January 30th, 2012

Professor Silvio Waisbord has penned a feature article for the most recent issue of Americas Quarterly.  In the article, entitled "Media 1.5," Professor Waisbord explores the assertion that social media will be the next great hope to promote democracy in Latin America.  "[O]bservers hail social media networking tools like Facebook and Twitter as saviors to address entrenched problems for freedom of expression," writes Waisbord.  "But can these new tools really meet all the democratic expectations placed on them?"

To read Professor Waisbord's article (and hear an audio interview with him regarding the future of media in Latin America), visit the Americas Quarterly website.


January 25th, 2012

In a CBS "This Morning" story today about the influence of audience reaction on political events, Professor Mike Shanahan said it's really the audience reaction at home that is most important. Watch his take at 1:08

Mike Shanahan


January 24th, 2012

Students in Professor Nikki Usher's fall 2011 Social Media course were tasked with creating multimedia final projects investigating the link between Web 2.0 and topics of their choosing.  Below are links to a number of these projects, which explore everything from the Occupy Movement to Justin Bieber.


January 24th, 2012

GW Sophomores: If you're interested in communication, journalism, media, digital communication, and public affairs, the School of Media and Public Affairs is for you! To become a major within SMPA, you MUST apply first - our program is selective and we can only accept a certain number of new applicants this year. Our Assistant Director, Professor Mike Shanahan, heads up the application process, so email him with any questions. For more information about the application process and to access the application forms, please click here. All applications are due by 5:00 pm on Friday, February 17, 2012.

Find out more about our two majors


January 19th, 2012

book jacketProfessor Nikki Usher's research takes her deep inside some of the most important newsrooms in American journalism. Her extensive field research inside both the New York Times and NPR has investigated everything from news gathering to business models, and she has now published two summaries about that work.

As a chapter for the new book Histories of Public Service Broadcasters on the Web, Professor Usher and co-author Patricia Riley wrote "NPR Online: Public Service Communication at the Center of National Public Radio." It looks at the evolution of NPR's digital presence from its basic beginnings to its current, more robust form. Her chapter makes an important point: for broadcast and radio, online innovation is more than just the Web, it's about audio, visual, and multimedia, and in the case of NPR, these things often came ahead of a robust news, music and culture text site.

Separately, part of Professor Usher's New York Times research is summarized in the January 2012 edition Journalism Practice as a paper called "Service Journalism As Community Experience." From the paper's introduction: "This paper looks at service journalism and its evolution as a community platform through blog comments and social media through a case study of two sections of The New York Times’ business section: the personal finance section and the personal technology section. The paper proceeds through a discussion of the importance of networked journalism, and relies on in-depth qualitative interviews with the journalists closest to the decisions being made about how service journalism at the Times becomes a participatory experience for readers.

"The article argues that a Web 2.0 world facilitates a community experience that changes the one-to-many relationship that journalists have with their readers; instead, journalists make decisions about coverage and engage in conversations with readers in response to this new relationship with readers."


January 18th, 2012

We regret to inform you that the Frank Sesno Conversation Series event with Wael Ghonim, scheduled for today, January 18, at 7 pm in the Lisner Auditorium, has been canceled.  Mr. Ghonim will not be traveling to the United States at this time.    Please e-mail us if you have questions.

Thank you for your interest.

- The School of Media and Public Affairs &
The Elliott School of International Service


January 17th, 2012

SMPA Adjunct Professor Michael Doyle, a reporter in the Washington, D.C. bureau of McClatchy newspapers,  has been awarded an honorable mention along with his McClatchy colleague Marisa Taylor in the John Jay Criminal Justice Reporting Award competition for their year-long coverage of military justice issues.  The award focused on five stories, part of a series of more than two dozen pieces that exposed mismanagement at the military's chief crime lab, unjust appellate delays, congressional missteps, and politically-driven prosecutions.

The awards will be presented at an annual symposium sponsored by the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York City on February 6, 2012.

To read the series for which Professor Doyle was honored, click here.


January 5th, 2012

By Kara Dunford
PCM ’13

When I first found out I would be interning this fall at NBC News' "Meet the Press," I was thrilled to be a part of the history-making show that President Kennedy once called our nation’s “51st state.”

As an intern, my role included doing a little bit of everything, including researching guests, finding tape for the show’s elements, and waking up bright and early on Sunday. Arriving at the bureau by 5 a.m. on Sunday mornings was well worth it, however.

Kara Dunford

Junior Kara Dunford worked with MTP anchor David Gregory in her recent internship at NBC News.

I saw firsthand how the different pieces of the show came together for the broadcast from the perspective of the show’s producers in the control room and the edit bay. In addition, I had the privilege of meeting a number of the show’s guests, the people who are driving the conversation in Washington and beyond. My favorite guest to meet was Ted Koppel, who appeared on the show’s roundtable the day before his debut on NBC’s "Rock Center".

One of the most memorable shows for me was the special commemorating the tenth anniversary of the September 11th terrorist attacks. It was an emotional show for many. In the week leading up to the show, I watched quite a bit of tape from that day, reliving the moments when the World Trade Center attacks interrupted the Today Show broadcast, serving as a reminder of the powerful presence television news had in the lives of Americans that day. Watching the flag being unfurled at the Pentagon and the ceremony at Ground Zero from the control room was a moving experience.

My internship at Meet the Press provided me with some incredible insights into television news. Now when I hear the familiar theme music or the phrase “If it’s Sunday...” I have a greater appreciation for the dedication and effort on the part of the staff it takes to bring the show to its viewers each week.


January 4th, 2012

By Eugenia Finizio
JMC '13

As an aspiring journalist, there are many sounds you learn to love.  A few of my favorites are the smack of an early morning newspaper hitting the driveway, the click of keys on a laptop, the opening theme song to your favorite newscast, and the snap of a camera.

The sound of my alarm clock blaring incessantly at 3:30 AM is most definitely not one of these sounds.  Waking up on a Sunday morning when most college students are still awake from the Saturday night before never feels natural.  It gives you that dizzy feeling, an eternal pit in the bottom of your stomach. You can feel your body telling you that it doesn’t want to be up yet.

When I received an internship at NBC’s “Meet the Press” for the 2011 fall semester, I knew that my Sunday mornings would start early.  What I didn’t know is how much I would learn in those early morning hours.

Eugenia

Junior intern Eugenia Finizio stands in front of signage from the program's first studio set.

From my first Sunday, which taught me that nothing stops the news, not even Hurricane Irene, to my last Sunday, where I met the journalism legend Tom Brokaw, I never stopped experiencing new things at “Meet the Press”.  I watched a four hour 9/11 special come together in three days, I learned how to find four seconds of tape in a library filled with hundreds of thousands of tapes, and I figured out what it means to constantly know what is going on in the world.  I met interesting and famous people every week, everyone from politicians like Michelle Bachman, Jon Huntsman, John Kerry, and Bill Clinton to news greats like Ted Koppel, to interesting characters like Ken Burns and Anna Valentino. A classroom can teach you almost everything you need to know, but being thrown into the real world of news is an unmatched learning opportunity.

Interning at “Meet the Press” opened my eyes to a part of television news that I had never fully understood.  It’s the longest running series in American television, and to witness the weekly process of the show first hand taught me more about journalism than any book or paper ever could.

I discovered that although people increasingly want their news quick and condensed, there are still millions of people who tune in every Sunday to watch David Gregory ask questions to the leaders of our country.  I figured out that although the 24-hour news cycle is great, there is a difference between reading something on Twitter and hearing someone say it in a live interview.

Not many students have the chance to spend every Sunday of a fall semester in the presence of such powerful guests and respected journalists, and for that opportunity I am grateful.  I came to learn that the sickly feeling that comes along with a sleepless night is also a feeling of success.  Waking up that early never got any easier, but rather it just became more bearable.  I began to associate the alarm clock with a chance to walk into a building that never ceased to inspire me, and be a part of a show that never stopped teaching me.  About the news business, about the way it runs, about how to make it to the top, and about why it all matters.


January 4th, 2012

There's no rest for SMPA professors during Winter Break when there's an election heating up!

Silvio Waisbord on CNN

Dr. Silvio Waisbord explained the Iowa caucus process on CNN's Spanish network yesterday.

Professor Silvio Waisbord appeared internationally yesterday on CNN en Espanol to explain the "caucus" process (there's no simple word in Spanish to define it), and the relevance of Iowa in the primary process.

He wrote in to summarize the interview (conducted in Spanish):  "I also explained the difference between primary elections in the US and in Latin America, and was asked which one I think is better. I said that there's no democracy in Latin America with a primary process similar to the US, and discussed the problems of long primaries and the limitations of news coverage (partially related to the fact that it's a months-long process)."

Download the interview