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Pew Center Videos
The Pew Center has produced a series
of videos that explore various civic journalism theories and practices. If you
would like to order a copy of any of the following videos, mail your request to:
A
Journalist's ToolBox (No
Longer Available) The Best
of Civic Journalism: 2001 Batten Award Winners (No
Longer Available) The Best
of Civic Journalism: 2000 Batten Award Winners The Best
of Civic Journalism: 1999 Batten Award Winners Tune
in Your Community, Turn on Your Viewers (Only Available with Spanish Subtitles)
Civic Journalism:
A Work in Progress (Only Available with Spanish Subtitles) Online Transcript: Civic
Journalism: A Work in Progress (English Transcript) Civic Journalism:
It's (More Than) Just Good Journalism (Spanish Translation Only) Self-Publishing
Communities: Partnering with the New Competition.
J-Lab: The Institute for Interactive Journalism
7100 Baltimore Avenue, Suite 101
College Park, MD 20740-3637
This set of four videos offers some practical tools to help journalists learn
more about what's happening in their communities and to better reflect that
in their news reports. It draws on the techniques and experiences of working
journalists at The Charlotte Observer, The Orange County Register, the Tampa
Tribune, The Virginian-Pilot and Tampa's WFLA-TV. Only $25 for the set of four
13-minute videos to cover postage and handling. Full
transcripts.
See The (Huntington) Herald-Dispatch and West Virginia Public Broadcasting's
ambitious and interactive coverage of the single biggest issue in the state
- its future without coal. Two runners-up - The Eagle-Tribune in Lawrence, MA
and the Chronicle-Tribune in Marion, IN - launched courageous examinations of
their deeply troubled communities that sparked encouraging turnaround efforts.
Those receiving honorable mentions: The Portland (ME) Newspapers, St. Paul Pioneer
Press, America Online, MTV Networks, and Minnesota Public Radio. 9 minutes.
Highlights of the Savannah Morning News, The Philadelphia Inquirer and New Hampshire
Public Radio projects and interviews with the newsroom leaders. 10 minutes.
(See Ordering
Publications page for mailing costs.)
Learn how the 1999 Batten Award winners developed their winning journalism.
Video features highlights of the St. Paul Pioneer Press, Portland Press Herald/Maine
Sunday Telegram and KRON-TV (San Francisco) projects and interviews with the
newsroom leaders. 10 minutes. Limited Supplies Available (Email J-Lab
at news@j-lab.org before ordering.) (See
Ordering Publications
page for mailing costs.)
Hear how some of the nation's top television news directors are creating journalism
that builds capacity for grappling with tough community issues, involves citizens
in finding solutions and engages viewers in civic life. 17 minutes, accompanied
by an informational booklet. (See
Ordering Publications
page for mailing costs.)
Through public listening, alternative framing, and tapping new voices, Steven
A. Smith, former editor of the The Gazette, Colorado Springs, challenged his
journalists to invent a better kind of journalism. Smith is now editor of the
Statesman Journal in Salem, Oregon. 18 minutes, accompanied by a transcript.
(See
Ordering Publications
page for mailing costs.)
Davis "Buzz" Merritt, former editor of The Wichita Eagle and an early innovator
in civic journalism, and media analyst Hodding Carter III talk about what journalism
has become and how civic journalism is addressing some of the problems. 30 minutes,
accompanied by a transcript. (See
Ordering Publications
page for mailing costs.)
A presentation by Glenn Ritt, The Bergen Record.
Glenn Ritt, former vice president of news and information at The Bergen Record
in Hackensack, N.J., shares his ideas for making newspapers the foundation of
a region's information highway by building partnerships with community groups
on the Web. Ritt is now publisher of the Cape Codder of Orleans, MA. 23 minutes.
(See
Ordering Publications
page for mailing costs.)