This document summarizes the winners of the 2009 Southern California Journalism Awards. It lists the winners in various categories for print, television, radio, online, and photography. For the print category A1, David Evans of Bloomberg Markets won for his financial reporting on the economic crisis. For television category A3, there was a tie between Ana Garcia and Fred Mamoun of KNBC for their investigative reporting, and Eric Longabardi of TeleMedia. The photojournalism award A7 went to Rick Loomis of the Los Angeles Times.
This document provides the categories and nominees for the 86th Academy Awards ceremony to be held on March 2nd. It includes ballots for the major categories of Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor/Actress, and more. Visitors to Moviefone.com can find full coverage of the Oscars and vote for their favorites in the printable ballot.
The document provides a review of the film American Sniper. It summarizes the film's opening scene and discusses the controversy surrounding the film's portrayal of the war. The review notes that the film tells the story from both the perspective of the difficulties of war and the soldiers' nobility. It ultimately leaves the audience to question their own views of war due to the film's complex and ambiguous nature in showing both the humanity and inhumanity of war.
The document lists the nominees for the 86th Academy Awards in various categories such as Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor/Actress, and Best Animated Film. Alfonso Cuarón's film Gravity received the most nominations with 7 total, including for Best Director, Best Cinematography, and Best Visual Effects. Steve McQueen's 12 Years a Slave received 3 nominations, including for Best Picture and Best Director. Several other films such as Dallas Buyers Club, Frozen, The Great Gatsby, Blue Jasmine, and Her each received 1 or 2 nominations.
Do women open resort marketing emails more frequently than men?Ryan Solutions
We’ve looked at gender a few times in regard to mountain resort marketing, but we’ve never looked at gender in the context of the most basic hotel email marketing metrics of open and click rates. So, do women tend to open or click marketing emails more often than men? Here’s what we found.
25 ways for a hotel to increase occupancy Joshua Miranda
25 ways for a hotels can increase their occupancy through Hotel website, Facebook, Twitter, Instragram, Pinterest, Flickr, SEO, Google analytics, Four-square, Trip advisor, and OTA's
The document outlines a hotel sales strategy. It discusses completing a SWOT analysis to understand strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats. The sales action plan targets the lucrative Indian market, key accounts, existing customers, and marketing activities like trade shows. Commission agents include domestic tour operators who arrange packages, hotel sales, and MICE events. The strategy is to list prospective agents, offer deals to drive business, and provide incentives. Targets for inbound tour operators are October to March when northern India has pleasant temperatures. The strategy aims to provide good service and compete on cost to build brand image and initiate business with Delhi-based inbound agents.
1.The Ritz-Carlton Understands the Value of Every Employee. If you’ve ever held a job where you didn’t feel appreciated, you understand how frustrating it can be. Heck, you probably didn’t care about the company, right? Well, the Ritz-Carlton avoids this pitfall by valuing every employee. By empowering the employee, the hotel creates a staff that is passionate about the hotel, its services, and its success. Furthermore, happier employees mean happier guests. In fact, the Ritz-Carlton has empowered employees so much that they have the ability to spend up to $2,000 to ensure guests have an enjoyable stay without seeking permission from management.
2.The Ritz-Carlton Defines its Brand. If you want to improve the public image of your brand, then what better way is there to do so than by defining it yourself? The Ritz-Carlton does this by telling stories about the hotel through its online content strategy. Their Stories that Stay with You page elaborates on ways in which their employees and the greater hotel have gone out of their way to ensure a great stay for guests. The Ritz-Carlton is excellent at not only framing their stories, but in behaving in such a way – providing great customer service at every level – that great stories happen.
3.The Ritz-Carlton Abides By its Standards. Forget unwritten rules or laws. The Ritz has 12 Service Values that are etched into every employee’s memory. By requiring that everyone on the payroll memorize the company’s golden standards, the Ritz showcases the fact that they are genuinely passionate about their standards and commitment to customer service. Likewise, be sure to establish internal and external standards for your brand and hold your entire team accountable to them to ensure an incredible customer experience!
For over a century, the Ritz-Carlton Hotel has defined itself as the standard for quality and luxury in the hotel industry. While the ritzy Ritz-Carlton is flush with grandiose chandeliers and staircases, it’s the customer service and brand differentiation that’s given the hotel its staying power. By implementing pizazz into your marketing strategy, you’ll give your business a more powerful presence in the real context of B2B relations.
This document provides the categories and nominees for the 86th Academy Awards ceremony to be held on March 2nd. It includes ballots for the major categories of Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor/Actress, and more. Visitors to Moviefone.com can find full coverage of the Oscars and vote for their favorites in the printable ballot.
The document provides a review of the film American Sniper. It summarizes the film's opening scene and discusses the controversy surrounding the film's portrayal of the war. The review notes that the film tells the story from both the perspective of the difficulties of war and the soldiers' nobility. It ultimately leaves the audience to question their own views of war due to the film's complex and ambiguous nature in showing both the humanity and inhumanity of war.
The document lists the nominees for the 86th Academy Awards in various categories such as Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor/Actress, and Best Animated Film. Alfonso Cuarón's film Gravity received the most nominations with 7 total, including for Best Director, Best Cinematography, and Best Visual Effects. Steve McQueen's 12 Years a Slave received 3 nominations, including for Best Picture and Best Director. Several other films such as Dallas Buyers Club, Frozen, The Great Gatsby, Blue Jasmine, and Her each received 1 or 2 nominations.
Do women open resort marketing emails more frequently than men?Ryan Solutions
We’ve looked at gender a few times in regard to mountain resort marketing, but we’ve never looked at gender in the context of the most basic hotel email marketing metrics of open and click rates. So, do women tend to open or click marketing emails more often than men? Here’s what we found.
25 ways for a hotel to increase occupancy Joshua Miranda
25 ways for a hotels can increase their occupancy through Hotel website, Facebook, Twitter, Instragram, Pinterest, Flickr, SEO, Google analytics, Four-square, Trip advisor, and OTA's
The document outlines a hotel sales strategy. It discusses completing a SWOT analysis to understand strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats. The sales action plan targets the lucrative Indian market, key accounts, existing customers, and marketing activities like trade shows. Commission agents include domestic tour operators who arrange packages, hotel sales, and MICE events. The strategy is to list prospective agents, offer deals to drive business, and provide incentives. Targets for inbound tour operators are October to March when northern India has pleasant temperatures. The strategy aims to provide good service and compete on cost to build brand image and initiate business with Delhi-based inbound agents.
1.The Ritz-Carlton Understands the Value of Every Employee. If you’ve ever held a job where you didn’t feel appreciated, you understand how frustrating it can be. Heck, you probably didn’t care about the company, right? Well, the Ritz-Carlton avoids this pitfall by valuing every employee. By empowering the employee, the hotel creates a staff that is passionate about the hotel, its services, and its success. Furthermore, happier employees mean happier guests. In fact, the Ritz-Carlton has empowered employees so much that they have the ability to spend up to $2,000 to ensure guests have an enjoyable stay without seeking permission from management.
2.The Ritz-Carlton Defines its Brand. If you want to improve the public image of your brand, then what better way is there to do so than by defining it yourself? The Ritz-Carlton does this by telling stories about the hotel through its online content strategy. Their Stories that Stay with You page elaborates on ways in which their employees and the greater hotel have gone out of their way to ensure a great stay for guests. The Ritz-Carlton is excellent at not only framing their stories, but in behaving in such a way – providing great customer service at every level – that great stories happen.
3.The Ritz-Carlton Abides By its Standards. Forget unwritten rules or laws. The Ritz has 12 Service Values that are etched into every employee’s memory. By requiring that everyone on the payroll memorize the company’s golden standards, the Ritz showcases the fact that they are genuinely passionate about their standards and commitment to customer service. Likewise, be sure to establish internal and external standards for your brand and hold your entire team accountable to them to ensure an incredible customer experience!
For over a century, the Ritz-Carlton Hotel has defined itself as the standard for quality and luxury in the hotel industry. While the ritzy Ritz-Carlton is flush with grandiose chandeliers and staircases, it’s the customer service and brand differentiation that’s given the hotel its staying power. By implementing pizazz into your marketing strategy, you’ll give your business a more powerful presence in the real context of B2B relations.
This document contains summaries from judges commenting on winners of the 2008 Missouri Press Association Better Newspaper Contest. It lists winners in different categories and classes of newspapers. For the General Excellence category in Class 1, the Warren County Record took first place, praised for being head and shoulders above others. The Lawrence County Record won first in Class 2, with judges commenting they felt like a member of the community after reading it.
Joe Donnelly is an award-winning journalist, editor, professor, and writer with extensive experience in print, digital, and narrative journalism. He has held leadership roles launching and editing various publications including LA Weekly, Slake: Los Angeles, and Mission and State. Currently, he teaches journalism courses as a visiting professor at Whittier College. His writing has appeared in numerous publications and been recognized in various awards and anthologies.
· listen to KPFA for at least one hour, the local Pacifica News Se.docxoswald1horne84988
· listen to KPFA for at least one hour, the local Pacifica News Service affiliate of the Bay Area: morning programs are broadcast hourly live between 07:00 and 12:00/noon PT are appropriate for this exercise;
· listen/watch daily morning news programs or articles of each source;
· compare subject matter content: what subjects do the daily programs cover? are these matters of high public importance? do both sources cover the same subjects?
· compare perspectives/points-of-view: does the news source present facts that reasonably describe/detail the issue or event? do the sources present differing views of people who are well-informed about the subject?
· are the sources reliably accurate?
· do the sources tend to imply or present a particular position on the issues/events? do they show any outright bias? explain your conclusion: biased or not biased, cite evidence from your viewing or listening exercise;
· political positioning: is the news coverage noticeably conservative/right-of-center, moderate/centrist or liberal/left-of-center in political perspective? what is the basis of your view on this factor?
Compare the KPFA and any types of news (NY times or others) 300 words maximumAnswer the questions aboveBe on timeAssignment due on Saturday June 17, 2017 Before 8pm!!!!!
For each article or reading, you are asked to prepare a written summary that includes the author’s argument/thesis, main points, sources of evidence if those are given, and your critique of the reading.
Here’s how to structure them:
# 1 Doug Mackenzie. “Canadian Beer” your own name.
· Thesis. The author’s main point in one or two short sentences.
· Summary of the Main Points used by the author to demonstrate the argument
· Evidence on which the main points are based – if there are footnotes or if they refer to what they used
· Your Assessment of the article. What do you think of it? Good, bad or ugly.. gaps..logic..bias.
These are informal. They can be in point form or paragraph(s)/ full sentences. They should be 200 words in length and not more than 250. If they meet those basic requirements, and come in on time, they will be assessed a 10 out of 10. Easy peasy. Half marks for being under length and/or not attempting to identify the thesis, and zero for not handing one in, or only handing in a few words.
This assignment is designed simply to ensure that you have read and thought about the articles before class.
One set of late readings will be accepted in the course without a medical note.
Surname 3
Author’s Name:
Course:
Professor’s Name:
Date: DD full Month YYYY
Article Summary
Thesis
The author of the article aims at explaining the journey of America’s Natives through eras of colonization, Wars, expansionism as well as imperialism towards an era of civilization and superiority (Marubbio 139).
Main points
The article illustrates the various components of the Mann’s film such as the racism as well as nationalism themes which depicts t.
003 Examples Of Essay About Myself Sample ~ Thatsnotus. Myself Writer Essay : Essay writing about myself. An essay of self. 26 Outstanding College Essay Examples / - Example of a college essay .... 011 Sample Essay About Myself Introduction Yourself Essays Examples .... History Essay: My self essay for university student. 009 Self Reflective Essay Example Essays Reflection Paper On Writing .... 002 Self Introduction Sample Essay Example College Essays Application .... 026 College Essay About Yourself Example Narrative Paragraph Examples .... Narrative essay: My self essay in english. My self essay in English. Short Essay About Myself / 001 Essay About Myself ~ Thatsnotus / These .... How To Introduce An Essay Examples | Sitedoct.org. Purchasing Essays papers: How to write an essay about yourself example. 018 Essay Example About ~ Thatsnotus. Essay Introduction Myself. Sample Essay Describe Yourself. 007 Introduce Yourself Essay Sample Words Example About Myself College .... 008 Essay Example Describing Yourself As Student On Describe Writing An .... 014 Self Introduction Essay Introduce Myself Sample Yourself College .... My self easy essay - essaynparaph.web.fc2.com. Writing a self analysis essay about - service essay. How to Write an Essay about Yourself. Myself Writer Essay – 10+ Writing Tips and Tricks on How to Write an .... 020 Introducing Myself Essay Self Introduction Introduce Personal .... Business paper: Self essays. 017 Self Essay Example Introducing Myself Introduction About How To .... Narrative Essay: My self essay in english for university students. Download reflective essay example 45 | Reflective essay examples, Essay ... Self Essay Example
Compare And Contrast Essay Introduction ExampleRosa Rojas
Strong Compare and Contrast Essay Examples. How to write a compare and contrast essay introduction paragraph - How .... 003 Compare And Contrast Essay Intro Example Fresh Of Introduction .... Stirring Compare Contrast Essay Example ~ Thatsnotus. Compare and Contrast Essay II | Secondary School | Lecture. What Is a Compare and Contrast Essay? Simple Examples To Guide You ....
Steve Rhodes is the founder, editor and publisher of The Beachwood Reporter, the world's wittiest Chicago-centric new and culture review. Previously: Chicago Tribune, Newsweek, Chicago magazine ... and tons more. A must-read!
Steve Rhodes has extensive experience leading and creating innovative digital news organizations. He has a master's degree focused on newsroom management and has held leadership roles at several prominent publications. Currently, he is the editor and founder of The Beachwood Reporter, an online news site covering Chicago politics and culture.
The 3D printing machine company is called Makerarm. Website Maker.docxmehek4
The 3D printing machine company is called Makerarm. Website: MakerArm.com
Here are what the research needs to be included. Length not restricted but please include adequate info according to following requirement. Please also provide a work cited page.
1. Advertising and marketing challenges: What would be the most efficient advertising and marketing channel?
2. Pricing and profitability: Based on the available information and your own assessment, what should be the price (or price range)? Under the estimated price, will the product be profitable?
3. Marketing Analysis
-4P’s
-How to hear about the voice of the customer
-define the audience by:
-psychographic
-demographic
-lifestyles
Academic Journal Article Review Guidelines
Academic Journal Articles:
“Childhood Slavery and Identity”- Thursday, February 25
“Freedwomen, Sexuality, and Violence”- Thursday, March 17
“Creative Conflict: Lincoln and Eleanor Ragsdale”- Thursday, April 28
“African American History in the Reshaping of the Twentieth-Century American West”- Thursday, May 5
Historians love to review the works of other historians. Whenever a new history book is written, the historical profession
selects experts in particular fields of studies to determine the value and contribution the new work will have on the
academic discipline. Upon completion of the course’s reading, each student will be considered an expert and be required
to read an academic article and submit a 2 page review. Students are encouraged to celebrate the author’s
accomplishments, but also challenge anything that seems substandard. Style and creativity play a crucial role in the
success of your review.
All papers must be 2 typed pages, double spaced, with 12pt font.
Please put your name, course name, and date at the top of the paper.
Article Review should address the following:
1. The author’s purpose in writing the article
2. The author’s main thesis
3. The author’s challenging of other historical viewpoints
4. The evidence utilized by the author (specifically primary sources)
5. Personal likes/dislikes
6. How the author could make the work stronger?
7. The recommend audience of the article?
8. Explain how this article contributes to understanding African American History
9. An example of how this article supports/contradicts The African American Odyssey (course textbook)
10. Suggested reading to accompany this work (not required, but helpful)
The Format should be as follows:
1. Introduction paragraph
The first paragraph introduces the author and the article you will review
A sentence should give an initial impression of the work
Express the purpose and thesis in the introduction paragraph
2. Body paragraphs
One paragraph should summarize the article
Several paragraphs should address the items listed above.
3. Conclusion paragraph
The final paragraph should express the importance of this work (or the lack)
Sugges ...
Steve Rhodes has extensive experience leading and creating innovative digital news organizations. He has a master's degree in newsroom management and has held leadership roles at various publications, including founding The Beachwood Reporter online news site. His work has received numerous awards for investigative and in-depth reporting. He is seeking a new role where he can apply his skills and experience in a mission-driven digital news organization.
This document provides the winners of the 43rd Annual Excellence in Journalism Awards from the San Diego Press Club. It lists the winners in categories such as Best Television Entry, Best Non-Daily Newspapers Entry, Best Magazines Entry, and more. It also lists the winners of categories within daily newspapers/websites and magazines, including Architecture and Design, Arts & Entertainment Reporting, Business & Financial, Column, Criminal Justice, and many others. The document provides the names of the journalists and publications that won awards.
This document introduces the Second Recommended Reading List from Prairie View A&M University (PVAMU). It discusses the success of the first reading list in generating interest in reading and distributing over 40,000 copies. The second reading list consists of 70 fiction and non-fiction titles, including some children's literature. It aims to promote reading as a cornerstone of the university's mission and student success. The introduction hopes that those receiving this list will enjoy and benefit from its suggested readings.
Early newspapers in the 17th and 18th centuries were published by political parties for elites and focused on opinion over news. The penny press revolution in the 1830s led by Benjamin Day lowered costs and focused on factual news stories to appeal to growing urban populations. Throughout the late 19th century, newspaper wars between Hearst and Pulitzer popularized sensationalized stories and yellow journalism. In the 20th century, radio and television challenged newspapers' role in broadcasting news, though newspapers adapted by strengthening online content and mobile platforms. While national newspapers remain profitable, many local papers are struggling with declining revenues.
This e-copy of "Viewpoint" is a widely distributed, quarterly magazine that I co-wrote, edited and published with the Executive Director of Corp. Communications at KCET-LA/PBS.
Can implants cure Diabetes by scientific american magazineDholon Paul
The document is the July 1995 issue of Scientific American magazine, which contains several articles on topics ranging from medieval siege weapons to diabetes treatments to deep sea life. The issue also includes letters to the editors, reviews of recent publications, essays, and regular departments on science news and trends in materials science.
The 1792 gubernatorial election between John Jay and George Clinton in New York exposed tensions in the young American political system. Although Jay received more votes, Clinton was declared the winner due to the invalidation of votes in three counties. This partisan decision polarized New York and threatened the legitimacy of republican self-government. It showed the founders' fears of political factions coming to fruition and competing definitions of republicanism clashing. National leaders like Jefferson, Hamilton, Madison, and Monroe were forced to confront the imperfections of the system they created as a result of this disputed election crisis in New York.
The California Midwinter International Exposition, San Francisco, 1894DoctorSequoia
This document provides an overview of the California Midwinter International Exposition held in San Francisco in 1894. It summarizes the key events and people involved in planning the exposition in just 7 months, led by newspaper publisher Michael de Young. The exposition featured over 180 structures built in a variety of architectural styles from around the world, clustered around the Grand Court of Honor. Major buildings highlighted the industries, arts, and agriculture of California and participating countries. The exposition aimed to boost San Francisco's economy and culture and showcase it on a global stage.
This document provides information about the Urban Issues Forum, which has hosted influential figures over the past 10 years to discuss important issues impacting the African American community in Los Angeles. It recognizes several honorees for advocating on issues that improved life for disadvantaged communities in L.A. in the past year. The keynote speaker, Roland Martin, will receive an award for his work as a journalist and being the first to interview President Obama.
The document summarizes the 1976 film Network and discusses its portrayal of journalists and the television industry at the time. It analyzes how the film depicted tensions between older journalists who wanted to report facts and younger ones focused on ratings. It also examines the film's portrayal of audiences' dependency on television and the major role journalists played in shaping public opinion. Finally, it outlines several ethical issues raised in the film's portrayal of the television industry.
More Related Content
Similar to 2009 Southern California Journalism Award Winners
This document contains summaries from judges commenting on winners of the 2008 Missouri Press Association Better Newspaper Contest. It lists winners in different categories and classes of newspapers. For the General Excellence category in Class 1, the Warren County Record took first place, praised for being head and shoulders above others. The Lawrence County Record won first in Class 2, with judges commenting they felt like a member of the community after reading it.
Joe Donnelly is an award-winning journalist, editor, professor, and writer with extensive experience in print, digital, and narrative journalism. He has held leadership roles launching and editing various publications including LA Weekly, Slake: Los Angeles, and Mission and State. Currently, he teaches journalism courses as a visiting professor at Whittier College. His writing has appeared in numerous publications and been recognized in various awards and anthologies.
· listen to KPFA for at least one hour, the local Pacifica News Se.docxoswald1horne84988
· listen to KPFA for at least one hour, the local Pacifica News Service affiliate of the Bay Area: morning programs are broadcast hourly live between 07:00 and 12:00/noon PT are appropriate for this exercise;
· listen/watch daily morning news programs or articles of each source;
· compare subject matter content: what subjects do the daily programs cover? are these matters of high public importance? do both sources cover the same subjects?
· compare perspectives/points-of-view: does the news source present facts that reasonably describe/detail the issue or event? do the sources present differing views of people who are well-informed about the subject?
· are the sources reliably accurate?
· do the sources tend to imply or present a particular position on the issues/events? do they show any outright bias? explain your conclusion: biased or not biased, cite evidence from your viewing or listening exercise;
· political positioning: is the news coverage noticeably conservative/right-of-center, moderate/centrist or liberal/left-of-center in political perspective? what is the basis of your view on this factor?
Compare the KPFA and any types of news (NY times or others) 300 words maximumAnswer the questions aboveBe on timeAssignment due on Saturday June 17, 2017 Before 8pm!!!!!
For each article or reading, you are asked to prepare a written summary that includes the author’s argument/thesis, main points, sources of evidence if those are given, and your critique of the reading.
Here’s how to structure them:
# 1 Doug Mackenzie. “Canadian Beer” your own name.
· Thesis. The author’s main point in one or two short sentences.
· Summary of the Main Points used by the author to demonstrate the argument
· Evidence on which the main points are based – if there are footnotes or if they refer to what they used
· Your Assessment of the article. What do you think of it? Good, bad or ugly.. gaps..logic..bias.
These are informal. They can be in point form or paragraph(s)/ full sentences. They should be 200 words in length and not more than 250. If they meet those basic requirements, and come in on time, they will be assessed a 10 out of 10. Easy peasy. Half marks for being under length and/or not attempting to identify the thesis, and zero for not handing one in, or only handing in a few words.
This assignment is designed simply to ensure that you have read and thought about the articles before class.
One set of late readings will be accepted in the course without a medical note.
Surname 3
Author’s Name:
Course:
Professor’s Name:
Date: DD full Month YYYY
Article Summary
Thesis
The author of the article aims at explaining the journey of America’s Natives through eras of colonization, Wars, expansionism as well as imperialism towards an era of civilization and superiority (Marubbio 139).
Main points
The article illustrates the various components of the Mann’s film such as the racism as well as nationalism themes which depicts t.
003 Examples Of Essay About Myself Sample ~ Thatsnotus. Myself Writer Essay : Essay writing about myself. An essay of self. 26 Outstanding College Essay Examples / - Example of a college essay .... 011 Sample Essay About Myself Introduction Yourself Essays Examples .... History Essay: My self essay for university student. 009 Self Reflective Essay Example Essays Reflection Paper On Writing .... 002 Self Introduction Sample Essay Example College Essays Application .... 026 College Essay About Yourself Example Narrative Paragraph Examples .... Narrative essay: My self essay in english. My self essay in English. Short Essay About Myself / 001 Essay About Myself ~ Thatsnotus / These .... How To Introduce An Essay Examples | Sitedoct.org. Purchasing Essays papers: How to write an essay about yourself example. 018 Essay Example About ~ Thatsnotus. Essay Introduction Myself. Sample Essay Describe Yourself. 007 Introduce Yourself Essay Sample Words Example About Myself College .... 008 Essay Example Describing Yourself As Student On Describe Writing An .... 014 Self Introduction Essay Introduce Myself Sample Yourself College .... My self easy essay - essaynparaph.web.fc2.com. Writing a self analysis essay about - service essay. How to Write an Essay about Yourself. Myself Writer Essay – 10+ Writing Tips and Tricks on How to Write an .... 020 Introducing Myself Essay Self Introduction Introduce Personal .... Business paper: Self essays. 017 Self Essay Example Introducing Myself Introduction About How To .... Narrative Essay: My self essay in english for university students. Download reflective essay example 45 | Reflective essay examples, Essay ... Self Essay Example
Compare And Contrast Essay Introduction ExampleRosa Rojas
Strong Compare and Contrast Essay Examples. How to write a compare and contrast essay introduction paragraph - How .... 003 Compare And Contrast Essay Intro Example Fresh Of Introduction .... Stirring Compare Contrast Essay Example ~ Thatsnotus. Compare and Contrast Essay II | Secondary School | Lecture. What Is a Compare and Contrast Essay? Simple Examples To Guide You ....
Steve Rhodes is the founder, editor and publisher of The Beachwood Reporter, the world's wittiest Chicago-centric new and culture review. Previously: Chicago Tribune, Newsweek, Chicago magazine ... and tons more. A must-read!
Steve Rhodes has extensive experience leading and creating innovative digital news organizations. He has a master's degree focused on newsroom management and has held leadership roles at several prominent publications. Currently, he is the editor and founder of The Beachwood Reporter, an online news site covering Chicago politics and culture.
The 3D printing machine company is called Makerarm. Website Maker.docxmehek4
The 3D printing machine company is called Makerarm. Website: MakerArm.com
Here are what the research needs to be included. Length not restricted but please include adequate info according to following requirement. Please also provide a work cited page.
1. Advertising and marketing challenges: What would be the most efficient advertising and marketing channel?
2. Pricing and profitability: Based on the available information and your own assessment, what should be the price (or price range)? Under the estimated price, will the product be profitable?
3. Marketing Analysis
-4P’s
-How to hear about the voice of the customer
-define the audience by:
-psychographic
-demographic
-lifestyles
Academic Journal Article Review Guidelines
Academic Journal Articles:
“Childhood Slavery and Identity”- Thursday, February 25
“Freedwomen, Sexuality, and Violence”- Thursday, March 17
“Creative Conflict: Lincoln and Eleanor Ragsdale”- Thursday, April 28
“African American History in the Reshaping of the Twentieth-Century American West”- Thursday, May 5
Historians love to review the works of other historians. Whenever a new history book is written, the historical profession
selects experts in particular fields of studies to determine the value and contribution the new work will have on the
academic discipline. Upon completion of the course’s reading, each student will be considered an expert and be required
to read an academic article and submit a 2 page review. Students are encouraged to celebrate the author’s
accomplishments, but also challenge anything that seems substandard. Style and creativity play a crucial role in the
success of your review.
All papers must be 2 typed pages, double spaced, with 12pt font.
Please put your name, course name, and date at the top of the paper.
Article Review should address the following:
1. The author’s purpose in writing the article
2. The author’s main thesis
3. The author’s challenging of other historical viewpoints
4. The evidence utilized by the author (specifically primary sources)
5. Personal likes/dislikes
6. How the author could make the work stronger?
7. The recommend audience of the article?
8. Explain how this article contributes to understanding African American History
9. An example of how this article supports/contradicts The African American Odyssey (course textbook)
10. Suggested reading to accompany this work (not required, but helpful)
The Format should be as follows:
1. Introduction paragraph
The first paragraph introduces the author and the article you will review
A sentence should give an initial impression of the work
Express the purpose and thesis in the introduction paragraph
2. Body paragraphs
One paragraph should summarize the article
Several paragraphs should address the items listed above.
3. Conclusion paragraph
The final paragraph should express the importance of this work (or the lack)
Sugges ...
Steve Rhodes has extensive experience leading and creating innovative digital news organizations. He has a master's degree in newsroom management and has held leadership roles at various publications, including founding The Beachwood Reporter online news site. His work has received numerous awards for investigative and in-depth reporting. He is seeking a new role where he can apply his skills and experience in a mission-driven digital news organization.
This document provides the winners of the 43rd Annual Excellence in Journalism Awards from the San Diego Press Club. It lists the winners in categories such as Best Television Entry, Best Non-Daily Newspapers Entry, Best Magazines Entry, and more. It also lists the winners of categories within daily newspapers/websites and magazines, including Architecture and Design, Arts & Entertainment Reporting, Business & Financial, Column, Criminal Justice, and many others. The document provides the names of the journalists and publications that won awards.
This document introduces the Second Recommended Reading List from Prairie View A&M University (PVAMU). It discusses the success of the first reading list in generating interest in reading and distributing over 40,000 copies. The second reading list consists of 70 fiction and non-fiction titles, including some children's literature. It aims to promote reading as a cornerstone of the university's mission and student success. The introduction hopes that those receiving this list will enjoy and benefit from its suggested readings.
Early newspapers in the 17th and 18th centuries were published by political parties for elites and focused on opinion over news. The penny press revolution in the 1830s led by Benjamin Day lowered costs and focused on factual news stories to appeal to growing urban populations. Throughout the late 19th century, newspaper wars between Hearst and Pulitzer popularized sensationalized stories and yellow journalism. In the 20th century, radio and television challenged newspapers' role in broadcasting news, though newspapers adapted by strengthening online content and mobile platforms. While national newspapers remain profitable, many local papers are struggling with declining revenues.
This e-copy of "Viewpoint" is a widely distributed, quarterly magazine that I co-wrote, edited and published with the Executive Director of Corp. Communications at KCET-LA/PBS.
Can implants cure Diabetes by scientific american magazineDholon Paul
The document is the July 1995 issue of Scientific American magazine, which contains several articles on topics ranging from medieval siege weapons to diabetes treatments to deep sea life. The issue also includes letters to the editors, reviews of recent publications, essays, and regular departments on science news and trends in materials science.
The 1792 gubernatorial election between John Jay and George Clinton in New York exposed tensions in the young American political system. Although Jay received more votes, Clinton was declared the winner due to the invalidation of votes in three counties. This partisan decision polarized New York and threatened the legitimacy of republican self-government. It showed the founders' fears of political factions coming to fruition and competing definitions of republicanism clashing. National leaders like Jefferson, Hamilton, Madison, and Monroe were forced to confront the imperfections of the system they created as a result of this disputed election crisis in New York.
The California Midwinter International Exposition, San Francisco, 1894DoctorSequoia
This document provides an overview of the California Midwinter International Exposition held in San Francisco in 1894. It summarizes the key events and people involved in planning the exposition in just 7 months, led by newspaper publisher Michael de Young. The exposition featured over 180 structures built in a variety of architectural styles from around the world, clustered around the Grand Court of Honor. Major buildings highlighted the industries, arts, and agriculture of California and participating countries. The exposition aimed to boost San Francisco's economy and culture and showcase it on a global stage.
This document provides information about the Urban Issues Forum, which has hosted influential figures over the past 10 years to discuss important issues impacting the African American community in Los Angeles. It recognizes several honorees for advocating on issues that improved life for disadvantaged communities in L.A. in the past year. The keynote speaker, Roland Martin, will receive an award for his work as a journalist and being the first to interview President Obama.
The document summarizes the 1976 film Network and discusses its portrayal of journalists and the television industry at the time. It analyzes how the film depicted tensions between older journalists who wanted to report facts and younger ones focused on ratings. It also examines the film's portrayal of audiences' dependency on television and the major role journalists played in shaping public opinion. Finally, it outlines several ethical issues raised in the film's portrayal of the television industry.
Similar to 2009 Southern California Journalism Award Winners (20)
1. 2009 Southern California
Journalism Award Winners
A JOURNALIST OF THE YEAR
A1 PRINT (Over 100K circulation)
David Evans, Bloomberg Markets. Judges’ comments: This was a very
close call with the second place finisher. But the financial meltdown was
the top story of the year, and Mr. Evans was well ahead of the pack on a
story that affected the lives of billions of people. His well-written, excellent
stories presaged many of our country’s economic woes. When historians
look back and ask why the press didn’t do a better job of revealing the
world’s economic problems before the crash, they’ll have to make an
exception for David Evans.
Second Place: Christine Pelisek, LA Weekly.
Honorable Mention: Miriam Jordan, Wall Street Journal.
A2 PRINT (Under 100K circulation)
Brad A. Greenberg, The Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles, Judges’
comments: Mr. Greenberg is a treasure. His insightful and illuminating
work offers key insight into the spiritual and religious life of Southern
California, while tackling religious racism and revealing the effects of the
economic meltdown on the non-profit world.
Second Place: Anna Scott, Los Angeles Downtown News.
Honorable Mention: Matt Welch, Reason.
A3 TELEVISION
Tie: Ana Garcia and Fred Mamoun, KNBC and Eric Longabardi,
TeleMedia
2. Comments: Ana Garcia & Fred Mamoun are a formidable investigative
team. All 3 stories were solid, well-crafted and informative–a true public
service.
Animal lovers would be appalled by vicious vets who cared more about the
dollars made off dogs than the actual puppy patients.
CNA is scandiulous in its treatment of our most vulnerable population.
Seniors paid thousands for insurance coverage that was wrongly
terminated.
Parents panicked when Carters-wearing kids developed rashes from
tagless garments made in China–yet the company continued to sell the
clothing.All of these combined can easily make the case that this team
deserves to be recognized as ‘Journaliast of the Year’
Longabardi: The judges found the Rev. Wright story to be infinitely
interesting and a political ‘aha moment’ of conscience.
The Drama of Obama Jet Incident story made our toes curl. But it was the
9/11 Redux investigative piece that left us absolutely fearful and
flabbergasted. The TSA is supposed to be one of our nation’s guard dogs
but we learned the federal agency is all bark and no bite. It is
unconscionable that ‘thousands of aliens’ are enrolled in US flight schools
for pilot training with no background check. Does no one remember
Mohammad Atta and the twin towers? Where is the oversight? Excellent
investigative work!
2nd
Place: Robert Kovacik, KNBC News.
A4 RADIO
Frank Stoltze, KPCC 89.3
Comments: Solid, professional radio reporter. Great public radio delivery
and pacing. Very good grasp on the subject matter he was reporting on.
Great use of natural sound.
Second Place: John Rabe: KPCC 89.3
Honorable Mention:. Brian Watt: KPCC 89.3
A6 ENTERTAINMENT
3. Alex Pham, Los Angeles Times
Second Place: George Pennacchio, KABC-TV
Second Place Tie: Monica Rizzo – People Magazine
A7 PHOTO JOURNALIST
Rick Loomis, Los Angeles Times
Comment: Loomis portfolio is strong, powerful and engaging. It is well
edited.
Second Place: Don Bartletti, Los Angeles Times
Honorable Mention Michael Robinson Chavez
A8 DESIGNER
Derek Simmons, Los Angeles Times
Comments: Talent and versatility show in these examples. No matter what
Simmons designs or lays out, his artist abilities shine.
Second place: Kelli Sullivan, Los Angeles Times
Honorable Mention: Wes Bausmith, Los Angeles Times
A10 ONLINE JOURNALIST
Chris Hedges, Truthdig
Comments: Chris Hedges combines reporting, links, personal experience
and magazine-style commentary to bring important new topics to light.
Second Place: Bennet Kelley, Huffington Post
Third place: Robert Scheer, Truthdig
A11 POLITICAL JOURNALIST, PRINT
Daniel Heimpel, LA Weekly, Los Angeles political coverage. Judges’
comments: Mr. Heimpel’s thoughtful columns dare to challenge political
correctness and the status quo, making him an essential voice in Southern
California’s political scene.
4. Second Place: Ted Johnson, Variety, The world of celebrity politics.
Honorable Mention: Bill Boyarsky, Truthdig, On the campaign trail.
A12 POLITICAL JOURNALIST, BROADCAST
Warren Olney, KCRW, To the Point
Comments: Conversational, approachable style coupled with
engaging topics an deft interviewing skills make this program interesting,
even for the politically unaware. Very listenable.
Second Place: Frank Stolze, KPCC 89.3, Political Coverage
A13 BUSINESS AND FINANCIAL COVERAGE, PRINT
David Evans, Bloomberg Markets, “The Risk Nightmare.” Judges’
comments: Mr. Evans’ extraordinary reports about the causes of the
financial meltdown, before it happened, are remarkably prescient. He was
writing about the frightening problems of credit default swaps and the
precariousness of banks well before those issues became part of our
national consciousness.
Second Place: Steven Leigh Morris, LA Weekly, “City Halls ‘Density
Hawks’ Are Changing LA’s DNA.”
Honorable Mention: Staff, Los Angeles Business Journal, “Market
Meltdown.”
A14 BUSINESS AND FINANCIAL COVERAGE, BROADCAST
Brian Watt, 89.3 FM KPCC
Comments: Mr. Watt makes effective use of ambient sound, revealing
interviews, and strong writing to tell interesting and compelling stories,
from the actors’ union struggles to the financial mess caused by America’s
banking system. Second Place: Susan Valot, 89.3 FM KPCC.
B. DAILY/WEEKLY NEWSPAPERS (Over 100K circulation)
B1 HARD NEWS
Christine Pelisek, LA Weekly, “Billboards Gone Wild.” Judges’ comments:
5. Ms. Pelisek’s dogged pursuit of LA’s illegal billboard industry is a must read,
from the incompetence and greed she uncovers to the backroom deals she
exposes.
Second Place: Los Angeles Daily News Staff, Los Angeles Daily News,
“Complete Chaos: Metrolink, Freight Trains Collide.”
Honorable Mention: Patrick McDonald, LA Weekly, “Proposition 8
Coverage.”
B2 FEATURE
Christine Pelisek, LA Weekly, “Raven, the Death of a Hollywood Beauty.”
Judges comments: This is an eye-opening, poignant look at Southern
California street runaways. And, it’s a terrific, heartbreaking profile to boot.
Second Place: Patrick McDonald, LA Weekly, “The All-About-Me Mayor.”
Honorable Mention: Scott Gold, Los Angeles Times, “Out There.”
B3 INVESTIGATIVE/SERIES
Christine Pelisek, LA Weekly, “Grim Sleeper.” Judges comments: Ms.
Pelisek represents the best of what investigative journalism should be:
Dogged determination, skepticism of authority, and insatiable curiosity. A
serial killer was on the loose in Southern California, and not even the
victims’ families knew about it until Ms. Pelisek came along.
Second Place: Beth Barrett and George B. Sanchez, Los Angeles Daily
News, “Top-Heavy District.”
Honorable Mention: Christine Pelisek, LA Weekly, “Billboards Gone Wild.”
B5 COMMENTARY
Devra Maza, Los Angeles Daily News, “Love on the Lines”
Comments: An entertaining column that puts a fun twist on a serious topic.
Second place: Amy Alkon, Creators Syndicate, Advice Columns
Honorable Mention: Robert David Jaffe, Los Angeles Times, Op-ed
Fourth place: Mariel Garcia, Los Angeles Daily News, Editorial
6. B6 COLUMNIST
Gendy Alimurung, LA Weekly, “LaVida”
Comments: An interesting range of topics and a flair for language make
this entrant the winner.
Second place: Dennis McCarthy, Los Angeles Daily News, Columns
Honorable Mention: Jonathan Gold, LA Weekly, Columns
B7 REVIEWS/CRITISM/COLUMN
Christophe Knight, Los Angeles Times, “Precious Stone”
Comment: Crisp, clean words that paint a picture in one’s mind of being at
the exhibit.
Second Place: Ann Powers, Los Angeles Times, “Niel Diamond”
Honorable Mention: Mark Swed, Los Angeles Times, “Hurricane Mama”
B8 ENTERTAINMENT NEWS OR FEATURE
Nancy Rommelmann, LA Weekly, “No Exit Plan,”
Comment: Nancy Rommelmann performs a skillful autopsy on the JT
LeRoy myth. In dissecting the motivations of a liar, Rommelmann did
not depend solely on the deceiver for the answers. She spins the story
from its crazy beginning in Brooklyn Heights, and holds back enough to
keep the reader’s interest all the way through.
Second Place: by Ella Taylor, LA Weekly, “Sacreligulous: Bill Maher’s
Cross to Bear,”
Honorable Mention: Scott Gold, Los Angeles Times, “Enough About Me”
and other stories
B9 SPORTS
Brian Dohn, Los Angeles Daily News, “It is positively a negative day for
UCLA”
7. Comment: Well written. An interesting look at the losing side of college
football.
B10 HEADLINE WRITING
Amy Alkon, Creators Syndicate, “From Beer to Eternity”
Comment: The headline is a clever takeoff on the title of a famous movie,
but it also could be readily understood by anyone who hadn’t heard of the
movie (As editors of the baby boom generation get older, they need to
keep in mind that younger readers might not get certain cultural
references.)
Second Place: Peter Fuertes, Los Angeles Daily News, “Deep-Sixed”
Honorable Mention: Peter Fuertes, Los Angeles Daily News, “Safety
Concern”
B11 DESIGN
Derek Simmons, George Wilhelm and Jay Clendenin, Los Angeles
Times, “Olympic Special Section”
Comments: The combination of outstanding photography, the subtle use
of typography and clean, refined, conservative design that doesn’t
compete with the image, creates a mood of pomp and pageantry not
usually connected with sporting events. This reflects the uniqueness of the
Olympic experience. This design works perfectly on every zoned cover.
Second Place: Darrick Rainey, LA Weekly, “Death of a Hollywood Beauty”
Honorable Mention: Kelli Sullivan, Michael Whitley, Mary Vignole, Doug
Stevens, Thomas Suhlauder et al, Los Angeles Times, “Out of Control”
C. DAILY/WEEKLY NEWSPAPERS (Under 100K circulation)
C1 HARD NEWS
First Place: Joel Russell, Los Angeles Business Journal, “Univision Battle
with Televisa.”
Comment: This is a strong, hard news story that not only breaks some
8. important news for readers, but also is written well.
Second Place: Andre Coleman, Pasadena Weekly, “Body of Evidence.”
Honorable Mention: Alfred Lee, Pasadena Star-News, “Alleged Bribery
Being Probed.”
C2 NEWS FEATURE
Brad A. Greenberg, The Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles, “The
Professor the Anti-Semites Love.” Judges’ comments: A well-written and
thoughtful look at a bigoted college professor, who has become the pied-
piper of racial discrimination while toiling unmolested at a California state
university.
Second Place: Greg Mellen, Long Beach Press-Telegram, “Davik’s Heart.”
Honorable Mention: Carl Kozlowski, Pasadena Weekly, “Life on the
Edge.”
C3 INVESTIGATIVE/SERIES
Anna Scott, Los Angeles Downtown News, “The Downtown Diamond
Caper.” Judges comments: This is very interesting look into the relatively
secret world of Los Angeles diamond dealers, and it provides insight into
how one man could defraud his friends and colleagues. Great research and
great interviews makes for a fabulous story.
Second Place: Daniel Miller, Los Angeles Business Journal, “Busted
Ventures.”
Honorable Mention: Evan George, Los Angeles Daily Journal, “Citing
Legal Fears, County Turns to Cops to Help Mental Patients.”
C4 BUSINESS
Richard Clough, Los Angeles Business Journal, “IndyMac’s Last Gasps”
Comments: Richard Clough not only explains what happened to IndyMac,
he does so with compelling storytelling skills, crafting a hard-earned
narrative of the decline and fall of a local institution set against the
looming crisis nationwide.
Second Place: Richard Guzman, Los Angeles Downtown News, “Money
9. Troubles and Conflicts at El Pueblo” and “City Looks to Boost Olvera Street
Rents,”
Honorable Mention: Karen Robes Meeks, Long Beach Press-Telegram,
“Retail vacancies a drag on reinvigorating iconic L.B. Street,” “Perceptions
of crime cost Pine,” “Classy, but costly”
C5 COMMENTARY
Dr. Mauricio Heibron Jr., Long Beach Press-Telegram, “A Heart That
Can’t Be Mended”
Comments: A column that makes this country’s gun debate
heartbreakingly personal.
Second Place: Calvin Naito, Los Angeles Business Journal, “ Los Angeles
Times Ripe for Some Advice on Reaching Local Readers”
Honorable Mention: Thomas D. Elias, California Focus Syndicated
Column
C6 COLUMNIST: Columnist (Daily/Weekly Newspapers under 100,000
circulation)
David Suissa, Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles
Comments: Thought-provoking columns filled with telling details.
Second Place: Rob Eshman, Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles
Honorable Mention: Tim Grobaty, Long Beach Press-Telegram
C7 ENTERTAINMENT REVIEWS/CRITICISM/COLUMN
Joel Beers, OC Weekly, “Bloodless Passion,” “Float On,” “Hare Raising,”
“Wacky Iraqi,”
Comments: Beers writes lively and thoughtful theater reviews with a
strong sense of authority and tone to match a variety of material.
C8 ENTERTAINMENT NEWS OR FEATURE
Matt Coker, OC Weekly, “Rock Angel,”
10. Comments: This is a beautiful example of the rare well-written, tension-
filled story about the artistic process. It’s also extremely entertaining – not
only in Coker’s descriptions of the characters involved, but in the implicit
suggestion that in the entertainment industry, it’s hard to follow Christian
principles.
Second Place: Alfred Lee, Los Angeles City Beat, “Something 2 Dance 2,”
C9 SPORTS
Bob Keisser, Long Beach Press-Telegram, “A Century of Dominance,”
Comments: After a fun trick lead, this is a well-meaning story about a
team that clearly deserves some attention.
Second Place: David Nusbaum, Los Angeles Business Journal, “In the
Swim?”
C10 HEADLINE WRITING
Jon Regardie, Los Angeles Downtown News
Comments: In a field of strong contenders, Los Angeles Downtown News
rises to the top with witty headlines that don’t rely too much on puns or
teenage double-entendres, nor do they oversell the stories. Fun yet classy;
not too aggressive.
Second Place: Steve Silkin, Los Angeles Business Journal
Honorable Mention: Kevin Uhrich, Pasadena Weekly
C11 DESIGN
Kelly Lewis, OC Weekly, “Best of OC”
Comments: Blurb-heavy packages are always a design challenge, but a fun,
bright, celebratory cover, with clean and consistent internal design, makes
for a winning combination. Extra points for making spot illustrations so
distinct from ads.
Second Place: Daniel Kacyinski , The Jewish Journal of Greater Los
Angeles, “Is our fate really sealed?”
Honorable Mention: Brian Allison, “Don’t Miss Summer,” Los Angeles
11. Downtown News
D ART/PHOTOGRAPHY
D1 PHOTO OF THE YEAR
Barbara Davidson, Los Angeles Times, “School Tragedy”
Comments: This is a haunting powerful photo from coverage of the
earthquake in China. It is a striking image that was also part of a photo
essay that was not edited tightly enough. .
Second place: John McCoy, Los Angeles Daily News, “Aerial photo – fires”
Honorable Mention: Carolyn Cole, Los Angeles Times, “ Kenya protest
deaths”
D2 PHOTO ESSAY
Michael Robinson Chavez, Los Angeles Times, “Divided by death”
Comments: This is a moving, well-edited story. It brings a terrible human
dimension to a story that is often over-simplified and trivialized in rhetoric.
Second place: Michael Robinson Chavez, Los Angeles Times, “Osettia”
Honorable Mention: Staff, Los Angeles Times, “Orange County Fires”
D3 EDITORIAL CARTOONING
Doug Davis, Los Angeles Downtown News, “Urban Scrawl”
Comments: Though Zell is an easy target, Doug Davis finds entertaining
ways to keep the pressure on.
E TELEVISION
E1 BREAKING NEWS
Bret Marcus, Justin Schmidt, Linda Burns, Val Zavala, et al, SoCal
12. Connected, KCET, “After the Burn”
E2 FEATURE
Bret Marcus, SoCal Connected, KCET “Foreclosure Alley”
Comments: Very creative and intriguing way to look at the foreclosure
crisis that builds a strong connection with the viewer.
2nd place: Bret Marcus, SoCal Connected, KCET, “Gold Diggers”
Honorable Mention: Chris Blatchford, KTTV, “No Guns Fraud”
E3 INVESTIGATIVE/SERIES
Fred Mamoun and Ana Garcia. KNBC News, “Fighting For A Claim”
Comments: A story with wide-ranging impact. Very thorough reporting.
Extensive interviews, well-sourced with powerful evidence. The interviews
were compelling, the writing was crisp and clear. Great story that makes
you think twice about whether you can really trust your insurance
company.
2nd place: Bret Marcus, KCET, “Billboard Confidential”
Honorable Mention: Eric Longabardi, Vic Walter and Brian Ross. ABC
News. “9-11 Redux Flight Schools”
E5 DOCUMENTARY
Bret Marcus, KCET, “Inside Locke High”
Comments: We all have heard about the problems facing children in
disadvantaged neighborhoods. This story took us inside and introduced us
to the faces of innocent children struggling to survive in the community
crumbling around them. It was inspirational watching the teachers and
mentors who are trying to make a difference and the children who are
making great strides despite the adversity. Every civic leader who makes
funding decisions regarding education should be forced to watch this must
see story. Best thing we’ve seen in years.
13. 2nd place: Kimber Liponi, KNBC, “A Child On Schindler’s List”
F RADIO
F1 BREAKING NEWS
Shirley Jahad, Frank Stoltze, Kitty Felde, KPCC 89.3, “Metrolink Crash”
Comments: Very good breaking news coverage of a tragic event. Anchor
and reporters are calm and paint a vivid picture of the crash scene. Good
information.
F2 FEATURE
Patricia Nazario, KPCC 89.3, “Her Three Sons”
Comments: Reporter had great access to the subjects of her stories. Very
good use of sound bites and NATS. Fast-paced and interesting. Judges felt
a connection to the family through the story.
2nd
Place: Frank Stoltze, KPCC 89.3, “Prison Desegregation”
Honorable Mention: Queena Kim, KPCC 89.3, “California Dreaming”
RADIO INVESTIGATIVE/SERIES
Molly Peterson, Frank Stoltze, Patricia Nazario, Queena Kim,
Adolfo Guzman-Lopez, KPCC 89.3, “Ashes of Oakridge”
Comment: Series captured the plight of people who lost everything. In-
depth coverage was compelling to listen to. Great series.
2nd
Place: Susan Valot, Frank Stoltze, Patricia Nazario, KPCC 89.3, “Mental
Health”
Honorable Mention: Cason Smith, KSAK 90.1, “A Voice in Your Life”
F4 RADIO ARTS/ENTERTAINMENT REVIEWS/CRITICISM
14. Rob Long, KCRW, “Martini Shot” WHERE IS JUDGE COMMENT?
2nd
Place: James Taylor, KCRW, “Theatre Talk”
F5 RADIO ENTERTAINMENT FEATURE
Kim Masters, KCRW, “Hollywood Magic”
Comments: Good job of taking a current event and making it an
interesting “how do they do that?” piece. Great comparison tape and very
good use of sound. Very interesting story.
2nd
Place: Soo Ah Youn, Matt Holzman, KCRW, “She-pap”
Honorable Mention: Gail Eichenthal, Chris Stanley, KUSC, “The
Mysterious Man-on-Wire”
F6 RADIO SPORTS
Susan Valot, KPCC 89. 3, “Olympic Badminton”
F7 RADIO PUBLIC AFFAIRS
John Rabe, Queena Kim, Frank Stolze, Marc Haefele, Kitty Felde,
Adolfo Guzman-Lopez, Rico Gagliano, KPCC 89.3, “Tom Bradley”
Comments: Interesting look back into a part of LA history. The producers
put a lot of work into finding old sound from Bradley’s tenure. The sound
took the judges back in time and made the segment come alive.
2nd
Place: Air Talk, KPCC 89.3, “Prop 8-Jerrry Brown”
Honorable Mention: Patt Morrison, KPCC 89.3, “RFK Tragedy Frozen in
Time”
F8 RADIO DOCUMENTARY
Cason Smith, KSAK 90.1, “A Voice in Your Life”
Comments: Fascinating look behind the curtain of movies and TV voice-
over work, with affectionate and loving memories of the best VO actor
who ever lived. Fast-paced and well-produced.
15. 2nd
Place: Lincoln Myerson, Ariana Morgenstern, Sarah Spitz, JC Swiatek,
KCRW, “McCabe’s at 50”
Honorable Mention: Jon Kalish, Sarah Spitz, KCRW, “Barrack 18”
MAGAZINES
G1 MAGAZINE NEWS/INVESTIGATIVE
David Evans, Bloomberg News, “Way Ahead of the Curve”
Comments: It is rare to find business reporting so clear and
understandable on the topic of credit derivative swaps. Evans makes a
complex system understandable and human. The fact that he did so early
in the credit crisis makes his work seem downright prophetic. Excellent
journalism on a consistently high level.
2nd
Place: Joe Domanik, Playboy, Saving Los Angeles
Honorable Mention: Radley Balko, Reason Online, “Guilty Before Proven
Innocent”
G2 MAGAZINE FEATURE/COMMENTARY
Seth Lubove, Bloomberg News, “Aegon Calling”
Comments: A compelling, well-researched and well-written article on a
little-known side of the financial industry.
2nd place: Lorenzo Benet, People, “Family Matters”
Honorable Mention: Richard Siklos, Fortune, “The Man Who Would be
Robbins, Covey and Chopra”
G3 MAGAZINE ENTERTAINMENT REVIEW/CRITICISM/COLUMN
Tim Cavanaugh, Reason, “When Free Love Died: Why the Sexual
Revolution Plays Only in Reruns”
Comments: A great job of deconstructing some myths of popular culture,
and a raw look at sexual mores.
G4 MAGAZINE ENTERTAINMENT NEWS/FEATURE
16. Richard Siklos, Fortune, “The Player”
Comments: Great insight into the rapidly changing world of providing (and
measuring) television entertainment, as well as a fine personality piece on
Ben Silverman. Siklos does a solid job of sorting out a complicated world.
2nd
Place: Alexis Chiu, People, “Shania Twain”
Honorable Mention:, Cynthia Wang, People, ”Miichael Phelps”
G5 IN-HOUSE OR CORPORATE PUBLICATION
Jim Perry, Los Angeles Firefighter, “United Firefighters of Los Angeles
City Local 112”
Comments: It’s not slick or flashy, but this is a classic union publication
that works hard to keep its members informed.
2nd Place: Monday Memo, Internet Law Center, Bennet Kelley.
G6 MAGAZINE DESIGN
Terry Colon, Reason, “What Part of Legal Immigration Don’t You
Understand? A guide to America’s labyrinthine immigration bureaucracy”
Comments: The cartoon says it clearly: Welcome, but leave -– even
though you have respectable jobs in nursing and carpentry.
H. NEWS BUREAUS AND CORRESPONDENTS
H1. BREAKING NEWS
Cathy Franklin, City News Service, “Molest Videotape”
Comments: Solid reporting.
H2 INVESTIGATIVE/SERIES Eric Longabardi, Vic Walter, Brian
Ross, ABC News/TeleMedia News, “9-11 Redux: Thousands of Aliens in
US Flight Schools Illegally” Comments: A thoroughly-researched and well-
written story of national and international importance. A sobering account
of what still has not been accomplished in a post 9-11 world that rightfully
put pressure on officials to explain themselves and account for their
failings. Investigative journalism at its finest. 2nd Place: Gary Cohn and
Darrell Preston, Bloomberg News, “AARP’s Stealth Fees Often Sting Seniors
17. with Costlier Insurance” HM: Seth Lubove, Bloomberg News, “Business Jet
Crashes Expose Rule-Breaking Brokers”
H3 Entertainment News/Feature Richard Siklos, Fortune, “The
Player” Comments: An extremely well-written, detailed and throughout
account of a major and unique player in the TV industry. Great reporting
that shows impressive insight into the industry. It gives a very balanced
presentation of a complex and distinct personality. 2nd place: Champ
Clark, Ken Lee, Frank Swertlow, K.C. Baker and Alex Tresniowski People
Magazine, “The O’Neal Family Hollywood Tragedy” HM: George
Pennacchio, KABC-TV, “The Reality of Covering Hollywood”
I ONLINE
I1 ONLINE NEWS STORY, FEATURE, SERIES OR PACKAGE
Scott Ritter, Truthdig, “Dinner With Ahmed”
Comments: The author transported us back to the fateful meetings he had
and made it clear the circumstances under which events were transpiring.
Vivid details bring the experience to life. An important, well-told story that
lets us know that more chapters may yet be written.
2nd Place: Wellford Wims, Truthdig, “Liberating the Schoolhouse
Honorable Mention: David Weigel and Julian Sanchez, Reason, “Who
Wrote Ron Paul’s Newsletters?”
I2 MULTIMEDIA PACKAGE
Robert Meeks, Joseph Dickson, Chris Berry, Paul Penzella,
Presstelegram.com, “Examination of the Juvenile Justice System”
Comments: The blending of the media elevates the traditional in-depth
newspaper series approach to a new level with the implementation of
audio and video. In one sitting the audience can get the equivalent of a
days-long newspaper series with the augmentation of audio and video.
Very good example of using the multimedia technique to enhance, rather
than replace, a traditional journalistic approach to an important topic that
demanded in-depth analysis.
2nd Place: Jon Gerung, Los Angeles Daily News, “2008 Holiday Film
Preview”
18. Honorable Mention: Jon Gerung, Los Angeles Daily News, “The Dark
Knight Returns”
I3 ONLINE COLUMN/COMMENTARY/CRITICISM
Chris Hedges, Truthdig, “Party to Murder”
Comments: Boldly presents the sad dilemma for the communities,
profound commentary, presents a different perspective on this ongoing
battle
2nd
Place: Bill Boyarsky, Truthdig, “The End of an Institution”
Honorable Mention: Rip Rense, The Rip Post, “Making Funny”
I4 BLOGGING
Ted Johnson, Variety/Wilshire & Washington, “September 5th
– Arrested
Development and The Night at St. Paul”
Comments: compelling story and great descriptions, affected many
members of the media, a great read.
2nd
Place: Pat Saperstein, Eating L.A., “Denise Hamilton Embraces
Vanishing Hollywood in ‘The Last Embrace’”
Honorable Mention: Bennet Kelley, The Huffington Post, “Candy
Bombers, Obama and the End of Wal-Mart Nation”
J INTERNATIONAL JOURNALISM
J1 HARD NEWS
Tom Walters and Adam Blair, CTV News, “Sylmar Fire”
Comments: In a segment that included striking visuals of fire-ravaged
communities, the reporting team explained why the blaze spread rapidly
and how homeowners reacted – using quotes and images to show the
physical and emotional devastation.
J2 NEWS FEATURE
Rajesh Mirchandani, Regan Morris and Nick Atkins, BBC, “Vallejo
Bankruptcy”
19. Comments: The report humanizes the bankruptcy of the city of Vallejo,
skillfully mingling the voices of concerned citizens with the verbal battle
involving public employee unions and city managers seeking to cut
municipal labor costs. The feature includes background on the factors
involved in the city’s economic decline and explores the possible impact on
fire and emergency services.
2nd
Place: David Willis, Regan Morris and Mark Walker, BBC, “Nevada
Election”
Honorable Mention: Tom Tugend, Jerusalem Post, “Cooper profile”
J3 ENTERTAINMENT NEWS/FEATURE
Tom Tugend, Jerusalem Post, “Like Father, Like Son”
Comments: Tugend captures the wit of Carl and Rob Reiner in an article
based on an interview with the entertainers. He explores their personal
relationship, their careers, identity and politics in a report that makes great
use of snappy quotes
2nd
Place: Tom Walters and Adam Blair, CTV News, “Lucha Va Voom”
Honorable Mention: Tom Walters and Adam Blair, CTV News, “Heston
Orbit”
J4 COLUMNIST/CRITIC
Izumi Hasegawa, TV Station Marugoto Zenbu Kaigai Drama, “Battlestar
Galactica: A Journey of Fate”
Comments: The writer displayed keen knowledge of the original Battlestar
Galactica and ably compared and contrasted it with the recent series. The
reviewer provides background on the story line of the new series and ably
explains how and why the character-driven nature of this program made it
successful.
2nd
Place: Tom Walters and Adam Blair, CTV News, “The Other Wall
Street”
K2. Best STUDENT News Story College
Theresa Adams handled this shocking Wilshire district murder, allegedly
committed by a college professor. With great aplomb. Her stories were rich
20. with multiple sources, solid information, and great enterprise. Her writing
about the murdered wife was particularly insightful.
2nd
Place: Virginia Bulacio, Jamie Hong, Victoria Safarian and Jessica
Russell of LA City Collage, Newspapers Tell Tale of Three Cities
HM: Theresa Adams, LA City Collage, Nurse Betsy