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By Mel Coffee, University of Kentucky Professor
“Tell your students and colleagues how blessed they are to be able
to report the truth. Tell your people we are praying for them.”
These are the words a Zambian journalist spoke to me in January as
my colleague and I were wrapping up two weeks of reporting and
storytelling workshops for community and rural journalists in Chipata,
Zambia.
I was reminded of those words just last month after another visit
to Zambia with my colleague, Chike Anyaegbunam, who also teaches at the
University of Kentucky and is a pioneer in behavioral journalism.
Those words were haunting because the man who spoke them did so with wide-open eyes and tears flowing down his face.
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By Barbara Cochran, RTDNA President Emeritus
On Nov. 9 Germany and the rest of the world will commemorate an
important moment in history – the fall of the Berlin Wall. It has been
20 years since the brutal dividing line between East and West Germany
collapsed, signaling the last days of the Soviet empire.
As a journalist, I remember those days well. And, thanks to an
RTDNF exchange program for journalists, I had a remarkable opportunity
this summer to visit Germany and see first-hand where these historic
events occurred and to assess their lasting impact.
In fact, you could say that without the fall of the Berlin Wall, I might never have made the trip. I’ll explain in a moment and tell how you too can travel to Germany, but first a little history.
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The Radio Television Digital News Association launched its new webinar series today, with “Video Free For All,” a discussion of how to build a successful online video strategy, featuring experts from YouTube, The Associated Press and Current TV. The webinar was hosted by Lane Beauchamp, Region 11 RTDNA Director. The webinar was free to RTDNA members and non-members were charged a small fee to join; 100 people joined the webinar. RTDNA will offer these free webinars on a monthly basis to its members as a member benefit.
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The
public is greatly affected by how you edit sounds and images for radio, television and online news stories you publish. Photojournalists, editors and online producers should exercise the same level of ethical professionalism and
accuracy in editing sounds and images as reporters and producers are
expected to exercise in their choice of words, soundbites and facts.
Added sounds and music in television, radio and online stories have
the power of setting the tone for a story and can even change the
meaning of the piece. Often the public remembers the visual images in a story long after they forget the story's narrative. That is
testament of the underlying power of "the visual."
For a refresher on RTDNA's Guidelines for video and audio editing, click here
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Caldwell was a radio and television ND in Springfield, MA. Read More |  |
Bell spent more than 30 years in television news and teaching journalism at Ball State University. Read More |
B&C - November 6, 2009
Mashable.com - November 6, 2009
NPR.org - November 6, 2009
Todaysthv.com - November 6, 2009
MSNBC.com - November 6, 2009
SteveOuting.com - November 6, 2009
Cincinnati.com - November 6, 2009
Times Online.com - November 6, 2009
NiemanLab - November 5, 2009
B&C - November 5, 2009
ABC News - November 5, 2009
LA Times - November 5, 2009
MarketWatch.com - November 5, 2009
PBS.org - November 5, 2009
AP - November 5, 2009
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