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Knight Blog

The blog of the John S. & James L. Knight Foundation

Evolve. Embrace. Reinvent.

June 30, 2009, 3:06 p.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

Jose Zamora is a Journalism Program Associate at Knight Foundation Ford and Knight Foundation partnered to support the participation of 76 journalists and students at The National Association of Hispanic Journalists (NAHJ) convention.

Recognizing that the media landscape is in flux, the theme of the 27th annual NAHJ conference was: "Evolve.' Embrace. Reinvent." And the focus was on multimedia and digital journalism.

The program was designed to help journalists acquire the multimedia and technological skills they need to keep their jobs, find new ones or grow professionally.

There were thirty-three sessions offering multimedia skills that ranged from how to Blog and use Twitter to how to Podcast, stream live video and create Mashups.

The Knight Digital Media Center held a Multimedia Bootcamp, where conference attendees could learn the basic skills needed for multimedia storytelling and get hands-on training on how to record audio, take photos and shoot videos for the Web.

David Ardia, the director of the Citizen Media Law Project, moderated a panel on online media law and ethics that focused on legal issues that might arise from the daily practice of online journalism to legal and ethical issues related to user generated content and the bloggosphere.

If you are interested in learning digital media skills and on getting hands-on training, please start by visiting:

Knight Digital Media Center J-Lab - The Institute for Interactive Journalism Knight Citizen News Network Citizen Media Law Project Knight Center for Journalism in the Americas

Notes from Knight's Boot Camp for News Entrepreneurs

June 29, 2009, 9:06 a.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

Julia Scott, who left her job at the Los Angeles Daily News to start BargainBabe.com, recommends being obsessed with your new business as a key to being a good news entrepreneur. That, and paying attention to social media as well as your advertisers.

Bargain Babe for KF Blog

Scott was a Fellow for the News Entrepreneur Boot Camp, the Knight Digital Media Center's week-long program held in May in partnership with the Online Journalism Review and the University of Southern California's Annenberg School for Communication, Center on Communication Leadership and Policy, and Lloyd Greif'Center for Entrepreneurial Studies.

The boot camp taught 12 digital entrepreneurs selected by Knight such topics as developing a sustainable business plan and marketing and audience development.

The Knight Digital Media Center will hold a Multimedia Reporting and Convergence Workshop from July 12-17 at the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism. The next boot camp for news entrepreneurs will be announced by the Knight Center when a date is set. Express interest through the center's web site.

If a glass of wine can't fix a long day of work, FUERZABRUTA can

June 26, 2009, 3:07 p.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

This post was written as a collaborative project'by Knight's 2009 summer interns.

On Tuesday, June 23 Knight Foundation staff members and summer interns attended a performance of FUERZABRUTA at the Adrienne Arsht Performing Arts Centeras guests of Dennis Scholl, the Communities Program Director for Miami.'

FUERZABRUTA is an interactive visual spectacle that packs six to eight hundred people into a dark room for an hour. Eight cast members manipulate the dynamic set pieces with their bodies and engage the audience with disposable props and pumping music. A giant treadmill and a plastic pool suspended over the heads of the audience make up most of the set.'

Fuerza Bruta Fuerza Bruta performers

It's easy to get swept up in the sensory show; audience members touch, throw, dance and move from place to place like the actors do. In a recent performance, one audience member got carried away and was kicked out for repeatedly punching the plastic pool.

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The show has been touring for three years, debuting in Argentina and traveling across the U.S. as well as to countries like the U.K., Brazil and Mexico.'One cast member noted contrasting energies between audiences in New York and in Miami. Another performer said that in Argentina the show is considered more a theatre piece than a work of conceptual art. Apparently the experience changes from city to city and from night to night, but everyone agrees the real party happens on the weekends.

Printcasting goes National

June 26, 2009, 2:39 p.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

Dan Pacheco explains how the new Printcasting model will be tested in dozens of newspapers across the country.

Printcasting lets people become their own publishers by creating a way to package stories and generate advertising revenue. Anyone can create a 'printcast' about their interests or community.

Printcasting will be beta tested with the MediaNews Group, which owns 54 daily newspapers.

Pacheco, a 2008 Knight News Challenge winner, is currently expanding his project to such cities as Denver and Los Angeles.

Knight Foundation awarded the Bakersfield Californian a Knight News Challenge grant to develop Printcasting, which ties online content to publication templates.

Printcasts update themselves when the selected web sites and blogs are updated, and can be printed or sent to a mobile device. People who make printcasts can also make money from targeted ads by local businesses.

The Knight News Challenge hopes to speed adoption of digital innovations in community news.

Printcasting is one of several Knight News Challenge platforms that, once completed, will be released to everyone as open-source software.

Will everyone use the new digital tools?

June 25, 2009, 7:50 p.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

At several of the BarCamp sessions at the Future of Civic Media conference Knight held with M.I.T., attendees spoke about using mobile technology and video and audio communication to bridge the digital divide.

The Web was thought to be the great leveler, but how about for people who don't have a computer, or can't read web site text?

In one BarCamp session on media and information in the developing world, 2007 Knight News Challenge Winner Ethan Zuckerman of Global Voices said the developing world is better wired for mobile technology than it is for Internet use on computers. His smart phone works faster in Ghana than it does in the U.S.

Knight News Challenge grants have supported such programs as Mobile Media Toolkit and News on Cell Phones. Knight Foundation Director of IT George Martinez and his team are also working on universal digital access in U.S. communities.

Below, 2008 Knight News Challenge winner Jessica Mayberry of Video Volunteers explains how illiteracy contributes to the digital divide.

Charlotte Video Lauded for Helping Heal Racial Divide

June 25, 2009, 3:59 p.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

Souls of our StudentsThe Souls of Our Students video came out of a Knight-funded project with Mecklenburg Ministries, called Souls of White Folks. Faith leaders exploring issues of white privilege during the program were challenged to carry their new understanding into their congregations and communities.

The video with students telling their own stories about challenges of being different (race, gender and sexual preference) was created. It's incredibly powerful and very well done and received a national Telly Award. You'll not be surprised to learn that I've cried every time I've seen it.

I'm proud of this project because of the vision it took to create it, the courage of our school superintendent to put it into our public schools and the tenacity and know-how of the faith leaders to see the need for it and give it legs to succeed.

Knight's unique community of other funders, academics, journalists and new media innovators may know of organizations or projects where teaching the value of differences and diversity would be helpful, and this is a wonderful tool available to you.

"Are you looking for a great diversity training program for your business leaders? Are you searching for an inspiring diversity video and curriculum for your Youth Group or adult Sunday School Class, your high school classroom? You can now obtain, Souls of Our Students, an award winning DVD and curriculum for your congregation or business or school.

This documentary features 9 local high school students sharing heartfelt reflections on the realities of life in Charlotte, and how it feels to be 'different' in a community that is becoming increasingly diverse. It is being incorporated into Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools 9th grade curriculum to address issues that continually affect every high school student in our city. It is also part of the CMS Teacher Training Academy.

Beyond the Charlotte-Mecklenburg School system, the video will be offered to companies, congregations, and independent schools in Mecklenburg County and beyond to be used as part of their diversity training. The Levine Museum of the New South is incorporating this documentary into its new exhibit, "Changing Places."

Three different facilitators' guides are available with the Souls of Our Students DVD: a congregational guide, an independent school curriculum (sponsored by Providence Day School), and a business guide. Curricula include questions for discussion, interactive exercises and additional resources.."

"Souls of Our Students" can be ordered from the homepage of Mecklenberg Ministries; facilitators are available for groups requesting the program.

Knight News Challenge Winners Discuss Future of News and Civic Media at M.I.T.

June 25, 2009, 11:33 a.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

On Wednesday morning, former Knight News Challenge winners like David Ardia and Lisa Williams gave their advice for web sites and non-profits at "Knight 101"

Wednesday evening brought a plenary called "Nerds, News, and Nabes" with Knight Foundation President and CEO Alberto Ibarügen, Henry Jenkins, principal investigator for M.I.T.'s Center for Future Civic Media (C4FCM), and N.Y.U. Professor Eric Klinenberg.

At Thursday morning's plenary session, Chris Csikszenmihalyi, co-direcotr of the C4FCM, talked about bringing communities near natural gas fields the news and information they need to preserve their communities and their health, and M.I.T. grad student Ben Fry helped us'visulaize data.

One example of data'visualization from Martin Wattenberg was Wordle, a program that generates images based on word frequency. The more times a word appears in a given text or blog, the larger it is in the image generated. Here's one for a press release on the KNC winners. KNC09 wordle

Throughout the rest of the day there were BarCamp sessions on such topics as reporting under repression and using "crappy cell phones." Knight's Journalism Advisory Committee hosted an afternoon BarCamp session on the future of journalism and Knight Foundation's role.

 

On Thursday afternoon and Friday morning, KNC winners and M.I.T. grad students and employees explained their digital media projects. Notable demos included Virtual Gaza, Sourcemap.org (in beta version)'and a digital community storytelling effort.

Friday morning, we all voted on the best idea for collaboration among KNC winners developed over the course of the conference using Selectricity. TweetBill, a project'linking constituents to one another and alerting them to'bills and their representatives' contact info,'won the $3,000 first prize.

Check out live tweets from the conference at #kncmit, #knc09, and #fncm09. Other information is available on the conference's wiki.

José Zamora announces Knight International Journalism Awards

June 24, 2009, 6:31 p.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

2009 marks the 12th year the Knight International Journalism Awards have been given to "media professionals worldwide who have taken bold steps to keep citizens informed despite great obstacles." This year's winners -- Cao Junwu of China and Chouchou Namegabe Nabintu of the Democratic Republic of the Congo -- "were selected for their ability to tell important stories that others have shied away from despite the risks."

Read more about the award, which was presented at the Knight Foundation Conference Center at the Newseum.

Paul Bass on Putting Together a Small Town News Experiment

June 24, 2009, 2:23 p.m., Posted by Marika Lynch – 0 Comments

This week, ValleyIndependentSentinel.org - a site covering Connecticut's Lower Naugatuck Valley - launched with funding from the Knight Community Information Challenge.'Here, Editor Paul Bass talks about how he applied for the challenge through the Community Foundation for Greater New Haven.

The Knight Community Information Challenge helps U.S. communities meet their information needs by offering matching grants to community foundations to fund news and information projects.' If you're a community foundation, or someone looking to start a news and information project, you may be eligible for funding through the challenge. Applications will be accepted beginning Aug. 10. Find out more at informationneeds.org.

It's Selectric!

June 24, 2009, 6:42 a.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

At the Future of News and Civic Media conference, Knight Foundation's Journalism Program Director Gary Kebbel announced that Knight would award $3,000 to the best proposal for collaboration between attendees that would improve current Knight News Challenge projects or result in a completely new idea. The second-place idea would win $2,000, and the third, $1,000.
 
 
The winners were'chosen using Selectricity, a voting process created by Benjamin Mako Hill. Mako had each conference attendee rank the 20 proposals for collaborative projects submitted by attendees, mostly KNC winners, and Selectricity chose the winners based on the largest consensus.

Selectricity

The proposals from the cooperation competition'will be available here for two weeks.

Knight Announces Investigative Reporting Initiative

June 24, 2009, 6 a.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

Eric Newton, Vice President of Knight Foundation's Journalism Program, announced Knight's Investigative Reporting Initiative at the Investigative Reporters and Editors' annual conference.
The initiative will help grantees develop new economic models for investigative reporting on digital platforms, and will begin with a $15 million initial investment. Newton announced Knight's three new grants to the Center for Investigative Reporting, ProPublica, and the Sunlight Foundation.
The Associated Press will also distribute non-profit investigative journalism from these grantees as well as from the Investigative Reporting Workshop to its 1,500 member newspapers.
In the past year, Knight Foundation has funded regional non-profit investigative journalism efforts. Other grants went to helping the twelve university journalism schools involved in News 21 make their investigative projects self-sustaining.
Knight will continue its endowments to the IRE and Knight Chair in Investigative and Enterprise Journalism at the University of Illinois, currently held by Brant Houston.
Knight has also supported community based investigative reporting projects such as Chi-Town Daily News, Minnpost.com, The St. Louis Beacon and Voice of San Diego.

Biloxi Program Director Honored by Young Professionals Organization

June 23, 2009, 5:39 p.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

Adele Lyons, Knight's Program Director for Biloxi and Gulfport, MS, was honored by a local group called the Coast Young Professionals with a "4 Ever Young" Award last month. According to a press release from CYP, the award is given to "those professionals who have given of themselves to their careers, their communities, and their families, forming a foundation for the young men and women who will lead the coast in the future."

"It was a great honor, but I have to say at 44 years old, I thought I was still young," said Adele in an e-mail. "Seems in the Coast Young Professional's eyes, I am older than I thought. Yet, wiser. Seriously, it was nice to be recognized." (Photo courtesy of Coast Young Professionals.)

Picture courtesy of Coast Young Professionals

Knight News Challenge Winners 2009 Announced at MIT #knc09

June 17, 2009, 5:30 p.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

Congratulations to all the winners of this year's Knight News Challenge that were announced this afternoon.

You can read the press release, great coverage from Nieman Lab, and follow the tweets on hashtags #knc09, #fncm09, #kncmit (all of them are aggregated in this CoverItLive that Greg Linch posted on his personal site.

Knight News Challenge 2009 Winners

KF President and CEO Alberto Ibarügen relates music to journalism

June 17, 2009, 9:17 a.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

On Wednesday June 10, Knight Foundation President and CEO Alberto Ibarügen gave a keynote speech at the League of American Orchestras National Conference held in Orchestra Hall, Chicago.'

The audience was encouraged to adapt music performance so that indeed the art form does not die, but instead persists in a digital medium enhanced by greater communal accessibility. Find his speech here.

 

Keyword Searches Find Local News Coverage in Decline

June 12, 2009, 4:44 p.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

New News: Journalism We Want and Need (.pdf), a study of local news coverage by Chicago's Community Media Workshop, reports that local news coverage is declining in the city's major news outlets.
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NewNews

The CMW used local news keywords to search the print editions of the Chicago Sun-Times and Chicago Tribune from 1986 to the present. They found that local news keywords decreased after a peak in 1994, except for corruption and bribery.
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The study was commissioned and funded by the Chicago Community Trust, a Knight Foundation grantee. It ranked'Chi-Town Daily News'first among Chicago's news sites, excluding the web sites of large media outlets like the Tribune and the Sun-Times.
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Check out the Knight Commission on the Information Needs of Communities in a Democracy and the Knight Community Information Challenge to learn more about local news sites in your community.

Knight Foundation to Announce Investigative Journalism Grants at IRE Meeting

June 11, 2009, 1:41 p.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

Journalism Program Director Gary Kebbel will speak at the Investigative Reporters and Editors' annual'conference'in Baltimore this weekend.
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Knight Foundation funds experimental models of investigative reporting through such efforts as the Knight News Challenge and American University's J-Lab.
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Today, Kebbel will speak as part of a panel on what funders look for in investigative reporting projects.
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On Saturday, Newton will announce three new investigative journalism grants as part of Knight Foundation's new Investigative Reporting Initiative.
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Brant Houston, Knight Chair in Investigative and Explanatory Journalism at the University of Illinois, will be on three panels. He will speak about understanding crime statistics, funding individual investigative projects, and sharing resources and knowledge among international investigative journalists. Find the conference schedule here.

Fantasia Gets An Adult Makeover

June 10, 2009, 4:16 p.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

In just a few months, architect Frank Gehry's latest creation will dominate Miami's artistic scene as the New World Symphony's arts 'laboratory,' where the musical and the visual will be combined into one dynamic arts experience.

New World Symphony, Miami Beach

In December 2007 the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation granted New World Symphony a Knight New Media Endowment of five million dollars. The money will be used for media innovations in the arts such as online broadcasting of performances, a digital music library, and integration of video art and music in the symphony's new building.

New World Symphony, Miami Beach

The building seeks to allow a performance space for NWS while incorporating animated art and new media technology into the concert experience. Working with video artist Tal Rosner, who listens to musical pieces, sketches his reactions, and develops them into video graphics, NWS has already begun integrating the music world with novel video artwork. In Rosner's interpretation of both Benjamin Britten and Igor Stravinsky's works, changes in tempo, dynamic, and tone are all expressed visually in mutable combinations of color and line projected onto a screen behind the musicians.

Gehry's design will take that music-video combination to the next level by permitting both art forms to exist throughout the hall rather than confining them to the traditional stage and back-drop. Acoustic sails all around and above the hall help to completely envelop listeners sitting in any section, and the experience is enhanced with two extra platforms for musicians situated in the middle of the seating areas. The design eliminates the division between audience and performer. In one large space, the music, the art, and the active listening and watching mingle to form an altogether new artistic experience.

It is impossible to predict the response to this kind of artistic collaboration. The new environment might overwhelm the senses; art purists may reject what could be viewed as a muddying of both media.

On the other hand, detecting change in an animated image alongside change in the music might help visual learners engage with the works. With shows as short as twenty minutes, or 'journeys' as long as two to three hours, art will be available to anyone, at any concentration, in either musical or visual form. It is an opportunity for the arts in Miami to soar to a new level of accessibility.

New World Symphony, Miami Beach

Just a few months ago, the space was totally vacant. The several stories of performance space seem to have shot up in a matter of moments. More exciting than its seemingly quick arrival, however, is of course the building's promised mission to challenge and change the Miami art world.

For more information, visit New World Symphony's new campus online.

Global Press Freedom Has Made Little Progress

June 5, 2009, 4:11 p.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

Claire Austin is a Journalism intern at Knight Foundation. Freedom House released its annual survey of press freedom showing the unfortunate post 9-11 trend of decreasing press freedom around the world.

The latest: only 17 percent of people live in a country where they can express themselves freely.

Click "play". Green countries are free, yellow are partly free, and red aren't at all free. After the fall of the Soviet Union, the world starts to turn yellow and green. But then, after 9-11, it turns back to red.

To get involved in freedom of expression issues, pick a project to help out with by visiting the sites of Knight grantees working in this field. These include the International Center for Journalists, the Committee to Protect Journalists, the Inter-American Press Association's Impunity Project, and the University of Miami's Knight Center for International Media.

Meet the 2009 Knight Foundation Summer Interns

June 4, 2009, 5 p.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

We'll let Raquel Villagra (Columbia), Claire Austin (Georgetown), Ernesto Alvarez (Amherst), and Chelsea Roth (Michigan) introduce themselves to you below.

Welcome to these fantastic four; we look forward to our summer ahead--

Knight Grantees Explore Non-Profit Media at Duke University

June 3, 2009, 8:21 a.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

The Sanford Institute of Public Policy at Duke University has posted a new web site on non-profit media models.

NEWS

Knight foundation grantees writing background papers for a conference at Sanford on non-profit media included Penelope Muse Abernathy and Brant Houston, both Knight Chairs in Journalism.
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James T. Hamilton, the Director of Duke's DeWitt Wallace Center for Media and Democracy, and Joel Kramer of MinnPost also wrote on emerging non-profit forms.
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Stephen Engelberg, managing editor of ProPublica, spoke at the conference.
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Check out the conference's web site, where you'll find the final conference report (.pdf) including the background papers, plus'reactions from attendees.

 

New Voices Contest Winners Announced

June 3, 2009, 8:20 a.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

New Voices has announced its 2009 grantees. A project of American University's J-Lab, New Voices funds community news experiments.

NewVoices

Some of this year's grantees are universities collaborating with their surrounding communities. Wayne State University has hired professional journalists to edit submissions from students and Detroit citizens for GrossePointeToday.com, while The Annenberg School at USC will run a community news web site focusing on education, housing, and immigration.
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News 21 Announces New Website and Contest

June 3, 2009, 8:19 a.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

News 21, a collaborative effort among over 90 journalism fellows from 12 top journalism schools, has launched its new web site.

Young and Wireless

Another project of News 21 is Syracuse University's video journalism contest for teens called "The Young and the Wireless." Contestants must create a "webisode" in the style of a soap opera.
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News 21 schools also include UC Berkeley, USC, Columbia, Northwestern, and many others. Students discuss journalism through a social networking platform at News 21's Ning site.
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Ian Bogost: "Journalism is hardly dying."

June 1, 2009, 2:27 p.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

Ian Bogost (3:05) on news games at last week's Games For Change conference:

"Journalism is hardly dying; in fact, it's possible that it couldn't be killed. The idea of informing and educating a public, such that they can make independent decisions, is something that is so endemic of a democracy, that we would have to take down the democracy to kill it. Instead, what's changing is the way that we communicate with one another."