Archive for February, 2009

SF Chronicle to Close? SPJ-NorCal Responds

Friday, February 27th, 2009

[Indy Arts is posting this for informational purposes; please contact the SPJ liaisons below for more details.]

Society of Professional Journalists Chapter Calls for Public Discussion of Hearst Corp.’s Threat to Shutter the San Francisco Chronicle

Contact: Ricardo Sandoval, 415-786-1258; Tom Murphy, 415-924-3364

Feb. 27, 2008 — The Northern California Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists today called for a public discussion – at the earliest date possible – of the Hearst Corporation’s threat to make deeper newsroom cutbacks or it will close the paper.

The chapter’s board insists that this discussion include the paper’s broad community of leading-edge thinkers, readers and journalists.

The board fears additional cuts will exacerbate what it perceives to be an already growing vacuum of credible reporting and will further limit scrutiny of our public institutions.

“We hold no faith in claims that if it reduces its staff even further, the Chronicle can maintain adequate – much less high-quality – coverage of the myriad issues affecting the lives of Bay Area residents,” said board president Ricardo Sandoval.

The paper, which today employs an editorial staff of 275, has already lost more than half its newsroom workers since Hearst bought the paper in 2000. Then, as now, Hearst vowed to build the Chronicle into one of the best newspapers in the world. Yet Hearst’s inability to succeed during better times raises troubling questions about its ability or desire to manage the Chronicle through the current recession.

A closure would mean losing the largest source of news for hundreds of thousands of readers in the San Francisco Bay Area, a region that leads the world in innovation. To date, this community of creative thinkers has been excluded from discussions regarding the paper’s downward spiral.

The SPJ chapter’s board is acutely aware of the trying business environment within the news publishing industry, and the board notes that Hearst issued its ultimatum on the eve of negotiations with union officials on another round of staff cuts.

“The board takes no position in labor negotiations or in the operation of any paper, but urges the Hearst Corporation to soften its rhetoric and embrace its responsibility to serve its loyal community of readers,” said Sandoval.

The board asks the Hearst Corporation to participate in a high-profile conversation with its community based on the imperative of reinvention, a conversation conducted with an openness and transparency that no paper has dared anywhere else. Our chapter stands ready to facilitate this dialogue in any way it can.

The 100-year-old Society of Professional Journalists is the nation’s broadest-based journalism organization, dedicated to encouraging the free practice of journalism and stimulating high standards of ethical behavior and diversity in the media. The Northern California SPJ chapter in recent years has actively engaged the creative capital of the Bay Area to identify and promote alternatives to the failing business model used by large media corporations.

In the interest of the public good and open government, the chapter is eager to work with its membership and the rest of the media community to develop new business models that will consistently support meaningful, substantive journalism and which demonstrate that high-quality journalism can remain a profession that attracts the best and brightest.

“We encourage broad community support for these emerging models,” Sandoval said. “We urge journalists, foundations, corporations, the public and public officials to join us in finding solutions to this increasingly urgent civic challenge.”

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The 2009 DIY Workshop series continues with …Making Taxes Less Taxing for Artists

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

The 2009 DIY Workshop series continues with …Making Taxes Less Taxing for Artists.
Presented by Independent Arts & Media, Lilycat.com and Access SF

(more…)

California lawyers for the Arts Presents: Relax with Tax

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

California Lawyers for the Arts presents:

Relax with Tax

Don’t miss this half-day seminar on the essentials of income tax for
individual artists of all disciplines and small arts businesses. Topics
include record keeping, form 1040, Schedule C and self-employment schedule,
deductions, hobby losses, home offices and more. Seminar fee includes the
tax workbook, The Art of Deduction, at no additional charge.

When: Saturday, February 21, 1-5pm
Speaker: Thomas Andres, CPA, JD
Where: Pro Arts, 550 Second Street in Jack London Square, Oakland
Registration: Seminar fees are $30 for members of California Lawyers for
the Arts and any cosponsoring organizations, $40 for members of the public
and $20 for students/seniors. (The member discount applies to individuals who
have found out about this seminar through Independent Arts & Media)
Register by calling (415) 775-7200 ext. 107
or by downloading and faxing/mailing the pdf form on our website at
http://www.calawyersforthearts.org/seminars.html.

Jose Antonio Vargas: “iPolitics: the rise of participatory democracy in our iPhone, YouTube, MySpace era”

Monday, February 16th, 2009

March 12, 2009
7:00 pm – 9:00 pm
McLaren Hall, 250

Jose Antonio Vargas is a political reporter for The Washington Post, where he covers the intersection of politics and technology. Vargas has covered video game culture and race and demographics, among other topics, and his yearlong series on HIV/AIDS in Washington is now the subject of a feature-length documentary titled “The Other City,” slated for release in 2010.

He won a Pulitzer Prize as part of a team that covered the 2007 massacre at Virginia Tech, and has written for the San Francisco Chronicle and New York magazine. He has appeared on CNN, National Public Radio and The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer.

A.C. Thompson: “The Future of Investigative Reporting: New Challenges, New Models” April 16, 2009

Monday, February 16th, 2009

7:00 pm – 9:00 pm
McLaren Hall, 250

A.C. Thompson is a staff reporter at ProPublica, a nonprofit news organization dedicated to producing quality investigative journalism. Before going to work for ProPublica in New York City, Thompson spent nearly a decade toiling in Bay Area newsrooms, working as a staff writer for both SF Weekly and the San Francisco Bay Guardian. His reporting has helped to exonerate two men wrongly convicted of murder, exposed slum conditions in San Francisco public housing, and, most recently, prompted the New Orleans Police Department to investigate shootings that occurred in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. He is a co-founder of the Chauncey Bailey Project, a collaborative effort by print, TV, radio, and web reporters to uncover the truth about the 2007 slaying of Oakland journalist Chauncey Bailey.

Maria Suarez Toro: “Las Mujeres en las Noticias: parte de la historia u otra historia”

Monday, February 16th, 2009

5 de marzo 2009
1:30 pm – 3:30 pm
Green & Gold Room (University Center, primera planta)

María Suárez Toro es feminista, periodista y activista por los derechos humanos en escenarios locales, regionales, nacionales e internacionales mediante su trabajo, desde 1991, como directora de FIRE: Feminist International Radio Endeavor. FIRE fue la primera cadena de radio en internet de Costa Rica; antes de esto solo se emitía en radio de corta frecuencia.

Es además co-fundadora y coordinadora del colectivo de alas de mariposa, proyecto que busca refforzar el movimiento de las mujeres a través de la expresión artística. Más recientemente María ha co-escrito el libro Se Vende Lindo País, que se centra en el movimiento democrático de base para detener el controvertido plan de una petrolera estadounidense para perforar en busca de petróleo en la costa atlántica de Costa Rica. Fue profesora de Comunicaciones en la University of Denver de 1998 a 2002; y en el Institute for Further Education of Journalists (FOJO) de Suecia de 1995 a 200.

María Suárez visita USF como parte del Global Women’s Rights Forum y del Davies Forum.

Paul Jay: The Real News and Global Challenges

Monday, February 16th, 2009

February 19, 2009
7:00 pm – 9:00 pm
Maraschi (Fromm Hall)

Paul Jay is CEO and Senior Editor of Independent World Television and Real News, creator and Executive Producer of CBC Newsworld’s debate program CounterSpin, award-winning documentary filmmaker of Return to Kandahar among other works, and founding Chair of Hot Docs!,the International Documentary Film Festival.

Alex Gibney: The Role of Documentary in Re-making the News

Monday, February 16th, 2009

2:00 – 4:00pm (Interview with Davies Forum Students)
4:00 – 6:00 (Screening of “Taxi to the Darkside” with Q&A after screening)
Presentation Theater

Alex Gibney is an Emmy and DuPont-Columbia Award winning American film director and producer. His work includes: The Trials of Henry Kissinger (2002), Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room (2005) (nominated for an Academy Award), The Human Behavior Experiments (2006), Jimi Hendrix and the Blues, and Taxi to the Dark Side (2007), focusing on an innocent taxi driver in Afghanistan who was tortured and killed at Bagram Air Force Base in 2002 (winner of the Academy Award for Documentary Feature). This event is co-sponsored with the Human Rights Film Festival.