Last year, Knight Foundation awarded $8 million to 31 groups – such as sculptors, musicians, prominent institutions and recently formed galleries. The winning ideas included creating a two-year, fellow residency for up-and-coming artists run by the University of Miami and housed in the Design District; a Haitian jazz series; and little league-like network of children’s choirs serving disadvantaged neighborhoods.
"Imagine, if you will, sitting down to your morning coffee, turning on your home computer to read the day's newspaper--well, it's not as far-fetched as it may seem..."
Today, Knight News Challenge (the ~$5 million yearly contest to find innovative ideas for news delivery) winner Everyblock announced a partnership with the New York Times to add political news items to the NYC block pages.
When an elected official representing your neighborhood is mentioned in the NYT, you'll find the mention on Everyblock as well.
Congrats to the Everyblock team on the new feature, and please leave comments and feedback for them on their announcement post.
In February 2008, Knight held a media learning seminar in Miami with a keynote from Judy Woodruff; on the informationneeds.org site, you can find a media toolkit, the 2008 session schedule, and videos from the 2008 event.
In a few weeks, the 2009 Media Learning Seminar will be held in Miami, and we would like to highlight all the good work that seminar attendees have done online in the past year.
Please help us by commenting with your links to Web pages, images, and video below. We look forward to hearing from you--
Knight is funding multi-media journalist Farai Chideya and her team of student bloggers from the University of Southern California's Annenberg School of Journalism to post videos, images, text, and "tweets" (using the microblogging service Twitter) on Pop + Politics this week (all of their inaugural content is released under a Creative Commons license).
A few years ago, Knight supported Detroit with a technology center at their downtown YMCA and youth programming. The YMCA centers developed the YArts program and have launched a refreshed Web site for the Detroit creative community: thedetroiter.com
The site is featuring artist Tristan Eaton, who contributes to the Detroit art scene and whose work has appeared on posters for the Obama campaign (below is his "gas pump" poster).
Eaton's work was part of the Manifest Hope: DC Gallery exhibit this week at 3333 M Street NW during the Inauguration festivities.
The full interview on the YArts site here with an image of an Obama mural by Eaton unveiled this week.
What do you think about the Obama campaign art? And how can we strength art communities in cities like Detroit?
Today is the deadline to apply to be a Jennings Fellow; a program (partially funded by Knight) meant for journalists to explore constitutional issues in their work.
Fellows attend a few days of workshops with leading constitutional scholars and lawyers (the 2009 faculty includes Kenneth Starr, Dean, Pepperdine University School of Law and John Yoo, Professor of Law, University of California at Berkley).
Harold Jackson of the Philadelphia Inquirer is a Jennings Fellow from the program's first year, and he tells us more about the program below:
The application deadline is today; questions on the program? You can tell them Knight Blog sent you--
Last week, the University of Miami School of Communication held two sessions of Beyond Bootcamp multimedia workshops that ran for three days with training on the specific tracks of audio narratives, video narratives, online infographics, multimedia production, multimedia programming, and teaching multimedia.
UM Knight Chair in Visual Journalism Rich Beckman facilitated Friday's discussion between the workshop faculty, toward the end bringing up questions of internationalization and audience (NYT Multimedia Editor Andrew DeVigal (@drewvigal) speaks about Mandarin translations):
A timely discussion given the recent launch of Global Post? What do you think?
Also, Alberto Cairo, a visual journalism professor at UNC Chapel Hill, talked about making information graphics easier to understand:
MSNBC.com Senior Multimedia Producer Jim Seida spoke strongly about the importance of ethics in journalism:
Washington Post Visual Journalist Travis Fox detailed the ethics of creating an accurate panorama:
and former Miami Herald General Counsel and UM Assistant Professor of Journalism Sam Terilli spoke on legal implications for journalists and newsrooms:
Comments? Thoughts? UM Senior Greg Linch's personal blog has more detailed posts from the sessions.
Today, Knight announced the twenty-one winning projects for the first year of the Community Information Challenge, a five-year, $24 million initiative for help community foundation find creative ways to better inform their communities.
The full list of winners is in the press release, and you can learn what a community foundation is as well as the Park City Foundation's climate change project in the below Knight Pulse conversation: (transcript is below video)
Hi! I’m Kristen Taylor, and this is a Knight Pulse video conversation. Today we’re talking with Katie Wright, and Katie is the Programs Manager for the Park City Foundation. Katie, thanks so much for being with us.
Katie: Thank you.
Kristen: So tell us more about the Park City Foundation and your role there.
Katie: Okay. Well, we are a pretty new community foundation. We’re actually the first one in the state of Utah. And it was started about four years ago and came under professional management only about a year and a half ago. And we’re located in a small ski resort town, and our focus is just promoting philanthropy throughout Summit County.
Kristen: And tell me what a community foundation is.
Katie: A community foundation is an organization, a public institution, a non-profit, that manages and invests people’s philanthropic funds. So in a way it’s an alternative to a private foundation, where people of lesser means can fully participate in philanthropy. And on the other side of services, they provide things to non-profit organizations. The first and most important is grants and funding, but also services and support such as volunteer recruitment and professional development and anything that can help the nonprofit sector thrive and do their job better.
Kristen: I see. How is it different, being a community foundation in a ski resort town?
Katie: We live in a pretty small town, and we have a lot of transient population, so the people who live here permanently all know each other well and form a really tight-knit community. But there are also a lot of part-time residents who come from a lot of wealth, might give philanthropically and be very involved philanthropically in their home town but don’t think about participating necessarily where they vacation. So that’s one of the things we’re trying to do is to pull them into the community and help them see that there’s need even where they are vacationing and just enjoying life.
Kristen: I see. And we’re going to be working with you—the Knight Foundation—on a project through the Community Information Challenge, so tell me a little bit about the project we’re going to be working on.
Katie: Okay. Well, we’re really excited about it, and what it is is we’re working in partnership with our local city government to create a website that is sort of a Facebook-style profile, but it measures a person’s carbon footprint and also water footprint. And the idea is that a household, an organization, a business can create a profile and measure what footprint they are affecting on our community and on the earth in general and then access information on how to reduce this footprint. And the real innovation is that we’re working with utility companies to have real data, so that every month someone can log in and see how the changes they made in the previous month have affected their footprint.
Kristen: That’s really exciting. What are the ways you’re going to be able to tell the community about this, and how will they be involved?
Katie: We are very lucky. As a ski town, we are sort of on the forefront of climate change; we’re the canary in the coal mine, because our culture, our economy, everything is based on snow pack and ski resorts. And so our city government and our local resort mountains are very involved in climate change and committed to innovation. And so we have support from the city, who is doing a community-wide footprint assessment that provides a baseline that we as a community can measure in upcoming years.
Are our reduction strategies actually affecting change? And we also have support from some of the local mountain resorts. And so we’re planning later this spring a big Save Our Snow event where we launch the website and also talk about how snow pack projections are for our town in particular. So in the year 2075, will there be skiing at the base of our resort at all, or will we have to shuttle people up the mountain to ski and things like that.
Kristen: I see. So where can people go if they’d like to find out more information?
Katie: Well, the best place to start is on our city government website, which is parkcity.org, or you can visit our website, the foundation’s, which is theparkcityfoundation.org.
Kristen: Great! Well, thanks so much, Katie. We’ll be checking back in with you to see how it goes.
Comments? Thoughts on other ways community foundations might reach their communities?