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ArticleWant to know how to gain an edge and make your application stand out? Innovation is welcome and encouraged. We also look at whether the applicant has the know-how to get the project done. That said, you or your group might be in need of a breakout push and some...
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ArticleWhen it comes to the heart of music, it comes to sound – sheer sound, away from categories, away from genre, away from top-10 lists and opus numbers and Billboard charts. This weekend, the folks at New Music Miami host an American composer whose work has been about this fundamental...
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ArticleMy friend Marcia Merrill and I had gotten together over a glass of wine last week when she mentioned she was in her sixth year serving on the board of The Light Factory. “Did you know it...
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ArticleKnight Arts Challenge Miami is open for its fourth year of competition. Until midnight on March 2, we're accepting applications for any idea to bring South Florida together through the arts. That's just enough time for you to get your thoughts together and submit your 150-word application. So over the...
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ArticleAt this juncture in time, Wynwood's Second Saturdays are about the barbecues, the pop-up sort-of art and the party. Which is all okay, as long as you aren't really looking to spend some quality time with much of the better stuff that...
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ArticleThe Coral Gables Art Cinema celebrates the South Florida Premiere of Phil Ochs: There But for Fortune, this Friday, Feb. 18, 2011. Phil Ochs: There but for Fortune is a musical documentary portrait of the tumultuous 1960s and the unlikely folk hero and protest singer, Phil Ochs, who embodied the...
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ArticleTwo weeks ago Detroit Mayor Dave Bing declined a Twitter suggestion that he erect a statue of RoboCop – the half-cop, half-machine of the 1987 science-fiction movie – in the Motor City. But the vigorous, chaotic energy of social media may make the statue a reality despite much criticism among...
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ArticleThis is one in a series of excerpts from our new booklet "Journalism and Media Grant Making," a primer for foundations that want to get started. Five Things You Need to Know: 3. You can start without a lot of money You don’t have to spend a lot of dollars to dip a toe in the water. You can fund coverage by an existing media outlet, as The George Gund Foundation does with grants of $40,000-$50,000 a year to support news coverage of the Great Lakes region on National Public Radio. Or you can help put local news start-ups on a path to sustainability by expanding their audiences, as The Chicago Community Trust has done with grants of $30,000 to $60,000 to emergent local news organizations. Foundation investments in media come in all shapes and sizes. For example, the West Anniston Foundation in Alabama hosts a weekly radio call-in show devoted to
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ArticleMayur Patel, Director of Strategic Assessment and Assistant to the President Evaluating Community Info Projects.pdf (PDF) Community information projects share a desire to inform and/or engage their communities. Most of these news and media projects take advantage of online, digital forms of communication (e.g., websites, Facebook groups or wikis), which in some cases is also integrate with offline approaches to sharing information and connecting people. The universe of community information projects includes a wide range of activities, but many focus on one or a few of the following: News: Strengthening credible professional news sources. Voice: Providing places where residents (e.g., youth, educators, the community at large) can share news and information with their communities. Capacity: Building the capacity of individuals and/or organizations to address information needs and use digital tools. Awareness: Creating awareness campaigns about community issues. Action: Providing platforms for civic engagement and action. In developing your community information project – whether to give voice to underserved communities or supporting an ongoing effort to deliver timely, reliable news and reporting – you may be asking yourself: • How do I know which outcomes to evaluate? • What can I learn from analyzing website or social media data? • How do I make sense of the vast amount of online information that’s available? • What is needed to answer the question: “Are we having an impact?” • How can I use evaluation to strengthen our project and communicate its value to others? This guide provides insight into these questions and others.
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ArticleTo make a splash upon arrival to Wynwood these days, you need to pull out all the stops. Or at least if you are KIWI Gallery, which opened Feb. 12, during Second Saturdays. You have to be about art, [caption id="attachment_11711" align="alignleft" width="194" caption=""Warhol Holding Marilyn Acetate," William John Kennedy;...