WAMC’s 51% wants your commentaries

You all know that I generally don't post gigs that don't pay, but I've been teaching this semester and so I have a renewed interest in finding opportunities for newbies – talented folks who have the skills and drive to succeed, but who need an audience and some clips to build their confidence to start charging a reasonable fee for their work. And so I offer this: WAMC's 51% (The Women's Perspective) wants your commentaries. Here's a note from the show's producer:

I am ALWAYS looking for good commentaries for 51%.  I have zero budget, but sometimes when someone's starting out, the money is less important than the credit.  It's no small thing to be on NPR, CBS, Sirius and AFR, and that's what a commentary on 51% gets. Themes – anything. I do not consider it a women's show – I consider it an issues show with women's points of view. You'd be surprised how difficult it can be to find women experts on things. Environment/health/politics/war/peace/community/sustainability/technology/human interest – I'm interested in all of it. So if you know of people who are interested, I am always happy to get queries and scripts.


And here's a blurb from their website:

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.

Also note that men's voices are welcome – but since it is a women's perspective show, their topic must relate to women. For instance, the show has a regular male contributor who is doing a series on women in history. There are no specific themes – though holidays, seasonal and event-related (election, for instance) are always a safe bet. And note that if a topic is time sensitive, it needs to be submitted at least four weeks in advance as they tape early. Submissions for the show should go to sbarnett@wamc.org. Let Susan know I sent you.

Best,
Mia

CPB Radio Grant Opportunity webinar, Oct 16, 3pm ET

Learn about an upcoming CPB grant in this webinar on Oct 16, 3pm ET. Details below. -Mia

+++++++++++++++++

Do you want to deepen your impact on education reporting for public media? Here’s your chance. CPB has a new grant opportunity for original education reporting at the local and national level. In alignment with the American Graduate initiative (http://www.americangraduate.org/) this grant seeks to fund your reporting into challenges and solutions faced by communities providing education in the 21st century.

 
Public media has long been a trusted educational resource. We invite radio stations and national producers to continue this important work and raise awareness of issues in education, including the high school dropout crisis.

 
Want to learn more? Join us on Tuesday, October 16, at 3:00 p.m. ET for an informational webinar about this grant opportunity. Please register in advance:
http://mediaengage.org/webinars/webinar_details.cfm?wbid=164481
 
The grant deadline is November 12, 2012, at 5:00 p.m. ET. You can see the proposal here:
http://www.cpb.org/grants/405/AG-Radio-RFP.pdf
 
Best,
Cristina Hanson
Deputy Director
National Center for Media Engagement
Engage Your Community. Share Your Story.

Storytelling Workshops Scheduled in NYC, Boston, Seattle, and San Francisco

Not sure about the cost of these workshops, but Tom Jenks has an impressive client list. -mia

MORE INFO

4-Day Intensive Workshops for Short Story Writers,
              Novelists, and Authors of Creative Nonfiction

with TOM JENKS

The class will meet every day for four days, with a morning workshop and an afternoon seminar focused on craft. For the seminar, there will be reading assignments and study of works by well-known writers. Each participant will have one manuscript workshopped in class and a second manuscript reviewed for an individual conference with Tom. We will study storytelling and the formal elements of fiction, including voice, point of view, characterization, imagery, plot, and theme. Attention will also be given to scene building, sentence making, and the dramatic movement of descriptive writing.

Enrollment limited to 12 participants. (Acceptance into the class will be based on evaluation of a submitted manuscript.)

In San Francisco      January 17–20, 2013
In Seattle                 April 11–14, 2013
In NYC                     May 2–5, 2013
In Boston                May 16–19, 2013

Application deadlines:
For the San Francisco class:  November 12, 2012
For the other classes:  December 14, 2012

To apply or receive more information:

  • Please send an email to Workshops.
  • Or, call 415-346-4477 and leave a message.
  • WRITERS EDITED AND PUBLISHED BY TOM JENKS INCLUDE:

    Rick Bass
    Richard Bausch
    Ann Beattie
    T. Coraghessan Boyle
    Janet Burroway
    Robert Olen Butler
    Italo Calvino
    Ron Carlson
    Michael Chabon
    Frank Conroy
    Don DeLillo
    E. L. Doctorow
    Andre Dubus
    Stuart Dybek

    Jennifer Egan
    Richard Ford
    William Gass
    Donald Hall
    Ron Hansen
    Charles Johnson
    Ken Kesey
    Min Jin Lee
    Bernard Malamud
    Peter Matthiessen
    Jill McCorkle
    Jay McInerney
    James Alan McPherson
    Arthur Miller

    Susan Minot
    Lorrie Moore
    Alice Munro
    Maud Newton
    Joyce Carol Oates
    Tim O’Brien
    Jayne Anne Phillips
    George Plimpton
    Padgett Powell
    Annie Proulx
    Mark Richard
    Tom Robbins
    Philip Roth
    James Salter

    Bob Shacochis
    Lee Smith
    Debra Spark
    Scott Spencer
    Robert Stone
    Elizabeth Tallent
    John Updike
    Kurt Vonnegut
    John Edgar Wideman
    Joy Williams
    Tom Wolfe
    Tobias Wolff
    Richard Yates
    Alexi Zentner

    iSTORIES | iPOEMS | RSS | NARRATIVE BACKSTAGE | A Nonprofit Publication

    Upcoming events at the UC Berkeley J-School

    Some great events for your Bay Area folks. -mia

    SCREENING: "Between Two Worlds" a film produced by Deborah Kaufman and Alan Snitow

    When: Wednesday, October 10,  7:00 PM

    Where: Room 105 North Gate Hall

    BETWEEN TWO WORLDS is a groundbreaking personal exploration of the community and family divisions that are redefining American Jewish identity and politics. The filmmakers' own families are battlegrounds over loyalty to Israel, interpretations of the Holocaust, intermarriage, and a secret communist past. Filmed in the United States and Israel, it explores the vital question:  Who speaks for a divided community at the crossroads?

    Q&A with the producers to follow the screening.

    Praise for BETWEEN TWO WORLDS:

    "The film's graceful, seamless, thoroughly engaging blend of family and communal history is sure to stimulate thousands of provocative conversations about the challenges of Jewish identity in the post-Holocaust era."

    -Letty Cottin Pogrebin, author & founding Editor, Ms. Magazine

    "One of the best films I've ever seen about the contradictions of American Jewish life."
    -Peter Beinart, author & journalist

    Presented by the Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism, the Magnes Collection of Jewish Art and Life, the Joint Degree Program in Jewish Studies at GTU and UC Berkeley, the Jewish Studies Program at GTU, J Street U and Berkeley Hillel

    Iraq Ten Years Later: Forgotten Past and Brutal Present

    When: Friday, October 12,  7:00 PM

    Where: Sibley Auditorium, Bechtel Engineering Center

    An evening with Iraqi Journalist, Haider Hamza, and American journalist and author, David Harris, speaking on Iraq: "Iraq Ten Years Later: Forgotten Past and Brutal Present."

    Best known for ShowTime’s This American Life: "Talk to an Iraqi ", Haider Hamza lived with his family near Babylon, south of Baghdad during the 2003 U.S.-led invasion. While in Iraq, Haider covered all the major events that took place in Iraq including the trials of Saddam Hussein.  Haider will speak about his experience in Iraq and the American public’s response to the war.  Haider is both knowledgeable and entertaining.  His lecture includes film clips from his road trip in America and a slide show of photos he took of post-war Iraq.  He will address the conflicts in Iraq since 2003 and the challenges that emerged after the U.S. troop withdrawal in 2011.

    American Journalist and author of "THE CRISIS: The President, The Prophet, and the Shah; 1979 and the Coming of Militant Islam". David is Vice President of Citizens Reach Out and has been an advocate for anti-militarism since the Vietnam War.  David will present the background of the Iraq war and will introduce the work of Citizens Reach Out.

    Christopher B. Daly | COVERING AMERICA: A Narrative History of a Nation's Journalism

    When:  Wednesday, October 24,  12:00 PM

    Where: North Gate Hall Library

    Today many believe that American journalism is in crisis, with traditional sources of news under siege from a failing business model, a resurgence of partisanship, and a growing expectation that all information ought to be free. In Covering AmericaChristopher B. Daly places the current crisis within a much broader historical context, showing how it is only the latest in a series of transitions that have required journalists to devise new ways of plying their trade.

    Christopher B. Daly is a veteran journalist with experience in wire services, newspapers, magazines, books and online. A Harvard graduate, he spent 10 years at the Associated Press. From 1989 to 1997, he covered New England for the Washington Post.

    RSVP REQUIRED
    David Barstow | The Story Behind the $100 Million Story

    When: Thursday, October 25,  7:00 PM

    Where: Sibley Auditorium, Bechtel Engineering Center

    In April, David Barstow described in The New York Times how Wal-Mart's highest executives covered up evidence of systematic bribery by Wal-Mart de Mexico, it's largest and most important foreign subsidiary. The story triggered investigations by the Justice Department, the SEC and Mexican authorities, along with at least a dozen lawsuits by Wal-Mart shareholders, including several major pension funds. Wal-Mart says it expects to spend at least $100 million this year alone handling the legal fall-out.

     
    David Barstow, a senior writer at The New York Times, is the winner of two Pulitzer Prizes.

    In 2009, he was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting for "Message Machine," his series about the Pentagon’s secret campaign to influence coverage of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. In 2004, he and Lowell Bergman were awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service for articles about employers who committed egregious work place safety violations.

    Mr. Barstow joined The Times in 1999 and has been a member of the newsroom’s investigative unit since 2002.

    Prior to joining The New York Times, Mr. Barstow worked at The St. Petersburg Times in Florida, where he was a finalist for three Pulitzer Prizes. Before that, he worked at the Rochester Times-Union in upstate New York and the Green Bay Press-Gazette in Wisconsin. Mr. Barstow, a graduate of Northwestern University, grew up in Concord, Mass.

    RSVP: juliehirano@berkeley.edu

    REPORTING FROM ISRAEL: THE US ELECTIONS, THE ARAB SPRING AND JOURNALISM IN THE DIGITAL AGE

    Aluf Benn, Editor-in-Chief, Haaretz Daily Newspaper

    When: Thursday, November 15,  6:00 PM

    Where: North Gate Hall Library

    Israeli journalist and author Aluf Benn on Israel – U.S. post-election relations, Israeli response to the Arab Spring and how journalism is changing in Israel.

    During his 23 years at Haaretz, Aluf Benn covered six Israeli prime ministers from Yitzhak Rabin through Binyamin Netanyahu and reported on Israeli-Arab wars and peace efforts since the Oslo Accords in 1993.  In his roles as diplomatic correspondent, chief news editor and opinion editor at the paper he has become an expert on the country’s leadership, foreign policy and national security. His writing has appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, Foreign Affairs, Newsweek, and The Guardian.

    Presented by Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism, Institute of Israeli Law Ethics and Society at UC Berkeley, the Israel Center of the Jewish Community Federation, the Jewish Community Relations Council and the Consulate General of Israel to the Pacific Northwest

    RSVP REQUIRED
    2012 Presidential Election Recap

    Co-sponsored by the University Library, the Media Studies Group major, the Institute of Governmental Studies and The Berkeley Political Review

    When: Friday, November 16,  6:00 PM

    Where: Banatao Auditorium, Sutardja Dai Hall

    The panel of experts will look at election results, voting patterns, the influence of money and digital technology, prospects for election reforms and, of course, what happens next.  

     
    Ron Elving, MJ '79, Senior Washington Editor, NPR
    Michelle Quinn, MJ '92, Silicon Valley-based technology correspondent, Politico
    Lisa Garcia-Bedolla, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science at UC Berkeley and the Berkeley Graduate School of Education

    David Kennedy, Pulitzer Prize-winning historian, Stanford University
    Bruce Cain, Professor of Political Science, Stanford University

    Moderated by Susan Rasky, Senior Lecturer, Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism

    RSVP: juliehirano@berkeley.edu

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

    The Betrayal of the American Dream

    Donald L. Barlett and James B. Steele in Conversation

    When: Wednesday, Oct. 17,  6 PM

    Where: Marines' Memorial Club and Hotel (609 Sutter St. San Francisco)

    Please join us for an evening of riveting conversation with Donald L. Barlett and James B. Steele, one of the most widely acclaimed investigative reporting teams in American journalism, and the only reporting team to have received two Pulitzer Prizes for newspaper reporting and two National Magazine Awards for magazine work.

    Donald Barlett and James Steele have worked together for more than four decades, first at The Philadelphia Inquirer (1971-1997), where they won two Pulitzer Prizes and scores of other national journalism awards, then at Time magazine (1997-2006), where they earned two National Magazine Awards, becoming the first journalists to win both the Pulitzer Prize for newspaper work and its magazine equivalent for magazine reporting.  They are now at Vanity Fair as contributing editors. Barlett and Steele also have written eight books. Their new book, "The Betrayal of the American Dream," distills 30 years of their work chronicling the dismantling of the American middle class, told through raw numbers and real American life stories. For more information, please visit http://www.barlettandsteele.com.

    Presented by the Center for Investigative Reporting and the Commonwealth Club of California

    REGISTER HERE



    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

    Journalist mixer Saturday night Oct 13, 6-9pm, SF (FREE)

    A bunch of great Bay Area journalistic organizations are getting together to throw a big (FREE) mixer on Oct 13. Details below. – Mia

    Third Annual Diversity Mixer

    Network, see old friends, make new ones

    6 to 9 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 13

    San Francisco Marriott Hotel

    55 Fourth Street

    FREE ADMISSION

    Complimentary appetizers

    A team effort by The Asian American Journalists Association, Bay Area Black Journalists Association, SPJ, East Bay Press Club, Oakland Local, SF Public Press, Hyphen, PRSA Silicon Valley/San Francisco, National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association, Pacific Media Workers Guild Freelance Unit, San Francisco Bay Area Journalists and the National Association for Multi-Ethnicity in Communications

     


    Facebook EVENT LINK:

    https://www.facebook.com/events/363046547107000/

    call for pitches – Election Advertising stories

    Hey folks. See the following message from the folks at Making Contact. They need your election advertising story pitches ASAP. -Mia

     

    ++++++++++++++++++++++

    We are planning a show to air beginning the day after the election.(November 7th)  Since we produce our programs in advance, it won’t be about the results.  Instead we want to focus on the election advertising industry—and hopefully from some angles that aren’t usually explored. 

     

    Underlying the entire show is the premise that Americans do not like the current state of election advertising—the frequency of TV ads, the number of flyers they get in the mail, never ending pop-ups online, etc.  So we are looking for pitches for sound-rich stories (generally 6-8 minutes in length) that get beyond the simple 'Enough, already!' sentiment, to look at why these ads might be bad for the nation as whole, and what might be done about it.  Some possible angles we are interested are:

     

    -the advertising industry.  How many people are employed in creating and disseminating ads?—From the script writers all the way down to the print shops that make the flyers and yard signs.  Could this be considered a ‘jobs engine’?  And if so, is this an economic boost that Americans would much rather be without?  Perhaps we could hear voices of people whose work depends on this—but maybe they don’t support what they are participating in?

     

    -are the ads even the point? What about media coverage of the ads which, arguably generates even more free press.  Or wanting to be written about as ‘out-spending’ ones opponent, making one candidate seem like they are in the lead.  This piece is veering into territory that has been covered quite a bit elsewhere (do ads actually convince voters?). So we would really want unique angles and voices.

     

    -A look at other countries that limit the length of the campaign season.  Some also have ‘blackout’ days right before the election.  How does this work?  Do people like it? Does a restricted campaign/advertising season benefit the democratic process or the tone of the campaign?

     

    -another ‘inside the ad industry’ angle to think about—a quote from Noam Chomsky:

    Elections are run by the public relations industry. Its primary task is commercial advertising, which is designed to undermine markets by creating uninformed consumers who will make irrational choices – the exact opposite of how markets are supposed to work, but certainly familiar to anyone who has watched television.

    It’s only natural that when enlisted to run elections, the industry would adopt the same procedures in the interests of the paymasters, who certainly don’t want to see informed citizens making rational choices.”

    -can any of these ideas be connected to voter suppression efforts?  We are open to other ideas as well

     

    We pay $250-300 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/ 

    Especially important:

    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?

    Please send pitches ASAP to pitches@radioproject.org

     

    Thanks,

     

    Andrew Stelzer & George Lavender

    Making Contact producers

    Media Ideation fellowship deadline Oct 8

    Last chance for this fellowship – deadline is Monday, Oct 8. It's a good one! -mia

    ++++++++++++++++++++

    Deadline Monday
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    View it in your browser.

    Closing Time

    If you haven't started your application for the Media Ideation Fellowship, there's still time! Applications close at midnight CT on Monday, October 8.

    Are you ready to take the plunge? www.mediaideation.org/apply

    This program is the ideal opportunity to seed great projects that will transform progressive politics and resolve social inequities. As a reminder, we are recruiting for five fellowships:

    • Graduate Level Fellows will receive a $12,000 stipend over three months. Candidates must be currently enrolled in a Masters or Ph.D. program, or have received their graduate degree within 12 months of applying for this fellowship. We will place three Graduate Level Fellows.
    • Early Career Fellows will receive a $30,000 stipend over six months. Candidates must have three-to-five years of work experience and can not be currently enrolled in a graduate program. Qualifying Early Career Fellows may also be eligible to receive an additional stipend to help offset the cost of personal health insurance. We will place two Early Career Fellows.

    Start your application today.

    One last chance to share

    Please share this opportunity with others by tweeting about the fellowships or sharing it on Facebook.

    extras needed for “Hypebeasts” shooting nights in NYC, Oct 13-21

    Any NYC folks want to be an extra in a movie? Details below. -mia
     
    A few good extras (over 18 years old) are needed to be sneakerheads in our film "Hypebeasts," a short film by Jessica dela Merced who is being advised by Spike Lee.  The movie is being described as a sneakerhead "Do the Right Thing."  All ethnicities are welcome.  Asian American, Latino and African American extras are highly encouraged!  

    Dates are October 13-21 with Wednesday off.  All NIGHT shoots.

    Please fill out this Google form with your exact availability:  http://bit.ly/Qz5ttP 

    The movie:  The night before a big sneaker drop, things get out of hand for sneakerhead Ronny and his sister Justine when the fast food cashier who wrote a racist remark on their receipt cuts in front of them in line.

    The Low-Down:

    25/per day. Food and snacks provided, you'll get lots of screen time, and you'll be in a fake riot- should be very exciting.  We also have some star names attached to the cast which will be announced hopefully next week. 

    Shoot times will range from 6pm-5am, but you won't have to be there the entire time. As it gets closer we will have a better idea of times you'll need to be there. We are shooting at REED SPACE in the LES on 151 Orchard Street and and a fast food restaurant.  We will contact you with more details on what to wear, but, please avoid wearing  sports team logos because of copyright issues. Please bring chairs to sit in if you have them. 

    And feel free to like us on Facebook:

    And follow us on Twitter:

    Our website:

    Thanks and hope to see you there!

    Marissa Aroy

    social media and other courses at Columbia J-school

    Upcoming events from Columbia jschool's social media guru Sree Sreenivasan and others. Details below.
    -mia
    ____________________________

    Folks: My next two social media workshops are coming up as part of the J-school's Continuing Education program.

    4-nights-over-2-months session starting this Thursday: http://www.journalism.columbia.edu/page/709-smarter-social-media/531

    Social Media One-night Stand, Nov 29, 2012: http://www.journalism.columbia.edu/page/710-social-media-one-night-stand/532

    Lots of other great courses, too – have a look below. Please share with your friends.

    Register now for Columbia Journalism School's fall continuing education workshops!

    More info and details: http://www.journalism.columbia.edu/page/843-training-program-offerings/638

    COMING UP

    Smarter Social Media (10/4, 10/18 & 11/1, 15)

    Advanced Multimedia Storytelling (10/8-12)

    Memoir Writing (10/11, 10/18, 10/25 & 11/1, 11/8, 11/15)

    Introduction to Radio/Audio Storytelling (10/13, 10/20, 10/27 & 11/3, 11/10)

    Reporting Safely in Crisis Zones (10/19-21)

    Self-Publishing a Photo Book for Amateurs and Professionals (11/3-4)

    Investigative Reporting: Data and Digital Media (11/10)

    Investigative Reporting: Using Public Records (11/17)

    Social Media One-Night Stand (11/29)

    Sree Sreenivasan | sree@sree.net | http://sree.net | @sree
    Chief Digital Officer, Columbia University
    [ an explanation: http://bit.ly/sreejob3 ]

    LINKEDIN: http://linkedin.com/in/sreenivasan
    FACEBOOK: http://fb.com/sreetips or http://fb.com/sreenet
    TWITTER: @sree – http://twitter.com/sree (tweeting tech, media & more)
    -> SreeTips blog on CNET News: http://bit.ly/sreetips

    Upcoming events at the UC Berkeley J-School + The Waiting Room documentary

    Some great events coming up at UC Berkeley's Jschool this month. Plus, if you haven't yet seen it, UCB J-school alum Peter Nicks made this AMAZING documentary that's in theaters now – http://www.whatruwaitingfor.com/film/. Go see this film!

    -mia
    _____________________

    SCREENING: "Between Two Worlds" a film produced by Deborah Kaufman and Alan Snitow

    Presented by the Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism,fhe Magnes Collection of Jewish Art and Life and the Jewish Studies Program of the Graduate Theological Union

    When: Wednesday, October 10,  7:00 PM

    Where: Room 105 North Gate Hall

    BETWEEN TWO WORLDS is a groundbreaking personal exploration of the community and family divisions that are redefining American Jewish identity and politics. The filmmakers' own families are battlegrounds over loyalty to Israel, interpretations of the Holocaust, intermarriage, and a secret communist past. Filmed in the United States and Israel, it explores the vital question:  Who speaks for a divided community at the crossroads?

    Q&A with the producers to follow the screening.

    Praise for BETWEEN TWO WORLDS:

    "The film's graceful, seamless, thoroughly engaging blend of family and communal history is sure to stimulate thousands of provocative conversations about the challenges of Jewish identity in the post-Holocaust era."

    -Letty Cottin Pogrebin, author & founding Editor, Ms. Magazine

    "One of the best films I've ever seen about the contradictions of American Jewish life."
    -Peter Beinart, author & journalist

    Iraq Ten Years Later: Forgotten Past and Brutal Present

    When: Friday, October 12,  7:00 PM

    Where: Sibley Auditorium, Bechtel Engineering Center

    An evening with Iraqi Journalist, Haider Hamza, and American journalist and author, David Harris, speaking on Iraq: "Iraq Ten Years Later: Forgotten Past and Brutal Present."

    Best known for ShowTime’s This American Life: "Talk to an Iraqi ", Haider Hamza lived with his family near Babylon, south of Baghdad during the 2003 U.S.-led invasion. While in Iraq, Haider covered all the major events that took place in Iraq including the trials of Saddam Hussein.  Haider will speak about his experience in Iraq and the American public’s response to the war.  Haider is both knowledgeable and entertaining.  His lecture includes film clips from his road trip in America and a slide show of photos he took of post-war Iraq.  He will address the conflicts in Iraq since 2003 and the challenges that emerged after the U.S. troop withdrawal in 2011.

    American Journalist and author of "THE CRISIS: The President, The Prophet, and the Shah; 1979 and the Coming of Militant Islam". David is Vice President of Citizens Reach Out and has been an advocate for anti-militarism since the Vietnam War.  David will present the background of the Iraq war and will introduce the work of Citizens Reach Out.

    Tickets Required
    Daily Cal Reception

    When: Friday, October 19,  6:00 PM

    Where: North Gate Hall Courtyard

    The big news for fall 2012 isn’t just the new home for Cal football: the scoop is the Daily Cal’s new building at 2483 Hearst Avenue. Donated by the Heising-Simons Foundation, the Center for Independent Journalism is across the street from the Journalism School.

    On October 19 – the day before the Big Game – we’ll have a reception to show off the new newsroom, honor Alumna of the Year Maura Dolan ’76 and Friend of Daily Cal Sue Stott, and gather together with old and new friends. Dolan is a legal affairs writer for the Los Angeles Times. Stott and Perkins Coie, the law firm in which she is a partner, have provided the Daily Cal with indispensable pro bono legal advice for three years.

    Please join us for a reception in the Journalism School courtyard and tours of the new Daily Cal building from 6-8pm, Friday, October 19.

    Tickets are $35. To purchase, go to http://donate.dailycal.org/big-game-reception-tickets/

    Christopher B. Daly | COVERING AMERICA: A Narrative History of a Nation's Journalism

    When:  Wednesday, October 24,  12:00 PM

    Where: North Gate Hall Library

    Today many believe that American journalism is in crisis, with traditional sources of news under siege from a failing business model, a resurgence of partisanship, and a growing expectation that all information ought to be free. In Covering AmericaChristopher B. Daly places the current crisis within a much broader historical context, showing how it is only the latest in a series of transitions that have required journalists to devise new ways of plying their trade.

    Christopher B. Daly is a veteran journalist with experience in wire services, newspapers, magazines, books and online. A Harvard graduate, he spent 10 years at the Associated Press. From 1989 to 1997, he covered New England for the Washington Post. 

    David Barstow | The Story Behind the $100 Million Story

    When: Thursday, October 25,  7:00 PM

    Where: Sibley Auditorium, Bechtel Engineering Center

    In April, David Barstow described in The New York Times how Wal-Mart's highest executives covered up evidence of systematic bribery by Wal-Mart de Mexico, it's largest and most important foreign subsidiary. The story triggered investigations by the Justice Department, the SEC and Mexican authorities, along with at least a dozen lawsuits by Wal-Mart shareholders, including several major pension funds. Wal-Mart says it expects to spend at least $100 million this year alone handling the legal fall-out.

     
    David Barstow, a senior writer at The New York Times, is the winner of two Pulitzer Prizes.

    In 2009, he was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting for "Message Machine," his series about the Pentagon’s secret campaign to influence coverage of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. In 2004, he and Lowell Bergman were awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service for articles about employers who committed egregious work place safety violations.

    Mr. Barstow joined The Times in 1999 and has been a member of the newsroom’s investigative unit since 2002.

    Prior to joining The New York Times, Mr. Barstow worked at The St. Petersburg Times in Florida, where he was a finalist for three Pulitzer Prizes. Before that, he worked at the Rochester Times-Union in upstate New York and the Green Bay Press-Gazette in Wisconsin. Mr. Barstow, a graduate of Northwestern University, grew up in Concord, Mass.

    REPORTING FROM ISRAEL: THE US ELECTIONS, THE ARAB SPRING AND JOURNALISM IN THE DIGITAL AGE
    Aluf Benn, Editor-in-Chief, Haaretz Daily Newspaper

    When: Thursday, November 15,  6:00 PM

    Where: North Gate Hall Library

    Israeli journalist and author Aluf Benn on Israel – U.S. post-election relations, Israeli response to the Arab Spring and how journalism is changing in Israel.

    During his 23 years at Haaretz, Aluf Benn covered six Israeli prime ministers from Yitzhak Rabin through Binyamin Netanyahu and reported on Israeli-Arab wars and peace efforts since the Oslo Accords in 1993.  In his roles as diplomatic correspondent, chief news editor and opinion editor at the paper he has become an expert on the country’s leadership, foreign policy and national security. His writing has appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, Foreign Affairs, Newsweek, and The Guardian.

    Presented by Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism, Institute of Israeli Law Ethics and Society at UC Berkeley, the Israel Center of the Jewish Community Federation, the Jewish Community Relations Council and the Consulate General of Israel to the Pacific Northwest

    RSVP REQUIRED
    2012 Presidential Election Recap

    Co-sponsored by the University Library, the Media Studies Group major, the Institute of Governmental Studies and The Berkeley Political Review

    When: Friday, November 16

    Reception: 5:30 PM (North Gate Hall Library)
    Discussion: 6:00 PM (Sutardja Dai Hall)

    Where: Banatao Auditorium, Sutardja Dai Hall

    The panel of experts will look at election results, voting patterns, the influence of money and digital technology, prospects for election reforms and, of course, what happens next.  

     
    Ron Elving, MJ '79, Senior Washington Editor, NPR
    Michelle Quinn, MJ '92, Silicon Valley-based technology correspondent, Politico
    Lisa Garcia-Bedolla, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science at UC Berkeley and the Berkeley Graduate School of Education

    David Kennedy, Pulitzer Prize-winning historian, Stanford University
    Bruce Cain, Professor of Political Science, Stanford University

    Moderated by Susan Rasky, Senior Lecturer, Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism

    RSVP: juliehirano@berkeley.edu

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

    The Betrayal of the American Dream

    Donald L. Barlett and James B. Steele in Conversation

    When: Wednesday, Oct. 17,  6 PM

    Where: Marines' Memorial Club and Hotel (609 Sutter St. San Francisco)

    Please join us for an evening of riveting conversation with Donald L. Barlett and James B. Steele, one of the most widely acclaimed investigative reporting teams in American journalism, and the only reporting team to have received two Pulitzer Prizes for newspaper reporting and two National Magazine Awards for magazine work.

    Donald Barlett and James Steele have worked together for more than four decades, first at The Philadelphia Inquirer (1971-1997), where they won two Pulitzer Prizes and scores of other national journalism awards, then at Time magazine (1997-2006), where they earned two National Magazine Awards, becoming the first journalists to win both the Pulitzer Prize for newspaper work and its magazine equivalent for magazine reporting.  They are now at Vanity Fair as contributing editors. Barlett and Steele also have written eight books. Their new book, "The Betrayal of the American Dream," distills 30 years of their work chronicling the dismantling of the American middle class, told through raw numbers and real American life stories. For more information, please visit http://www.barlettandsteele.com.

    Presented by the Center for Investigative Reporting

    REGISTER HERE