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POOR Magazine A poor people led arts and media organization that’ll turn the way you think, write, and report on poverty on its head. Poverty Scholarship and Journalism 101 With Lisa “Tiny” Gray-Garcia and the POOR Magazine Family of Poverty/Indigenous Youth and Elder Skolaz POOR Magazine is group of poor, homeless and disabled scholars and…
** Seating is first come, first served but please let us know if you plan to attend to give us a sense of the headcount ** RSVP: http://bit.ly/2TCtd8T The event is from 6:30-8:00PM (Doors open at 6:00PM) Presented by the Graduate School of Journalism. Sponsored by Berkeley Arts + Design as part of Arts + Design…
Thirty years ago this spring, China faced a dramatic turning point in its modern history – the Tiananmen Square protests for political reform, and the military crackdown that crushed it. It was a watershed moment not only for China but in the history of the international media, redefining the relationship between the press, public opinion,…
Jenni Monet is an award-winning journalist who writes about Indigenous rights and injustice for such publications as The LA Times, The Guardian, the Center for Investigative Reporting and others. Jenni received top honors for her coverage of the Dakota Access Pipeline battle in which she chronicled the movement for six consecutive months, resulting in her…
Food, drinks, and a candid conversation about being a journalist of color in 2018. Featured speakers: Azucena Rasilla, Associate Editor at East Bay Express Manjula Varghese, Video Producer at SF Chronicle Carvell Wallace, Writer and Podcaster Bobby Calvan, Freelance Journalist All journalists of color and allies welcome! Presented by AAJA, NABJ and NAHJ Berkeley student…
With a president who reviles journalists as the ‘enemy of the American people’ and labels nearly all mainstream news outlets as ‘fake news,’ polls show that his rhetoric is getting across to many Americans. Public trust in the media, long declining, is at an all-time low. But how bad is this crisis, really? And what…
“From Chinese Dumplings to The New Yorker: the Making of an Accidental Science Journalist” Nicola Twilley is a frequent contributor to The New Yorker magazine and a co-host of Gastropod, an award-winning podcast about the science and history of food. She will draw on her own experiences to talk about how to pitch and report…
Bill Owens’s landmark documentary project and book Suburbia from the 1970s met with immediate success for its keen observation of middle-class America. Owens had recorded a generational phenomenon: the rapid migration of inner-city apartment dwellers to affordable, newly produced homes in Livermore, California. He realized that this wasn’t simply a demographic shift but a psychological…
Journalism: Now More Than Ever 10:00 a.m. – 10:30 a.m. | Room 142 North Gate Hall (Library) The post-election tension between the new U.S. administration and the news media has resonated in sometimes perplexing ways for the journalism academy. There has never been a greater or more acute need than now for the work…
Russian Roulette is a story of political skulduggery unprecedented in American history. It weaves together tales of international intrigue, cyber espionage, and superpower rivalry. After U.S.-Russia relations soured, as Vladimir Putin moved to reassert Russian strength on the global stage, Moscow trained its best hackers on U.S. political targets and exploited WikiLeaks to disseminate information…