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    Each new earthquake aftershock off the coast of Japan comes brings additional misery for the Asian nation and a renewed upswelling of sympathetic grief worldwide. It also creates an increased desire to help out, and later this month, that’s just what a concert at Florida International University will aim to...
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    There's a reason that honeymoons are synonymous with travel -- love is supposed to bloom and take hold best away from everyday realties and life. And a honeymoon doesn't need to be a one-time affair. The concept of enduring romance and of exotic travel captured artist Kevin Arrow's heart as...
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    On Wednesday, Knight Foundation participated in We Media's NYC conference. (The day's Twitter archive here.) Along with the Ethics & Excellence in Journalism Foundation, we sponsored  We Media's PitchIt challenge. Eight projects competed for two $25,000 awards: Milena Arciszewski of Pando Projects and Ben Stacks of Stable Renters Clear Health Costs FastCast Longshot Media Meridian Stories Neighborhood Pages NewsWar Pando Projects Stable Renters I spent part of last Friday in a public speaking training session, so I kept a sharp eye on the presenters' approach and style. I was impressed by all eight. In part, the quality pitches were the result of a coaching session WeMedia conducted the day before that matched each applicant with a mentor. The day's winners day were Milena Arciszewski with Pando Projects and Ben Stacks with Stable Renters. Congratulations to both.
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    Not everything you read online is true, Sir Tim Berners-Lee jested recently, referring to a Wikipedia article about the Web being launched on Christmas day, 1990 (that is, if it hasn’t been edited already… wink, wink). While version #1990-12-25 of the world’s first ever web software was in fact developed in the late fall of 1990, Berners-Lee said on a panel this week that it was actually completed well before Christmas Eve: Alberto Ibargüen asks Tim Berners-Lee about exact birthday of World Wide Web from Knight Foundation on Vimeo. Watch the full panel session featuring Berners-Lee discussing...
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    Last night the New World Symphony opened its doors to magic. To the magic of poetry and music, to the language of Rilke and Goethe, Monteverdi and Mozart, Bernstein and Debussy. New World Symphony Conducting Fellow Teddy Abrams hosted the event aptly titled, “Inside the Music: Music in Poetry” in...
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    This post is by Michele McLellan, journalist and consultant, and Eric Newton, senior adviser to the president, John S. and James L. Knight Foundation We’ll be at the Council on Foundations Conference at 9:30 a.m. Monday to launch a new guide, “Journalism and Media Grant Making: Five Things You Need to Know, Five Ways to Get Started.” It is a basic how-to, from the foundations that are making media and journalism grants, for the foundations that are thinking about making them. More foundations are getting involved.  About 15,000 newspaper journalists have been cut from newsrooms in recent years. As news organizations cut back, community leaders find they must strengthen the news and information flow in order to accomplish their strategic goals of civic engagement and community betterment. There are lots of ways to get involved and they don’t all cost a lot of money.  Some foundations have established independent public affairs journalism outlets, others have trained citizens to create digital media, and others have created awareness campaigns about education, the environment and civic participation. The booklet describes many efforts, from grants to support professional journalism about health care by the California Endowment to a contest sponsored by the Minnesota Community Foundation to bring new voices into civic conversations about important state issues. The booklet features...
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    A few months ago, Arianna Huffington published a piece on the Huffington Post questioning the role(s) social media should play in the museum experience. “The danger of social media becoming the point of social media -- connection for connection's sake, connection to no end -- is one museums need to...
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    On Saturday, April 2, 2011, 45 members of the Opera Company of Philadelphia’s official children’s choir, the Keystone State Boychoir, spontaneously performed “Avec la garde montante” from Georges Bizet’s Carmen for delighted children and parents at the Please Touch Museum, a favorite Philadelphia destination for children of all ages. Why Does Knight Foundation Fund Random Acts of Culture? Knight Foundation, like its founders Jack and Jim Knight, focuses on promoting informed and engaged communities. To that end, we strongly believe in the potential of the arts to engage residents, and bring a community together. Hearing Handel, or seeing the tango in an unexpected place provides a deeply felt reminder of how the classics can enrich our lives. As you’ll see in our videos, the performances make people smile, dance, grab their cameras – even cry with joy. For those brief moments, people going along in their everyday lives are part of a shared, communal experience that makes their community a more vibrant place to live. In these days of shrinking audiences, we also hope that these random acts will encourage people to attend traditional performances. We can’t promise it. But it’s hard to watch what unfolds during a Random Act of Culture, and not be inspired to see and hear more.   Cross-posted from KnightArts.org.
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    Arthur Goyette knows the value of good neighbors. While his wife Betty was battling cancer, they brought countless meals to the Goyette home. When the neighbors learned that Betty had always wanted to ride in a convertible, they surprised the family with a loaned Chrysler Sebring. The couple drove down the block with the top down, surrounded by people waving and taking pictures. Arthur marvels that he might never have met these people f it weren’t for the Front Porch Forum, an online network of neighbors. The forum is a great example of how digital media and technology are changing how we connect to information and each other. The way we engage in public dialogue, coordinate, solve problems—all of it is shifting. Networks themselves are as old as humanity, used by activists from Mahatma Ghandi to the Tea Party to impact society. Today, though, technology is enabling networks to emerge in new ways. So Knight Foundation and Monitor Institute set out to look at the impact on communities, and ask, what do these emerging networks mean for community change? And, how can funders leverage them for good? The result is our new report, Connected Citizens: The Power, Peril and Potential of Networks. Through more than 70 examples, we found networked communities pushing for open government, banding together to care for the elderly, enlisting volunteer coders to make online aid maps for earthquake ravaged Haiti, and more. We also identified five promising trends, or ways people are using networks for social action. We hope funders will keep an eye on them. The practices include using the network to crowdsource ideas and listen to new perspectives, and “designing for serendipity,” or creating environments - in person and online - where connections can take shape. Serendipity isn’t necessarily in funders’ DNA, as Knight Foundation Vice President Trabian Shorters notes. Yet serendipitous spaces have been fertile ground for innovation. The report does raise some flags about the future though, offering a cautionary look at how society may change as a result of the evolving way people connect. In fact, we projected ahead to 2015, and offered several scenarios. Will neighbors be uber-connected and gathering to improve their communities? Or will people grow more distrustful, worried about their privacy and retreating into their own foxholes? Only time will tell if either, or both, come to pass. Whatever happens, it is clear that networks are a growing part of our ever-complex communities. It’s up to all of us to figure out the best ways to use their potential for good. We’d love to hear about your experiences with networks. Download the report and join us for a webinar conversation at 2 p.m. EDT on April 20th (sign up and more info here) or leave a comment below. - Mayur Patel, Knight Foundation, and Diana Scearce, Monitor Institute