Saturday, March 29, 2008

Green For All

I usually enjoy Tavis Smiley's PBS program, but I haven't been able to watch it much lately. Last night I managed to see a thought provoking interview that touched on issues I thought might be of interest to other frequenters of the blog (especially journalists that specialize in environmental issues like Elissa does).

One of Smiley's guest was an activist and writer named Van Jones. Jones is championing a group he helped create called Green For All, which combines environmentalism with advocacy for the poor and urban social justice movements. Their goal is to encourage the development of a "green" economy that lifts people - especially people from disadvantaged urban communities - out of poverty.

Here are a few comments from Jones that I found the most engaging:

"Part of the thing is the whole way the environmental movement has been framed has been wrong for our community. We're supposed to cry about polar bears and stuff like that, and if Pooky don't have a job, then Pooky might get shot today. I can't cry about a polar bear dying when Pooky is dying."


"If we teach our young people to put up solar panels, they're on their way to becoming electrical engineers, electricians, they can join unions. Those are green pathways out of poverty."


"We don't want eco-apartheid, and that is the big danger as we begin to respond to global warming and these issues. We could wind up in a situation where we get hit first and worst on everything negative, and then benefit last and least on everything positive. Dr. King would have stood against that."


We begin to say..."We can fight poverty and pollution at the same time; you can save the polar bears and Pooky."


"Dr. King was for civil rights. He was also anti-poverty. He was also anti-war, and for peace. He bridged those issues. Now we have these issues, the environment's supposed to be over here, anti-poverty over here, justice over here.

Dr. King would say no. He would link those issues and he would say, "No, this is one agenda to lift America up, to lift up our most vulnerable, and also to make sure that we never have to fight another war for oil or resources ever again."


I was surprised that I was surprised by this guy. When you think about it, all of these things do relate closely to one another and could easily be components of a single, coherent movement. But in the press each of these movements seem to be discussed separately.

I fear that coverage of any of these movements is sometimes limited by the stereotypical roles in which activists are cast. Like relegating environmentalism to "hippie tree huggers," or relegating poverty issues to "naive" and "bleeding heart" rich white people with too much time on their hands, or relegating social and racial justice to senselessly angry black folk, or relegating the anti-war movement to unruly and holier-than-thou college potheads with Che Gueverra posters on their walls, or relegating gay rights activism to drag queens in San Francisco. And of course there isn't enough room here to even begin to lay out all of the stereotypes that hang over the heads of feminists.

But what if a single, plausible and hopeful movement brought all of these together? That (at least on the face of it) seems to be what Green For All is. Whether you agree with their politics or not, it still seems like a pretty cool story to me. Nice catch, Tavis.

~Geoffrey Dobbins
UCABJ, vice president

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

NABJ Webinar - March 27

Dear NABJ Member:
You have been invited to a Webinar Town Hall meeting for the membership of The National Association of Black Journalists to discuss the
organization's financial outlook for 2008. Featured speakers will be NABJ President Barbara Ciara and NABJ Treasurer Gregory Lee.

NABJ "State of Our Finances" Town Hall

Thursday, March 27, 2008

1:00 PM - 2:00 PM EDT

Please click here to register:
https://www2.gotomeeting.com/register/189693199

**Please note that you will need your NABJ membership number to register
for this Town Hall. In addition, to participate in the Webinar, you
will need phone AND computer access.

Many Thanks,

NABJ Board of Directors


Tuesday, March 18, 2008

UCABJ Member Wins Big in SPJ's Region 4 Mark of Excellence Awards

UCABJ member Keith Jenkins, editor of The News-Record, won first place in the sports writing category of SPJ's Region 4 Mark of Excellence Awards. Read his winning entry, "Yoooouk!"

Congrats, Keith!

Friday, March 7, 2008

See you on April 3!

Kick butt on your finals and have a great spring break!

We'll see you on Thursday, April 3 for the first meeting of the spring quarter, where Cincinnati Magazine associate editor Aiesha D. Little and UC prof (and freelancer) Jenny Wohlfarth will discuss the ins and outs of magazine publishing. Be there!

Peace and blessings,

UCABJ Executive Board
Make your voice heard!

Thursday, March 6, 2008

Internships: Paid....Or Not

Ah, it's that time of year again. Hordes of college students will start eagerly sending out resumes and cover letters hoping to secure summer internships. In the field of journalism, landing an internship(s) is a crucial step in deciding on a career path. It's the way that students take what they're learning in theory and apply it to the "real world." For some, it's their first experience in a professional environment. And for most, these experiences will be unpaid.

Think of it as the business approach to Descartes' famous saying "I think, therefore, I am": "I work for free, therefore, I must love my job." Not necessarily so. But that's the price (or lack thereof) at which experience comes these days. Unfortunately, it's too much a part of the industry's business model to turn back now. For most publications, it's not a matter of not wanting to pay students; with the changing market and the economic fluctuations it's causing, they simply can't afford to do so.

In "Take This Internship and Shove It," New York Times op-ed writer Anya Kamenetz posits: "What if the growth of unpaid internships is bad for the labor market and for individual careers?" In some cases, that's probably true, but it also means that students must do more research to find internship opportunities that will benefit them most in the long run. It doesn't make sense to work for a magazine--where you'll only get a couple of very short clips for three of four months of work--when you really want to be a newspaper reporter. It's a waste of time to spend an entire summer at a TV station and the only thing you get to do is pick up dry cleaning and make coffee. During searches and interviews, be sure to ask very detailed questions about interns duties: What's a typical day like for an intern? To whom do interns report? Are there any non-monetary perks that come with the job (at the very least, some employers will pay for parking)? Remember: Employers aren't promising to provide the "ultimate intern experience." They're just giving students a shot at seeing how the sausage gets made, so to speak. It's up to the student to make the most of his/her experience.

adl

Aiesha D. Little
NABJ Adviser
University of Cincinnati Association of Black Journalists

Broadcast Writing Workshop March 6

Attention budding TV reporters!

FOX19 weekend anchor Regina Russo will talk about broadcast writing on Thursday, March 6. A Purdue University graduate, Russo joined the FOX19 crew in 1996 and has anchored First Look and 19 in the Morning. She currently does the weekend nightly newscasts and hosts What's Hot With Regina and Making the Grade with Regina Russo. She als explores current events through the station's half-hour public affairs program, Cincinnati Matters.

Bring your questions about the business and have them answered by this TV veteran!

DATE: March 6

Time: 7 p.m.

PLACE: 423 TUC
 

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