Calendar

Oct
19
Thu
2023
Fighting Gag Rules on Government Employees
Oct 19 @ 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm

A Discussion sponsored by the New England Chapter of the SPJ.

Join HERE on Zoom.

Brittany Hailer
Brittany Hailer is an award-winning investigative journalist and educator based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. She is the director of the Pittsburgh Institute for Nonprofit Journalism and Teaching Professor of Writing at the University of Pittsburgh.
As director of PINJ, Brittany has investigated how the pandemic has impacted the Allegheny County Jail, including the jail’s kitchen, its use of solitary confinement, isolation of the sick. For three years, she has tracked the deaths of those in custody of the Allegheny County Jail. Her work on deaths in custody has been funded by The Pulitzer Center for Crisis Reporting.
In 2023, a state court ordered Allegheny County to overturn the autopsies records of a man who died in the Allegheny County Jail. The county had previously denied a records request submitted in 2020. This three-year legal journey was made possible by legal representation from The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.
Her work has appeared in Spotlight Pa, Sierra Club Magazine, Pennsylvania Capital-Star and elsewhere.
Kathryn Foxhall
Because she needed a job, Kathryn Foxhall inadvertently became a reporter on a weekly newspaper in her hometown of Selma, Alabama. Her addiction was irreversible within two weeks.
She covered health in Washington for 40 years, including 14 years (1978-1992) as editor of the American Public Health Association’s newspaper.
After years of getting a dynamic education by speaking frankly with sources on Capitol Hill and in federal agencies, she became alarmed when, 20 to 25 years ago, federal workers gradually came under rules prohibiting them from communicating with journalists without the oversight of public relations offices—in reality, heavy censorship coming down from the people in power.
Frank LoMonte
Frank LoMonte is a media lawyer and professor whose research focuses on government restrictions on the First Amendment rights of public employees. He is newsroom legal counsel to CNN in Atlanta and an adjunct professor with the University of Georgia School of Law, where he works with the school’s First Amendment Clinic. He previously served as director of the Brechner Center for Freedom of Information at the University of Florida and as executive director of the Student Press Law Center in Washington, D.C.

Jan
8
Mon
2024
So You Want To Run A Podcast: An Evening with Sarah Ventre
Jan 8 @ 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm

So You Want To Run A Podcast: An Evening with Sarah Ventre

If you ever wondered about a career in audio journalism, you shouldn’t miss an Evening with Sarah Ventre, 7 p.m. ET Monday, January 8.

The webinar, sponsored by the Society of Professional Journalists DC Pro chapter, is free and open to all journalists and journalism students. It will be moderated by DC Pro vice president Celia Wexler.

Ventre, a graduate of the Arizona State University, has been in the journalism business for about a dozen years. Her career history marks a path that has led to both steady career success and advancement. She has produced for NPR, PBS, Gimlet, Vox, Critical Frequency, Crooked Media, Campside Media, The African American Policy Forum, Center for Science and the Imagination, and The Moth.

Her podcast, Unfinished: Short Creek, about a fundamentalist Mormon community on the Utah-Arizona border, was named one of 2020’s top podcasts by both The
New Yorker and The Atlantic, and her reporting there won an Edward R. Murrow award for journalistic excellence. Ventre will discuss her career in audio investigative journalism, the perils and promise of embedded reporting, and how she has survived and thrived in a changing media landscape.

We want you to be part of the conversation. So come ready to have a chat with this accomplished journalist and bring your questions.

Register for the webinar HERE.

 

Jan
23
Tue
2024
Putting a Local Tinge to Global Stories: How One Small Paper Makes It Work
Jan 23 @ 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm

The Alexandria Times describes itself as a “hyper-local” newspaper. And yet Denise Dunbar, executive editor and publisher of the paper has been able to find ways to bring global events to the doorsteps of the papers’ readers.

Join the International Community and the Washington DC Pro chapter in a discussion with Dunbar and learn how and why local news organizations can make the connection between local and global events. And stay within budget!

January 23, 2024

6:00 PM

Register for the webinar HERE.

Mar
25
Mon
2024
Knight Center Class: Campaign Reporting that Centers Communities and Solutions
Mar 25 – Apr 21 all-day

Welcome to the Knight Center’s new MOOC, A Better Way to Cover Elections: Campaign Reporting that Centers Communities and Solutions, organized by the Knight Center for Journalism in the Americas in partnership with The Solutions Journalism Network. During this four-week massive open online course, which will be held from March 25th- April 21st, 2024, students will learn how to reinvent elections and campaign coverage to better serve communities and strengthen democracy.

Register HERE

Objectives

Upon completion of this course, you will be able to:

– Craft a strong mission statement that clearly articulates how you and/or your newsroom approaches coverage of elections and democracy.

– Engage deeply with your audiences to learn what they want politicians to be talking about, in a way that’s reciprocal, not extractive.

– Identify and report strong solutions stories that help communities solve problems and also hold politicians accountable for addressing them.

– Produce campaign stories in ways that build trust and reduce polarization rather than increase distrust and divides.

GOALS: 

Over the next four weeks, you will learn an effective and innovative alternative to the traditional horse-race approach to elections reporting, which will help you better serve your communities and strengthen democracy. This course will provide materials and examples predominantly based on the context of US elections, with a commitment to ensuring their global relevance.

WHO CAN ENROLL: 

Reporters, editors, students, and aspiring journalists around the world.  It’s for anyone who is dissatisfied with traditional coverage of politics, elections and democracy and wants tools and strategies to increase trust and engagement, reduce polarization,  and employ solutions journalism to help communities address problems and hold politicians to account.

Apr
8
Mon
2024
Not the odds, but the stakes – Covering the 2024 Elections
Apr 8 @ 2:00 pm – 3:00 pm

Covering the 2024 election when the future of democracy is on the ballot:

A conversation with Margaret Sullivan and Barton Gellman

SPJ Webinar 2 p.m. EDT, Monday, April 8

Register for the free webinar HERE

This November, the U.S. will hold one of the most consequential elections in its history. One candidate challenged the results of the 2020 election, helped gin up support for the January 6 insurrection, and has no qualms about what he’d do if re-elected in 2024. He’s suggested using the Justice Department to go after his political enemies, weakening protections for a nonpartisan civil service, and using an 1807 law to send in U.S. troops to police unrest in cities. This year, writes journalism professor Jay Rosen, the election must be about “not the odds, but the stakes.”

This election and its potential consequences cannot be left to big media outlets. Despite extensive coverage of what’s at stake by the New York Times, Washington Post, The Atlantic, NPR and network news outlets, surveys in some key swing states reveal that two-thirds of voters are not aware of these threats. That’s not surprising, since polls show that Americans tend to trust local media more.

That means it will be up to hundreds of reporters, freelancers, and college journalists across the country to cover the 2024 presidential contest, as well as down-ballot races, in a way that informs the public and keeps faith with the SPJ code of ethics, which advises: “Search for and report the truth,” and “Minimize harm.”

Our two panelists embody the best in our profession. Media critic and author Margaret Sullivan, formerly executive editor of The Buffalo News, was public editor at The New York Times and a columnist for The Washington Post. She now writes a weekly column for the Guardian US, and is executive director of Columbia Journalism School’s Craig Newmark Center for Journalism Ethics and Security.

Barton Gellman, a three-time Pulitzer-prize-winner, and author, reported for The Washington Post for more than two decades, was a staff writer for The Atlantic, and is now senior advisor to the Brennan Center for Justice.

They will discuss how journalists can address these unprecedented challenges to their craft in a conversation you won’t want to miss.

Moderated by DC SPJ Chapter Board Member and Author, Celia Wexler.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Apr
24
Wed
2024
Mexico’s Elections and What It Means to Press Freedom and Journalists’ Safety
Apr 24 @ 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm

Mexico’s Elections and What It Means to Press Freedom and Journalists’ Safety

Mexico goes to the polls in June. What will the election of a new president and legislative assembly mean for the safety of journalists in Mexico and for press freedom?

Join former Associate Press Bureau Chief Katherine Corcoran and founder and editor-in-chief of Tijuana Press Vicente Calderón and they ponder this question and look at what the upcoming election means.

Register HERE.

May
30
Thu
2024
SPJ DC Freelance Lunch @ Teaism Penn Quarter
May 30 @ 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm

Drop a note to Stephenie Overman at soverman@spj.org

 

Jul
25
Thu
2024
Using Artificial Intelligence
Jul 25 @ 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm

The SPJ Freelance Community is hosting a free webinar Thursday, July 11 at 7 p.m. ET on how journalists can and should use Artificial Intelligence. Our guest speaker on the topic is the formidable Sree Sreenivasan. We’re quite proud of organizing this and we’d love to see you there.

Sreenivasan has been teaching generative AI workshops worldwide for the past year. He was a full-time journalism professor at Columbia University for 20+ years and served as the chief digital officer at Columbia. He is the 2024 president of the South Asian Journalists Association (SAJA), which he co-founded in 1994.

If you’d like to attend (it’s for all SPJ members, not just freelancers), the Zoom details are below.

Please click the link below to join the webinar:
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/89294784013?pwd=bTltbTJGQUhtRzhXQ1hPLzZMK1M2dz09
Passcode: 063800
Or One tap mobile :
+16469313860,,89294784013#,,,,*063800# US
+16468769923,,89294784013#,,,,*063800# US (New York)
Or Telephone:
Dial(for higher quality, dial a number based on your current location):
+1 646 931 3860 US
+1 646 876 9923 US (New York)
+1 312 626 6799 US (Chicago)
+1 301 715 8592 US (Washington DC)
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+1 689 278 1000 US
Webinar ID: 892 9478 4013
Passcode: 063800
International numbers available: https://us02web.zoom.us/u/kdjdLpH023

Aug
26
Mon
2024
How to turn your election coverage from horse-race to pro-democracy
Aug 26 @ 4:00 pm – 5:00 pm

With a dwindling number of days until the general election, it can be easy to get caught up in the day-by-day minutiae of campaign theatrics, mudslinging and insider politicking — even if that doesn’t help voters understand what candidates stand for, let alone how they plan to accomplish it.

Research shows that episodic, horse-race coverage is driving Americans to disengage with news, and creating gaps in civic understanding at all levels. How to fix it? Shift from the odds to the stakes. Led by Beatrice Forman and Jaisal Noor — two organizers with U.S. Democracy Day — this training will help journalists have working understanding of pro-democracy journalism and its impact, develop reporting plans for thematic election stories, and pull from a set of quick tips to immediately elevate their coverage beyond the horse race.

Beatrice Forman is the project coordinator for U.S Democracy Day, where she oversees programming and operations for a collaborative of 160+ newsrooms across the U.S. committed to producing high impact journalism that spurs civic engagement. She is also a reporter for The Philadelphia Inquirer, covering breaking news and Philly’s unique internet culture. A graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, Beatrice has reported on the creator economy for Vox and built engagement strategies for nonprofit newsrooms in Philadelphia.

Jaisal Noor is the Democracy Cohort Manager for the Solutions Journalism Network. He leads the Advancing Democracy Fellowship, helping newsrooms reinvent the way they cover politics, including deepening their election coverage beyond the horse race. He is a graduate of the University of Maryland, College Park. Over the past decade, Jaisal has reported for Democracy Now!, The Atlantic, Bolts Magazine, The Real News Network and Baltimore Beat.

The session will be hosted by chapter president Celia Wexler.

REGISTER HERE.

Aug
27
Tue
2024
Foreign Correspondents; Finding Foreign News on Main Street and the French 75: A Discussion with John Maxwell Hamilton
Aug 27 @ 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm

John Maxwell Hamilton, journalist, author and journalism professor, has agreed to talk about the history of American foreign reporting, local/global story possibilities and his assessment of the current way US media outlets cover international events. We will also get to his book about the cocktail, The French 75.

Register for this event sponsored by the SPJ International Community HERE.

John Maxwell Hamilton, a longtime journalist, author and public servant, is the Hopkins P. Breazeale Professor of Journalism at the LSU Manship School of Mass Communication and a global scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Washington, D.C.

As a journalist, Hamilton reported for the Milwaukee Journal, The Christian Science Monitor and ABC radio. He was a longtime commentator for MarketPlace, broadcast nationally by Public Radio International. His work has appeared in the New York Times, Foreign Affairs and The Nation, among other publications.

In the course of his career, Hamilton has had assignments in more than 50 countries. In addition to covering foreign news, Hamilton has written extensively on foreign correspondence and sought to improve it. In the mid-1980s, he created and directed a Society of Professional Journalists project to develop techniques for local reporting of foreign news, especially on relations with developing countries. He later contributed to a similar project for the American Society of Newspaper Editors. In the 1980s, National Journal said Hamilton has shaped public opinion about the complexity of U. S.-Third World relations “more than any other single journalist.”

Hamilton is author or co-author of seven books and editor of many more. “Journalism’s Roving Eye: A History of American Foreign Reporting.” won the Goldsmith Prize from the Shorenstein Center on Press, Politics and Public Policy and the Book of the Year Award from the American Journalism Historians Association/

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