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    Although Grizzly Grizzly is a creative collective geared towards the somewhat broader definitions of what art can be, one type of art that they do not display is work by their own members. This boundary is probably in place to prevent conflicts and controversy, and it is upheld by the...
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    The St. Paul Green Line. Photo (cc) by Michael Hicks via Flickr. After years of planning and construction, it’s thrilling to see the new Green Line trains flowing smoothly and carrying thousands of people to locations between the downtowns of Saint Paul and Minneapolis. It’s equally thrilling to see people connect to and explore the many diverse neighborhoods along the new 11-mile light rail route. Now, Knight Foundation is pondering what would make these Central Corridor neighborhoods in St. Paul even more vibrant places to live, work, play and visit? That’s the question at the heart of the Knight Green Line Challenge, which begins accepting applications Tuesday, June 24. Applicants have until July 24 to submit their project idea. Finalists will be notified no later than Aug. 26, 2014, with winners announced in October 2014. Any individual, business or nonprofit can apply. The only requirement is that the project must take place in and benefit at least one of six St. Paul neighborhoods along the Green Line: Downtown St. Paul, Frogtown/Thomas-Dale, Hamline Midway, St. Anthony Park, Summit-University or Union Park.
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    Ethan Zuckerman is the director of the Center for Civic Media at the MIT Media Lab. Matt Carroll is a research scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Media Lab. He is a former journalist with The Boston Globe and founder of Hack/Hackers Boston. Some opportunities come along only once in a lifetime. That’s why I jumped at the chance to help launch the Future of News initiative at the MIT Media Lab’s Center for Civic Media. The news industry desperately needs new storytelling techniques, new research apps for industrious reporters and new streams of revenue. Now is the time to start turning that wish list into concrete tools. Knight Foundation, which has been the chief financial sponsor of the Center for Civic Media, and Bloomberg, a leading global media company and sponsor of the Media Lab, are the first to back this new initiative. With their support, we are launching new research projects and new courses and working to connect the innovative work underway at the Media Lab with newsrooms around Boston and around the world.
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    This article is cross-posted from the Open Policy & Advocacy blog at Mozilla. Above: Laura Weidman Powers introduces Code 2040 to the Knight-MIT Civic Media Conference. Today, we are at the Knight – MIT Civic Media conference in Cambridge, Massachusetts to celebrate the winners of the Knight News Challenge. The Knight News Challenge winners are a group of 19 projects that will share $3.4 million in grants to address the diversity of issues impacting the free and open Web: from privacy and free expression to expanding the diversity of the tech workforce to improving digital access and connecting communities. They represent the best ideas from nonprofit organizations to start-up creative agencies; from Silicon Valley to London to Eastern Europe. The Knight News Challenge sparked a conversation about how to strengthen the Internet, enabling us to tap into innovation, creativity, and substantive discussion among all stakeholders. Together with the Knight Foundation and the Ford Foundation, we joined together to issue a call to the Mozilla community and beyond: Send your breakthrough ideas to strengthen the Internet for free expression and innovation.
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    Today we’re announcing 19 winners of the Knight News Challenge on strengthening the Internet with total awards of $3,466,000. We launched the challenge Feb. 27 with our partners Ford Foundation and Mozilla Foundation by asking the question: How can we strengthen the Internet for free expression and innovation? We saw several themes emerge in the 704 challenge entries; the nine winners of the major prizes each fit within one. The winners fall within one of three approaches to building a stronger Internet. • Access: Enabling more people to participate and create. • Transparency: Providing a better understanding of who is doing what online. • Safety: Building more effective tools for engaging with the Internet securely. Access. Several projects sought to provide broader or improved access to the Internet through training, providing hardware or developing new tools and other resources to allow more people to participate and create.
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    Attention Miami-based artists: Tigertail is looking for high-quality films that examine movement and dance for the 2015 ScreenDance Miami Festival, which will run January 22-25, 2015. Summer workshops begin in July at Inkub8. The deadline for film submissions is September 1st of this year. Screendance Miami....
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    Bilbao, Spain.   I just returned from the German Marshall Fund’s BUILD event in Bilbao, Spain.  For three days, 100 Americans and Europeans on the front lines of urban innovation gathered to exchange ideas. This transatlantic engagement enables civic leaders to share best practices for cities and facilitates collaboration that improves them. As a native Michigander with limited overseas travel experience, I continue to marvel at how the language of loving cities and place translates in  other countries. Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao First, the place. Bilbao is extraordinary.  We most commonly see the picture of the Guggenheim Museum anchoring Bilbao’s revitalization. All of our events took place within walking distance of this remarkable cultural anchor.  We were also within walking distance of Bilbao’s bustling historic district; a vibrant, contemporary shopping district; office buildings; government buildings; university buildings; and a robust residential community.  Most of our activities took place in a landscape that, 30 years ago, was an industrial port in deep decline, contributing to a contaminated river. Today, few signs of the former industrial shipyards exist, and the fish we witnessed in the river countered the history of contamination. Quite a few of the Bilbao representatives commented that Detroit is “Bilbao 30 years ago.” I considered that a compliment, and I saw several examples that suggested Detroit is on a path that was taken by Bilbao – most notably the reclamation of the riverfront as a place for great public space and redevelopment. 
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    By Carolina Wilson In Miami’s developing tech and startup community, there are always opportunities for new entrepreneurs to build their networks and access information to make their businesses better. Here’s an item of note if you’re interested in federal grant programs: The Miami-Dade Entrepreneurial Development Organization will host a workshop on preparing a proposal on June 23. Next month, you can attend two workshops in what is actually a paired series. The first, on July 10, covers the basics of federal grant programs, and a July 21 session covers preparing proposals. There is plenty more happening too. Here are some Knight Foundation-supported events in South Florida June and July: · June 26: Refresh Miami presents “Bringing Your Ideas to Life,” covering how to take your idea for a startup quickly to market. Registration is free.   
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    Fresh Produce Records in Macon. When you first walk into Fresh Produce Records in downtown Macon, it’s like you’ve stepped into a clubhouse for fans of independent music rather than a retail shop. There may be someone sitting on a couch reading a magazine. Obscure experimental rock music plays in the background as people standing around the counter discuss music of all types. All the while, there is a band setting up, getting ready to perform. These small, little-known bands travel the country with a desire to play their music for anyone who will listen. The normal route these artists take through the Southeast leads them from Atlanta down into Florida, usually to Orlando. The area between these two cities is often considered a musical desert, with few chances to stop and play. In a city such as Macon, a place like Fresh Produce Records must is an oasis to these weary travelers. They are welcomed by people who are as passionate about listening as the band is about playing. Since Fresh Produce opened in September 2013, owner William Dantzler has been inviting bands to play for his modest, but always growing, group of regulars. When the rest of downtown is alive with nightspots hosting bands with bigger followings, Fresh Produce buzzes with indie music and eclectic listeners. Dantzler’s “do-it-yourself” attitude to bringing these shows to Macon caught the attention of Knight Foundation, which gave the store a $10,000 grant as part of a recent package of funding to the Macon arts community. Now Dantzler is seeking to improve the quality of the shows he can offer by upgrading the sound equipment and attracting bands that while still independent, are more recognizable to the Fresh Produce community.
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    By Serlin Quah, ZERO1: The Art & Technology Network Opening the BRING IT! Performance Art Series is a live performance double feature by animator, designer, and multimedia artist Miwa Matreyek. Internationally recognized, Matreyek is based in Los Angeles and creates animated short films that integrate animation, performance, and video installation....