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November 17, 2008

Live Webcast of Knight Commission Chicago Meeting Today

Filed under: Award, Knight Commission on Information Needs of Communities i — Kristen Taylor @ 2:53 pm

Knight Commission member danah boyd posted to Twitter from the Chicago Knight Commission on the Information Needs of Communities in a Democracy meeting:

Twitter  @zephoria (danah boyd)  I love the Knight Commission meetings. Smart people thinking collectively.

You can watch the live webcast by clicking the top link on today’s Commission agenda page.

Do you have thoughts to share with the Commission? Leave a comment below or Twitter @knightfdn.

September 25, 2008

Communications Network Conference 2008 Begins in Chicago

Filed under: communications — Kristen Taylor @ 9:19 am

The 2008 Communications Network Conference, a group of philanthropy professionals who work in communications, began last night in Chicago.

Chair of the Network, Larry Meyer (pictured below at left) and Senior Communication Officer and Secretary at Knight Foundation, introduced Ira Glass, who explained how his wildly successful NPR (and Showtime) show This American Life uses narrative hooks to “cunningly” engage listeners around issues they might not otherwise care about.

bud meyer, chair of communications network

Everyone was still abuzz about his talk this morning at breakfast;

breakfast at the communications network conference 2008

to follow the events, the conference Twitter tag is #comnet08 and the conference blog has more details about sessions and speakers.

July 28, 2008

Lee Oglesby On the 2008 UNITY Convention

Filed under: Journalism Program — Lee Oglesby @ 12:49 pm

Editor’s note: Lee Oglesby has been interning with the Knight Communications department this summer. Today is her last day. This post concerns the UNITY Convention, which was held last week in Chicago. Knight is a sponsor of the event.

The four days of workshops at UNITY 2008 Convention may have changed my mind a bit about new tools for journalism. The theme of the conference this year was “A new journalism for a changing world” so, naturally, everyone was anxious to discuss their ideas for the future of journalism in ways that would actually work right now.

I went to two sessions that were particularly influential for me. The first was hosted by Knight’s own J-Lab and brought together a panel of people who had worked with citizen journalism projects and knew the ins and outs.

Citizen media, for them, could mean a woman in Somalia sending a news lead to a BBC correspondent in London. It could also mean a student journalist gaining real-world experience by reporting on an event in a neighborhood near his school. But all forms of participatory media are ways of connecting professional journalists with citizens who could help them build a better story. Framing the concept for me that way (instead of theorizing about questionable people off the street writing stories for the paper) made it easier to understand.

The other session I attended was hosted by KYW NewsRadio and was designed to teach newspaper journalists how to write for radio. On the outside, it was just a workshop, but I got more from it.

The session reminded me that, although newspapers may be doing badly, media in the form of radio and television is doing just fine. Inevitably, during the question and answer portion of the session, a member of the audience brought up the growing field of online media and how radio was handling it. Their answer was typical of those I had heard from other Unity attendees: their hearts are still in radio (or television, or print media), but the Web site provides information that they can’t include in the limited space for each story.

So I leave Unity with a positive outlook towards my (possible) future in journalism. The journalism world won’t be completely detached from the one I grew up with, but it will be enhanced by digital media. The people behind the innovations know what they’re doing and know how to maintain integrity, even if the experiments fail.

July 24, 2008

Lee Oglesby On Journalism and Being A Reader

Filed under: Journalism Program — Lee Oglesby @ 10:07 am

Editor’s note: Lee Oglesby interns with the Knight Communications department this summer. This post is from the day before the UNITY Conference, which goes all this week in Chicago. Knight is a sponsor of the conference, and convened all journalism grantees on Tuesday to discuss media innovation.

A few of the presentations at Knight’s Journalism Grantee Meeting here in Chicago Tuesday gave me some interesting ways to think about journalism in the digital era and the role I play as a reader.

Knight Chair Rosental Alves talked about the deconstruction of the print newspaper, and stressed that this was not synonymous with the decline of journalism. That theme presented itself throughout the room yesterday. I’m certain I’ll see it several times during the Unity Conference this week. I almost expect to see T-shirts that read “Journalism is Not Dead!”

Dianne Lynch, 2007 News Challenge winner, also used her presentation to stress the need to focus on the goal and not the medium, but she brought up some crucial points. One of these was that new media is not always journalism. Most times, it’s people using their Facebook to tell friends that The Dark Knight was awesome.

Dianne also mentioned that the audience of innovators and journalists present in the meeting Tuesday (and at Unity for the rest of the week) are the “early adopters” of this new media. They’re ahead of the curve, but their readers are still behind and are likely to be a little more skeptical.

I’m not (yet) a digital innovator and I’m not a professional journalist. I’m a reader, and I have my doubts. For me, the most reliable news source is a print newspaper or an NPR station, This week, as I explore Unity, I’ll look for things that will encourage me to embrace the digital age and accept it as journalism.

If you can change my mind about digital journalism, I’d like to hear from you. Leave a comment.

July 22, 2008

Knight Journalism event at Unity 2008

Filed under: Journalism Program — Kristen Taylor @ 3:45 pm

Today, more than 170 journalism grantees of Knight are gathered in Chicago for a day of listening and learning about the digital landscape and the future of journalism.

The conference site, unity2008.knightblog.org will be updated during the day with new video and synopsis of the talks.

This is a video of Dianne Lynch, Dean of the Park School at Ithaca College, presenting this morning on what journalism isn’t:

Find more video and presentations on the conference site.

What questions do you have for the “journalism brain trust” in this Chicago conference center today?