cost $30 (payable to CUNY, not me). If you're interested, email Amy Dunkin <amy.dunkin@journalism.cuny.edu> and she can tell you how to register.
Lemme know if you have any questions, and hope to see you there! Feel free to pass this along to anyone you think may be interested.
Best, Mia
845-444-4034

Accepting Submissions Now 2012 NAM Ethnic Media Awards SOCAL, deadline Jan 12

The latest NAM newsletter includes info about the SOCAL Ethnic Media Awards plus a bunch of other stuff. -mia

To view a webpage version of this newsletter Click here

nam weekly nwsltr header

21 December 2012

CALL FOR ENTRIES for the 2012 NAM ETHNIC MEDIA AWARDS for SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA!

 

Postmark Deadline for Entries: January 12, 2013 

 

Dear Media Colleagues,

 

It is with great pleasure that we invite ethnic media practitioners (print, online, radio and television) to participate in New America Media's 2012 Ethnic Media Awards for Southern California. The NAM Awards bring recognition to the entire ethnic media sector.

 

We are calling for entries for work published or aired in an ethnic media organization of any size serving an ethnic/newcomer community in Southern California — between October 1, 2011 and December 1, 2012 [within Oct. 1, 2011-Dec. 31, 2011, Jan. 2012-Dec. 1, 2012].    

 

For the 2012 NAM Awards for Southern California, we are inaugurating several new approaches that reflect the rapid changes in California's media landscape.

 

NAM will consider all entries in English and in-language; and across all media platforms – in print, online and broadcast [TV & Radio] as a single pool in all of the News Beats  [NB1-NB6] and Spotlight Reports [SR 1- SR6] categories. The news beat categories include Outstanding Reporting on Governance & 2012 Elections Coverage, Outstanding Reporting on Civil Liberties Issues in Ethnic Communities, Outstanding Reporting on Inter-Ethnic, Inter-Racial and Inter-Religious Relations, and many others. 

 

The spotlight reports categories honor special news reporting on 2012 news events or trends including Outstanding Reporting on California's Economic Divide; Outstanding Reporting on International Affairs, and others including a Community Advocate Award that will honor one ethnic media organization for its public advocacy on a specific issue impacting its own community and/or California.

 

We are also maintaining a separate track of awards for outstanding photojournalism, outstanding community reporting for radio and outstanding community reporting for television.

 

Award winners will receive cash prizes and a trophy or certificate.

 

We are honored to partner with Southern California Public Radio (SCPR) which will host our Awards Gala at their Mohn Broadcast Center and Crawford Family Forum in Pasadena on Thursday, March 7, 2013.

 

SCPR is a member-supported public media network that operates 89.3 KPCC-FM in Los Angeles and Orange County, 89.1 KUOR-FM in the Inland Empire and 90.3 KVLA in the Coachella Valley.

 

Below, embedded as a downloadable pdf link — is our NAM Official Call for Entries, Guidelines & Submission Form-SoCal. NAM encourages in-language as well as English-language entries, and participants are encouraged to include their own English translations wherever possible.  For the purposes of this competition, Southern California ethnic media include those located from Calexico to Bakersfield.

 

We look forward to receiving your entries and any questions you may have.   

 

CLICK here: NAM Official Call for Entries, Guidelines & Submission Form-SoCal

 

POSTMARK DEADLINE: JANUARY 12, 2013

 

Warmest regards,

 

Odette Keeley

NAM Awards Chair-California

New America Media

okeeley@newamericamedia.org / 415.503.4170

 

Sandy Close

Executive Director

New America Media

EVENTS & OPPORTUNITIES

  

Renaissance Journalism, a program of SF State's Journalism Department, invites you to LearningLAB 2013, a multimedia journalism training conference for the ethnic and community news media on Friday, January 11, 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m., at San Francisco State University. The conference features workshops on multimedia storytelling, social media and "Hot Topics," important issues such as immigration and health care reform. Reg Fee: $25. For more info: 415.773.0388, ext. 333, or Valerie@renjournalism.org Register Today!  Here is a link to a pdf flyer

    

The  2013-14 class of John S. Knight Journalism Fellows at Stanford University |(The deadline for U.S. applications is Jan. 15, 2013) Applications are now open for the 2013-14 class of John S. Knight Journalism Fellows at Stanford University.  Fellows in our program work on solving problems, from leveraging technology to help journalism, finding new ways to reach underserved communities, seeking innovative ways to financially support quality journalism as well as fostering independent journalism in countries without a history of a free press.

REMEMBER OUR NEW ADDRESS IS NOW 209 NINTH STREET, SUITE 200, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94103

 

When you come to visit: 

 

Press Call then 07 — to get buzzed in.

 

TOP STORIES OF THE WEEK:

 

 
 

 

In This Issue
Call for Entries for the 2012 NAM Ethnic Media Awards for Southern California
Events & Opportunities
Our new address is 209 9th St. #200, San Francisco, CA 94103
Top Stories of the Week

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Call for Entries Open for 2013 Hillman Prizes in Journalism, deadline Jan 31

Start the new year off with a prize. Deadline Jan 31. -mia

Follow us on Twitter Like us on Facebook Visit our blog Like us on Facebook
The Sidney Hillman Foundation

Submissions For Hillman Prizes In Journalism

Due January 31, 2013

Annual Prizes Honor Excellence in Journalism in Service of the Common Good

The Sidney Hillman Foundation is now accepting submissions for the
2013 Hillman Prizes that honor investigative journalism and commentary in the public interest.
The 2013 prizes will be given for work produced, published, broadcast, or exhibited in 2012. Our categories include:
  • books (non-fiction)
  • newspaper reporting (print or online)
  • magazine reporting (print or online)
  • broadcast journalism (video or radio programs longer than 20 minutes)
  • photojournalism (still photos that may or may not be part of a larger multi-media package)
  • web journalism (online reporting done by an individual or an institution (text blog and/or multimedia), and
  • opinion journalism (for commentary and analysis in any medium)

The received-by deadline for all submissions is January 31, 2013. There  is no submission fee.  View the submission form and application instructions.

Winners will be announced in April 2013. Each winner is awarded travel to   New York City to receive a $5,000 prize and a certificate designed by New  Yorker cartoonist, Edward Sorel, at our awards ceremony and cocktail  reception to be held Tuesday May 7, 2013 at the New York Times Center.

Submissions are judged by a distinguished panel of journalists: Hendrik Hertzberg, senior editor, The New Yorker, Susan Meiselas, Magnum photographer, Harold Meyerson, Washington Post columnist and editor-at- large, The American Prospect, Katrina vanden Heuvel, editor and publisher,The Nation, and Rose Marie Arce, senior producer, CNN.

See previous winners here.

Since 1950, the Sidney Hillman Foundation has honored journalists, writers and public figures who pursue investigative journalism and public policy for the common good. Sidney Hillman was the founding president of the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union of America, a predecessor union of Workers United, SEIU. Sidney Hillman, an architect of the New Deal, fought to build a vibrant union movement extending beyond the shop floor to all aspects of working people's lives.

For any questions, please contact:

Alexandra Lescaze
Executive Director, The Sidney Hillman Foundation
12 West 31st St., 12th fl., New York, NY 10001

646-448-6413
alex@hillmanfoundation.org

For more information, please visit our website at www.hillmanfoundation.org

$25,000 Social Justice Leadership Prize Announced!

Well hey – a new award for social justice journalism. Deadline March 8. Good money for good deeds = good news! -Mia


$25,000 Social Justice Leadership Prize Announced!

News Release-----Kalamazoo College Establishes Global
Prize for Collaborative Social Justice Leadership
Contact: Jeff Palmer O: 269.337.5724 / C: 269.806.7700
jpalmer@kzoo.edu

Kalamazoo College officials announced today the
establishment of the Kalamazoo College Global Prize for
Collaborative Social Justice Leadership, a biennial
$25,000 prize that honors an innovative and

collaborative leadership project in the pursuit of
social justice and human rights anywhere in the world.

The inaugural $25,000 Social Justice Leadership Prize
will be awarded May 11, 2013, following a juried
competition administered by the College's Arcus Center
for Social Justice Leadership. Jurors include author,

political activist, and University of California-Santa
Cruz scholar Angela Y. Davis; former Executive Director
of the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights
Commission Cary Alan Johnson; and Detroit-based author,

educator, and columnist Shea Howell. Howell is also a
board member of the James and Grace Lee Boggs Center to
Nurture Community Leadership, in Detroit.

A $5,000 Social Justice Leadership Prize, also juried,
will be awarded to a project in Southwest Michigan.
Jurors include a panel of K students, faculty, staff,
and Kalamazoo community members.


Entries-in the form of 8- to 10-minute videos-must be
received by March 8, 2013. Entry information, FAQ, and
more may be found at
www.kzoo.edu/SocialJusticeLeadershipPrize

Freelance Cafe highlighted on WAMC’s 51%

I recently spoke with WAMC’s Susan Barnett for her show 51% – The Women’s Perspective. She asked me about my freelancing experience and gave a nice shout out to Freelance Cafe. It was fun to be on the other side of the mic for a change! Listen to hear a bit about why I started FC and my thoughts on networking as an important part of making it as a freelancer.

This was 51% Episode 1220, broadcast on November 29 at 8pm and again on December 5 at 3pm.

Here’s a blurb about the show:

In America, women make up more than half the population. Worldwide, women are expected to outnumber men within the next fifty years. And every issue we face is one that affects us all.

Whether it’s the environment, health, our children, politics or the arts, there’s a women’s perspective, and 51% is a show dedicated to that viewpoint.

Host Susan Barnett talks to experts in their field for a wide-ranging, entertaining discussion of issues that not only fall into the traditional ‘women’s issues’ category, but topics that concern us all as human beings and citizens of the global community.

Tune to 51% weekly throughout the U. S. on public and community radio stations, some ABC Radio Network stations, Armed Forces Radio stations around the world and on the Internet.