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

Mario Garcia on newspaper innovation in U.S.

July 31, 2008, 5:45 p.m., Posted by Marc Fest – 0 Comments

Newspaper designer Mario Garcia has a provocative theory about why there is less newspaper innovation in the' U.S. than elsewhere in the world. In today's entry on his personal blog Mario states:

[...] editors are extremely protective of what they consider to be "serious journalism," and with this comes a negative reaction to anything that, like innovative advertising, could create a notion of compromising ethical values. Not that it has to be, but editors react that way.

Do you think that "serious journalism" sometimes stands in the way of newspaper innovation in the U.S.? Read Mario's blog post, and comment below to let us know what you think.

 

Citizen Media Law Project Online Guide Launch

July 30, 2008, 8:30 a.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

Yesterday, the Citizen Media Law Project, directed by David Ardia, launched the final sections of its online guide to media law.

 

The free online guide, which is intended for use by bloggers, website operators, and other citizen media creators, focuses on the legal issues that non-traditional and traditional journalists are likely to encounter as they gather information and publish their work online.

 

You can read the entire online guide here

The Citizen Media Law Project, a joint venture between Harvard Law School's Berkman Center for Internet and Society and the Center for Citizen Media, is a Knight News Challenge winner. More details about the guide are in the press release.

Lee Oglesby On the 2008 UNITY Convention

July 28, 2008, 12:49 p.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

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.

Lee Oglesby On Journalism and Being A Reader

July 24, 2008, 10:07 a.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

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.

Knight Journalism event at Unity 2008

July 22, 2008, 3:45 p.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

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?

Ben Franklin Parkway as Cultural Campus

July 21, 2008, 11:35 a.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

Editor's note: Matt Bergheiser is Knight Program Director for Philadelphia. Below, he describes a new Knight investment in the future of the Ben Franklin Parkway.

In Philadelphia, Knight has made the case that compelling, dynamic public spaces can change the feel and perception of our entire city.

The Ben Franklin Parkway is such a place, and a recent Knight investment of $1.25 million has helped to put this wonderful, sweeping promenade on a path to being transformed into a signature cultural campus for the entire region.

Read a recent editorial for more details on this effort.

What would you like to see in the new Ben Franklin Parkway?

Snag Films Beta Launched

July 18, 2008, 2:36 p.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

Yesterday, the beta of Snag Films launched. As the name implies, the site allows users to "snag" a documentary film from the site archive and embed the film on another site. The widget allows for easy donations of "pixels, money, and time." Knight Foundation has funded parts of the ongoing development of the widget and the expansion of the video library.

From the press release:

 

In sessions convened by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation and the Paley Center for New Media, the SnagFilms team listened to foundations that fund films, filmmakers and others. (The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation promotes excellence in journalism worldwide and invests in the vitality of 26 U.S. communities where the Knight brothers owned newspapers. The Paley Center for New Media is a premier convener of programs focused on the dynamic and important role of media in society.)

 

A common theme stated by all of the participants was that the bottlenecks in traditional distribution were threatening the economics of the medium and diminishing its impact. Alberto Ibarügen, Knight's President and CEO, noted that, "documentaries can be an especially powerful social tool at a time when traditional investigative journalism is under budgetary and other pressures. We believe in harnessing the web's power to democratize the distribution of these films, and SnagFilms does this."

Ibarügen, other foundation leaders, and Paley Center President and CEO Pat Mitchell will provide input to SnagFilms to make it an effective platform for the greatest possible number of filmmakers, and increase its community and charitable connections. Knight Foundation is also providing a multi-year grant to assist these activities.

 

Gary Kebbel, Director of Knight Foundation Journalism Program, expects that "the success of this platform will change the filmmaking industry by introducing new revenue streams for filmmakers, as well as turning passive viewers into active citizens. Ultimately, we hope that more journalists will engage in investigative documentary filmmaking."

Knight Digital Media Center Leadership Conference Live Blog

July 17, 2008, 8:33 a.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

This week, USC's Knight Digital Media Center convenes their annual leadership conference in Los Angeles. Michele McLellen is liveblogging the week's events; to begin, start with her initial explanatory post:

 

The top editor and the top online editor from each of 12 traditionally print organizations get together Tuesday-Friday with experts in digital journalism, technology and innovation. We hope each team will leave with a plan of next steps to take their organizations forward online.

 

In other posts:

Michele's thoughts about recent trends in newsroom reorganization, culture, systems and processes, staff cuts, and technology,

Amy Mitchell's (Deputy Director for the Project of Excellence in Journalism) overview of news audiences, including her point that "The user is NOT becoming the reporter,"

Krisztine "Z" Holly's (Vice Provost for Innovation and Executive Director of the USC Stevens Institute for Innovation) seven myths of innovation,

Jeffrey Cole (USC Center for the Digital Future) on television and the importance of video,

Dana Chinn (USC Annenberg School for Communication) on web metrics (hint: move beyond "time spent" by site visitors and spikes),

and Nora Paul (Institute for New Media Studies at the University of Minnesota) on the importance of good design.

The conference blog feed is here, and the event continues through Friday.

ManaTEEN Club Dive in West Palm Beach

July 15, 2008, 6:43 a.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

The ManaTEEN Club, an organization funded through the Knight community of Bradenton, recently completed a marine restoration dive in West Palm Beach with members of Knight Foundation staff.

Knight Foundation staff and the ManaTEEN Club on a West Palm Beach dive

Founded in 1994, the ManaTEEN group volunteers in southwest Florida, and more than 300 teens have given 16,576 hours of service. The club has 12,000 active members ranging in age from eight to twenty-one.

"It is currently the largest locally based youth community service organization in the nation giving back 1.7 million hours annually to our community," according to Alysia Bower of ManaTEEN. "The dive in West Palm Beach focused on the purpose to empower teens as decision makers regarding the coastal environment and marine restoration."

Here's the video from the dive:

For more ManaTEENS, you can follow along on their blog.

Five Freedoms Project Site and Network Launch

July 14, 2008, 10:35 a.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

Funded by Knight Foundation, the Five Freedoms Project announces its Web site launch (fivefreedoms.org) and online network.

A resource for educators, students, and citizens, the site has an "actionable five-part framework" for leadership skill development, an area about voice and the learning cycle, and identifies five categories for impact.

You can read blog posts from the inaugural Five Freedoms Leadership Academy, convened recently at the Newseum in Washington, D.C. here, and answer the Five Freedoms question for July:

When have you exercised your First Amendment rights to bring about meaningful change? (Weigh in here.)

How do you think voice for the five freedoms can be articulated?

"Thoughts On Democracy" Exhibition at Miami's Wolfsonian-FIU

July 11, 2008, 12:48 p.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

Knight Foundation supports Miami's Wolfsonian-Florida International University's new poster exhibition "Thoughts on Democracy" through the Knight New Work Award. A video about the exhibit, which opened July 3rd, is below, followed by details on included artists and the inspiration for the exhibit.

"The Thoughts on Democracy exhibition is comprised of posters created by fifty-five leading contemporary artists and designers, invited by The Wolfsonian to create a new graphic design inspired by American illustrator Norman Rockwell's "Four Freedoms" posters of 1943, which were recently gifted to the museum by Leonard A. Lauder.

 

Some of the participating artists involved in the project are Neville Brody, Seymour Chwast, Wim Crouwel, Elliott Earls, Richard Tuttle, Lawrence Weiner, Paula Scher, Francesco Vezzoli, Chip Kidd, and Italo Lupi, among others.

Rockwell's images, reproduced by the U.S. Office of War Information for mass dissemination, communicated FDR's vision of 'a world founded upon four essential human freedoms''Freedom of Speech, Freedom of Worship, Freedom from Want, and Freedom from Fear. The exhibition will be on view and free to the public in the museum's lobby."

 

At the July 3rd exhibit opening, visitors were asked for their thoughts on democracy. You can watch their responses on the Thoughts on Democracy blog.

What are your thoughts on democracy and this exhibit?

Village Soup Reinvigorating Newspapers Through Online News in Maine

July 11, 2008, 9:30 a.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

Editor's note: Gary Kebbel is the Journalism Program Director for Knight Foundation. Below, he talks about Village Soup, which has recently received coverage for reinvigorating print circulation through an online model. Village Soup is using its strength as a digital news, information and advertising platform to preserve and strengthen the information flow in communities in MidCoast Maine.

The company has bought six failing weekly newspapers and plans to strengthen and integrate them into the successful Village Soup online news group. Village Soup owns two other newspapers that it started to reverse-publish content from two local online Village Soup sites.

Village Soup is a 2007 Knight News Challenge winner with a proposal to re-create its successful digital platform in open-source code so that other communities easily could start online news sites.

You can read a recent article on Village Soup and their recent acquisition here; for more, visit the Village Soup site.

What do you think about this "technology version of your basic man-bites-dog story"?

Matt Bergheiser On the Job Opportunity Investment Network

July 10, 2008, 11:38 a.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

Editor's note: Matt Bergheiser is Knight Program Director for Philadelphia. He adds context below to a recent article on the new Job Opportunity Investment Network (JOIN).

Knight's work in Philadelphia continues to focus on building connections to jobs and opportunities. One significant platform for change is the Job Opportunity Investment Network, a Knight-led funding collaborative which creates advancement opportunities for lower-skilled Philadelphians into career ladder jobs.

From the article:

"The idea is to create a fund that will invest in connecting lower-skilled workers to career ladder opportunities," said Matt Bergheiser, Philadelphia program director of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, which has formed a partnership with the state, the United Way of Southeastern Pennsylvania and the Philadelphia Workforce Investment Board to establish Job Opportunity Investment Network (JOIN).

The founding partners of JOIN have raised $1.6 million and have close to another $2 million in the pipeline from other entities that are in the process of submitting requests for funding to their board of directors, Bergheiser said. In addition, JOIN applied last month for $450,000 over three years from NFWS-- the maximum grant support it can receive -- which will have to be matched 25 cents on the dollar. With or without the grant support, JOIN will roll out, he said.

"I think it's critical; our target audience is people marginally attached to the work force," Bergheiser said. "A lot of times they are the very first to go in an economy like this."

 

Look for more information in coming months about JOIN. What questions do you have about this new network?

Mike Maidenberg Interviewed By Leonard Witt On Knight Community Information Challenge

July 9, 2008, 9:29 a.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

Leonard Witt posted an interview today with Knight Foundation consultant Mike Maidenberg on the new Knight Community Information Challenge.

Here's an excerpt:

Leonard Witt: Tell me a little about the Knight Community Information Challenge, why is Knight involved and for what end?

Mike Maidenberg: Knight Foundation is deeply interested in how information flows in physical communities. We know the power of the web in specialized fields. What we are trying to understand and experiment with is how the web can be used to tie local communities together, with the newspaper a model from the past.

Read the entire article on PJNet, and find out more about the challenge on the official site.

What other questions do you have for Mike about the Community Information Challenge?

$1.4 Million To Poynter To Expand NewsU E-learning Program

July 9, 2008, 9:16 a.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

From yesterday's press release:

 

 

The grant will help NewsU expand in four key areas:

* Enhance the skills and digital abilities of journalists,
* Find new ways to teach and inspire journalists as well as those without access to formal journalism training,
* Increase news literacy, and
* Use the Internet to deliver training in innovative and effective ways.

Specifically, NewsU plans to offer new courses to help journalists and others make the transition to a digital world, shift its current content management system to a Web 2.0 platform, deliver course content in multiple languages, and create e-learning modules on news literacy for the general public.

'More than 73,000 participants have enrolled in NewsU courses since its introduction, vastly exceeding initial expectations and making NewsU the top e-learning destination for journalists and others interested in journalism,' said Howard Finberg, director of interactive learning at The Poynter Institute. 'We are excited about taking NewsU to the next level and reaching journalists around the world.'

 

Here's the current course list.

Have you taken a course? What other courses would you like to see offered?

Carnegie-Knight Initiative expanding with $11 million investment

July 7, 2008, 4:25 p.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

From the press release:

 

Seeking to change the way journalism is taught in the United States, Carnegie Corporation of New York and the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation are investing more than $11 million in the expansion of a national initiative to adapt journalism education to the challenges of a struggling news industry. Three new journalism schools are joining the effort of redefining journalism education and training a new generation of journalists capable of reshaping the news industry.

 

The expansion will deepen and extend:

* News21 (an experimental, online news incubator);
* Curriculum enhancement;
* and a journalism education policy task force.

Each foundation will contribute half of the new funding, and allocate it among each of the initiative's three distinct efforts.


How do you think change can be accelerated at journalism schools?

 

Akron Art Museum wins 2008 RIBA International Award, finalist for Lubetkin Prize

July 3, 2008, 3:33 p.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

Akron Art Museum Flickr image from rockyradio

From the 6.28 press release:

Proving once again that it indeed deserves the title 'world renowned,' the Akron Art Museum, designed by the Viennese firm Coop Himmelb(l)au, was chosen as one of three finalists for the highly prestigious Lubetkin Prize from the Royal Insitute of British Architects (RIBA) in London. After winning one of RIBA's 2008 International Awards, following a visit by a jury of architects and lay judge, the Akron Art Museum was honored further by being chosen as one of only three worldwide finalists for the Lubetkin Prize.

...

"It is an incredible honor for all of us in Akron who worked on the museum's John S. and James L. Knight Building to have it singled out by the world's leading architectural organization as one of the three most important new buildings outside Europe,' said Mitchell Kahan, director and chief executive officer of the Akron Art Museum. 'When I think of all the great structures unveiled last year around the globe, from Asia and Africa to North and South America, this recognition underlines the success of our goal to create an innovative design of worldwide significance."

 

Find more images (and interesting manipulated photography) of the Akron Art Museum's Knight Building on Flickr.

Have you visited the Akron Art Museum? What is your favorite museum building?

Everyblock adds Charlotte and Philadelphia

July 2, 2008, 11:43 a.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

Knight News Challenge winner Everyblock, "a new way to find local news and public information," has launched two new city sites: Charlotte and Philadelphia.

The Everyblock team has added a data type for new library posts in Charlotte, and more details on the new sites are in the Everyblock blog post announcement.

Charlotte and Philadelphia join Chicago, New York, and San Francisco in the Everyblock city roster.

Congratulations to the Everyblock team--

"Human filters and hubs"

July 2, 2008, 9:24 a.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

Nathaniel Whittemore of the Do Good Well blog on the new Knight Community Information Challenge:

"...the implication for the Knight grant might be that smart community foundations find ways to help their communities tap into existing citizen-led or socially concerned news networks and become human filters and hubs for the information most relevant for their daily lives."

The rest of the post offers distinctions between communities, networks, depth, and breadth.

Do you think community foundations should tap into existing networks or develop new ones?

Global Voices Summit 2008: An Inspired Community Gathering in Budapest

July 1, 2008, 4 p.m., Posted by Knight Foundation – 0 Comments

Last Friday and Saturday, the members of the worldwide Global Voices community gathered in Budapest for the panels, conversations, and merriment of Global Voices Summit 2008.

Knight Foundation sponsored the 2008 Summit and funds the Rising Voices project within Global Voices.

Led by Director of Outreach David Sasaki, Rising Voices widens the already extensive reach of Global Voices, (which "aggregates, curates, and amplifies the global conversation online - shining light on places and people other media often ignore,") by finding, funding, and resourcing new communities and projects in underrepresented areas.

This video, shown Saturday morning at the Summit, shows projects from the first year of Rising Voices:

Six new health-related projects were announced on Saturday in conjunction with the Open Society Institute's Health Media Initiative; details about these new projects are here.

For more on this year's summit of leading thinkers, expatriate bloggers, and advocates, visit the archive of streamed video, the archive of liveblogged entries, and the tagged Flickr photos.

And find out why Global Voices founders Ethan Zuckerman and Rebecca Mackinnon are "blown away" and "almost brought to tears" by the work Rising Voices projects are doing (as well as what "street theatre" is called in an area where there aren't many streets).

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