Gay marriage legal in Conneticut
Gay marriage legal in Conneticut
Immigration issues are so polarizing, but here's a documentary by American RadioWorks that helps illustrate the gray areas like:
as well as explore the figures like:
This documentary catches people at their most candid and well worth a listen.
When I didn't get in to journalism school this year, I decided to try and create my own professional development program. So far my program has included the following:
Most of these classes required an investment by me, but while I was at the CDS institute, I found out that I won a fellowship and scholarship to the Knight Center for Environmental Journalism Boot Camp!
My environmental journalism reporting has been limited to the two stories I did on Maui water issues and a feature on the Asian Pacific Environmental Network. Both took a lot of studying in order to get my reporting right, so I'm really looking forward to the workshops I'll learn at the Boot Camp and the Society of Environmental Journalist conference.
And I'll get to see fall colors on the east coast! I'm taking my camera :)
I lucked out my first year in college and shared a dorm room with a Filipina shoe gazer. Stylishly adorned in the colors of a true mod-ster, black and white, she refused to leave the room without make-up. She pinned up posters of Ride, Lush, and the Jesus and Mary Chain. And she took me to my first general admission show: Wonderstuff.
My Bloody Valentine's reunion show in San Francisco took me back to these early years of my musical development. While the decibel level had my clothes and body parts vibrating like a cell phone, I danced like it was 1991.
And the folks present took me back to those days as well. I ran into someone I made out with in high school, my first college boyfriend, a boyfriend from my early days in San Francisco!
But MBV wasn't enough. I wanted to hear a mix tape of this soundtrack with Teenage Fanclub, Chapterhouse, JAMC, Ride, and Lush. And it would have been nice to run into that college dormmate. I'm sure that if she lives in SF, she was in the house.
My attraction to radio and the web has always been the do-it-yourself possibilities. Today's tools allow many different stories and perspectives to be shared to diverse communities. And with this Youtube initiative, citizen journalism is rewarded.
Round one asks you to feature someone in your community in under three minutes. I think the judging criteria is depth of reporting and strong narrative. Watch the video for more details.
I didn't make it out to much of APAture, the tenth anniversary celebration of emerging Asian American artists. But thankfully, Sam Chanse's featured artist set is on Youtube.
She opens with a hilarious spoof on spoken word artists and continues with a series of skits that mimic real APAture performances.
Most public radio segments are around four minutes long. Commercial news stations feel generous giving a reporter two minutes. But some stories are so compelling, they demand more time.
This story on Rene Enriquez, a former leader in the Mexican mafia, was so compelling, All Things Considered aired the story in two, 14-minute segments.
So many elements make this story work. It reveals secrets on how Mafia leaders earn thousands of dollars while locked up in windowless isolation cells and Enriquez's diary-like audio tape places us in the inmates' Security Housing Unit:
These segments are part of a documentary produced by American Radio Works. I'm going to have a listen this week.
I only caught the tale end of this segment, but it's brilliant. To teach elementary kids about the elections, they are having a book election.
The fourth grade reporter, Bridget, is amazingly well spoken as she records her stand-ups flawlessly. Students stand in groups to show their support for their favorite book. Some students vote on popularity, some students vote without having read any of the books, and there are even undecideds.
It's suppose to be an on-going series, but nothing new has posted. I hope they follow through with this great idea.
Conscientious objector, Lewis Hill, started th first listener-supported radio station in 1946 to create a more powerful venue to spread a pacifist message.
Hill's vision grew to encompass Pacifica Radio, made up of a network of stations in Berkeley, New York City, Los Angeles, Washington D.C., and Houston. And while Pacifica stations are the go-to radio for progressives during times of war, in-fighting plagues the institution and mars the movement for progressive media.
But Nicole Sawaya addresses Pacifica's failures in her departure letter from her short tenure as Pacifica's exeuctive director.
We've reached the day where digital video self-publishing is a reality. Just as the photocopier launched print self-publishing, or zines, iMovie and Youtube have made online video a vibrant new place to create and have your voice heard.
Thy and her crew at the Asian Culinary Forum made an enticing teaser video for their upcoming weekend of programming that includes workshops, cooking classes, panel discussions and a full-day symposium celebrating Asian food. I love how the themes of the weekend are conveyed so vividly without moving image. The marriage of great sound and evocative text do the trick.
I'm bummed I'll be missing it all, but in exchange, I'll get to see fall colors in Roanoke, Virginia!
Robynn Takayama is a community artist whose work has been presented through video, web, and gallery installation in San Francisco, Berkeley, Los Angeles, and Chicago.
A graduate of the KPFA First Voice Apprenticeship, she has contributed to national and local public radio programs and the Peabody-awarded documentary on Asian American history, Crossing East.
Robynn is a board member of the Association of Independents in Radio and served on the CPB-funded Makers Quest Talent Committee, charged with finding the most imaginative producers, reporters, and sound artists and urging them to take public radio beyond its traditional airwaves.
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