April 30th, 2012

Mark your calendars!  All seniors and Master's candidates who are eligible to graduate in May are invited to attend one of SMPA's most popular events of the year: the SMPA Graduation Breakfast and Recognition Ceremony on Saturday, May 19th, 2012!

1) Tickets are not required for the buffet breakfast, which will be available from 9:00-11:00am.  However, students must RSVP the total number of attendees from their family to  smpa@gwu.edu by Wednesday, May 9 so we don't run out of food.

2) Because this annual SMPA tradition is so popular, we will be hosting two graduate recognition ceremonies that morning in our Jack Morton Auditorium.  The schedule will be as follows:

9:00-9:30am: Journalism and Mass Communication majors
10:30-11:00am: Political Communication majors and Master's candidates

Due to the size of the auditorium, each student is guaranteed only four tickets (one student ticket, plus tickets for up to three guests) to their recognition ceremony.  These tickets must be picked up from the front desk at MPA 400 before 5pm on Wednesday, May 9.  We will follow up with those who already have RSVP'd to confirm ticket information.

Should you require extra tickets for the auditorium, or have any questions about this event, please notify Samara Sit at samara@gwu.edu; she will contact you if and when more tickets become available.  Those guests without tickets to the recognition ceremony will be able to watch a live video feed on the lower level of the MPA building. 
 
These recognition ceremonies are SMPA's opportunity for faculty to say farewell and to recognize award winners and special honors students.   We look forward to celebrating your accomplishments.

If you need more information about the CCAS ceremony later that day, click here.


April 26th, 2012

(From left) Mayor Mark Mallory, GW Professor Melissa Keeley, Mayor Tommy Battle, SMPA Director Frank Sesno, Mayor Vincent Gray, and GW President Steven Knapp discuss sustainable cities at "GW Moving the Planet Forward."

Last Tuesday, SMPA’s Planet Forward co-hosted “GW Moving the Planet Forward," an innovation summit that sought to address issues surrounding sustainability by bringing together decision leaders in the areas of government, industry, and academia.

Summit host Frank Sesno, the creator of Planet Forward and Director of the School of Media and Public Affairs, explained that the summit was organized not only to address "a crisis of the planet," but to embrace a great opportunity for the university to become "a catalyst for innovation, for solutions, how can we share, foster, communicate the ideas needed to move the planet forward."

Panelists throughout the day weighed in on topics from the creation of green jobs to the use of renewable energy. Among the number of prominent panelists featured were former U.S. Chief Technology Officer Aneesh Chopra and Vice President of GE ecomagination Mark Vachon.

In the first panel, "There's An App for That - Can I.T. Save the Planet?" moderator Megan Hughes of Bloomberg TV led a discussion between Chopra, Mayo Shattuck, Executive Chairman of Exelon Corporation, and Alex Laskey, the co-founder and president of Opower, a new engagement platform for utilities companies that sends customers information about their energy spending habits through text message, e-mail, snail mail, and even Facebook.  Laskey compared a part of Opower's services to that of a credit card company feature that is undoubtedly useful to its customers: activity alerts. Opower also uses behavioral analytics and data to inform customers of unusual usage, enabling them to use that awareness to save money on their utility statements and in turn help them to conserve energy.  Chopra asserted that information technology will be the key to an energy efficient future, explaining that the intersection of liberated data and financial innovation will be a "big boon to sustainability." Read the rest of this entry »


April 25th, 2012

Watch below as SMPA Professor Silvio Waisbord discusses The Handbook of Global Health Communication, which he co-edited with Rafael Obregon of UNICEF. The book offers a comprehensive and up-to-date analysis of the role of communication processes in global public health, development, and social change.

For more information about The Handbook of Global Health Communication, visit http://bit.ly/handbookglobalhealth.


April 23rd, 2012

SMPA's Planet Forward seeks candidates for the position of Outreach Coordinator.

The Outreach Coordinator is in charge of managing relationships with external partners and organizations. This includes finding ideas, recruiting participants, instructing them on how to create videos or participate with us, and helping to plan competitions that will encourage them to work with us.

Candidates should have a strong background in energy and environmental issues, and feel comfortable talking to entrepreneurs, research teams, professors, business leaders, and students about their ideas.

In addition, the Outreach Coordinator also will be tasked, on occasion, with coordinating the marketing materials for the organization. This includes marketing packets, palm card, fliers, one-page documents, binders, and anything else that is needed for a variety of situations. Much of this material already exists, but needs to be constantly updated to reflect the organization's progress. Some Photoshop experience is required.

Desired Qualifications:
-Experience in marketing and outreach to a college audience, especially students, both through digital and in-person tools.
-Experience engaging faculty in promoting their work preferred.
-Production experience with HD cameras, Final Cut Pro preferred.
-Experience working with high-profile talent and guests preferred.
-Experience working in an environment with regular deadline pressure. Ability to work in such an environment with limited supervision.
-Bachelor’s degree from accredited university.

Job Description:
Hours are generally standard working hours, but a flexible schedule occasionally may be required to meet project deadlines or accommodate the schedules of key stakeholders or subjects. Benefits, including tuition reimbursement, included, as this position is a staff position at The George Washington University. The Outreach Coordinator will report to the Executive Producer, Fuzz Hogan.

Working Conditions:
The incumbent performs jobs duties in a normal business office environment. Tasks are often carried out in a sedentary format, but significant parts of this job requires incumbent to work in the field, despite weather conditions, carrying camera and production equipment. The incumbent will be required to attend meetings in other offices and deliver and/or retrieve information from other offices around campus and Washington, DC.

To apply, send your resume, cover letter and links to published videos to Fuzz Hogan at fuzz@planetforward.org.


April 22nd, 2012

Only 15 tickets are available to attend a taped session of a special ABC News broadcast - first come, first served. April 29th, 3:30pm, at the Newseum. Read below for more info. Interested? Email your name, major to Michelle Sherrard at mcs1@gwu.edu. Deadline is 5pm EST tomorrow, 4/23.

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Interested in coming to be a part of an audience for a special ABC News broadcast on "This Week with George Stephanopoulos?" "The Great American Debates: The U.S. Economy...is it Built to Last?" is the second in a six-part special series on politics in America, and is being produced in partnership with the Miller Center at the University of Virginia. The broadcast will air on Sunday, April 29, 2012, but will be pre-taped at 3:30p from the Newseum in Washington D.C. This time around, there is no audience participation, but the discussion should prove to be interesting and exciting - especially for students who are interested in politics.

Panelists include: columnist George Will; Paul Krugman, American Economist and Professor; Carly Fiorina, Former Hewlett-Packard C.E.O.; Jennifer Granholm, Former Governor of Michigan; and Eric Schmidt, Executive Chairman, Google.

The debate will be on subjects relating to our economy - from our schools and health-care system, to the state of our markets and businesses. The audience is small, and everyone will need an electronic ticket to get in the door.


April 20th, 2012

Beth Murphy, a 1992 alumna of The Documentary Center, will be premiering her latest documentary at the prestigious Tribeca Film Festival this weekend.

Her film, The List, details the struggles of Kirk Johnson to help former Iraqi co-workers escape their war-torn country.  Johnson worked for the United States Agency for International Development rebuilding Iraqi infrastructures destroyed in the war. However, upon his return home from the Middle East, he received word of former Iraqi co-workers being targeted as “traitors” to their country for having worked with Americans.  Johnson immediately began compiling a list of threatened Iraqis and attempting to secure their safe passage out of Iraq.  The List follows his efforts over the course of four years, highlighting the stories of Iraqis he has helped.

How did Murphy choose this subject to be the focus of her next documentary project?  She serves on the board of the International Institute of New England, an organization that helps settle refugees in the Boston area.  In early 2007, the organization was told to prepare for a large influx of Iraqi refugees, especially those who had worked directly for the United States government who were being kidnapped and killed by fellow Iraqis.  This expected flood of refugees, however, never arrived.  Murphy called the State Department to find answers, and her investigation led her to Johnson.  Less than a month after meeting him, Murphy began filming. To document the story, Murphy traveled from Iraq to Egypt, Jordan, and Syria, braving war zones and hostile attitudes.

“Wherever he was going with his remarkable one-man fight, I wanted to document it,” Murphy explains.  “To me, Kirk Johnson represents the best of America – who we want to be or imagine ourselves to be when we engage in the world.”

This is not Beth’s first Tribeca experience.  Her first feature, Beyond Belief, premiered at Tribeca in 2007.

“I’m looking forward to having the film’s world premiere in an environment that truly feels like family,” says Murphy.

When asked what advice she could give to aspiring documentary filmmakers, she shared this bit of wisdom: “The most important thing I learned is to just stay true to the story you’re trying to tell," she says. This lesson recently was reiterated by her former teacher, SMPA research professor and director of The Documentary Center, Nina Seavey.

“One of the most profound things I heard during production came from Nina," says Murphy. "Since I studied at The Documentary Center, Nina has been a mentor and friend, and she served as story consultant for The List. I had been editing for weeks to establish the film’s narrative structure, and knew I’d finally had an important breakthrough.  Nina said, 'The story—as it wants to be told—is revealing itself to you.'  And I love what that says about documentary filmmaking and about life itself."

Seavey has enjoyed watching Murphy develop into a skilled filmmaker.

"Becoming a filmmaker is not about even making one film, or many, it is about exploring the world around you in an honest, truthful, and engaging way," says Seavey.  "Over the years, Beth has grown and matured so much in these critical areas as she has been finding her own, unique voice as a filmmaker.  It has been a privilege for me to be part of that discovery."

The List premieres on Saturday, April 21, 2012.  The documentary is one of twelve films competing in the "World Documentary" category. Watch the film's trailer below.


April 19th, 2012

By Matthew Rist
JMC '12

Senior Matt Rist sits at the anchor desk in the NBC4 Washington studios.

Covering everything from murder trials to Mitt Romney to kids dancing on the Mall, there’s never a dull moment at NBC4 in Washington, DC.  I’m happy to share my experience at News 4, which undoubtedly has been the best internship I’ve had in my four years at GW.

Now let’s get one thing straight—I’m what you would call a “veteran intern.”  I got the quintessential Capitol Hill internship under my belt freshman year, writing press releases, performing research, answering phones, and giving the occasional tour.  It taught me a lot about my strengths and weaknesses and how to interact with people.  Then I moved on to NBC’s Meet the Press.  There, I rubbed elbows with movers and shakers, and I learned how to digest dozens of daily news sources into useful information.  It was great to learn how television news operates and see the most talented journalists hard at work.

But this internship is different.  On my first day in the newsroom, I sat in on the morning editorial meeting and pitched my own stories.  In my first week, I accompanied a reporter to a murder sentencing in Maryland, where I saw my first live shot in action and filmed my first "standup" at NBC.  Let’s just say my standup skills have grown exponentially since then and that first attempt is tucked away on an “intern blooper reel.”  Each time interns go out with reporters on a story, we come back to the newsroom and cut our own version of the package for our demo reels—which is "television speak" for the tape of all your work.

In addition to going out with reporters, interns at News 4 get the chance to work on their own stories for the web.  My fellow interns and I have pitched, filmed, and edited a number of stories that have since appeared online at www.nbcwashington.com.  We got up close and personal with a record-setting $20 food truck sandwich, discovered a new exhibit on the Titanic, and, in my favorite video, played PacMan.  These are just a few examples of work I created as part of my News 4 internship.

I am so thankful for all of the wisdom and advice that mentors at the station have given me this past semester.  I have grown as a journalist, and I look forward to starting my career at a local television station following graduation.

Watch Matthew Rist report on the new "American Stories" exhibition at the National Museum of American History:

Smithsonian Stories Exhibit from Matthew Rist on Vimeo


April 19th, 2012

By Sloan Dickey
JMC ‘13

Opposition researcher Shauna Daly of American Bridge 21st Century spoke to Professor Abby Jones’ Research Methods class on Tuesday and explained how research is more than what we do for our classes -- it is a key part of politics.  Daly, who has been in the middle of American politics for ten years, has held many coveted positions, from Research Director at the DNC to Deputy Director of Research for both the John Edwards (2004) and Barack Obama (2008) presidential campaigns.  Now, as the Research Director and Senior Advisor to American Bridge, a liberal Political Action Committee focused on opposition research, Daly uses her skills to investigate Republican candidates’ pasts, including their financial actions, personal conduct, and, yes, even dirt.

Since the beginning of her career as a senate campaign research staffer for Tim Johnson in 2002, Daly has been exposed to the art of finding, uncovering, and exposing the dirty secrets of politicians.   Her signature find was John Edwards' infamous “$400 haircut.”  While reviewing the campaign finances of her former employer in 2007, she came across the price tag of his haircut at a beauty salon in Beverly Hills, California.  It was this find that severely stifled the Edwards campaign and allowed Barack Obama to gain momentum.  Daly uses this same mentality as she continues to research Republican front-runners, predominately Mitt Romney, in the 2012 race.

After reviewing Romney’s tax returns, campaign finance reports, and other political datasheets with our class, Daly emphasized the point that numbers mean so much more to someone who can read them.  She reiterated the notion that politics is a game where a checked box, an out-of-place number, or a missing receipt could lead to a jackpot for an opposition researcher.  The key to success is knowing where and how to look.


April 18th, 2012

This week, the School of Media and Public Affairs honored 31 students with awards and scholarships totaling over $80,000 at the annual SMPA Awards Night.  Please join us in congratulating our winners:

Devika Agarwal
Nefi Alarcon
Meg Arellano
Stacie Ann Buell
Ana Buling
Amanda Castroverde
Jacqui Corba
Reid Davenport
Jon Fenech
Lauren French
Ian Gray
Chanelle Havey
Chance Jackson
Aliya Karim
Lindsay Life
Bridgett Lynn
Hyacinth Mascarenas
Sandi Moynihan
Sara Myers
Keith Osentoski
Chelsea Radler
Noah Resnick
Matt Rist
Shivan Sarna
Audrey Scagnelli
Louis Serino
Sara Snyder
Samantha Stone
Saira Thadani

School of Media and Public Affairs/Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting Fellowship:
Melissa Turley

2011-2012 SMPA Distinguished Scholar:
Andrea Vittorio


April 16th, 2012

FACE THE FACTS USA Student Journalist Position:

The Center for Innovative Media at The George Washington University’s School of Media and Public Affairs seeks 5 to 6 student journalists for a paid 6-8 week summer project.

A team of student journalists will create short-form video profiles that connect national issues to local realities – stories about real people dealing with real government and policy issues. These creative, gritty, sometimes humorous, always memorable real-life videos will be part of FACE THE FACTS USA, a multi-platform civic engagement project dedicated to elevating the tone of national debate by providing a baseline, myth-busting understanding of key facts related to critically important issues.

FACE THE FACTS USA Student Journalists will:
-Work in teams to conceive, plan, produce and edit a short-form piece – or pieces – that illuminate how big national issues are affecting individuals.
-Go beyond the predictable – bringing creativity to presentation of critical issues.
-Deliver finished, ready-to-distribute pieces with guidance and review from the Team Leader and FACE THE FACTS USA editors.

The Student Journalists are required to have:
-Demonstrated skill in producing compelling short-form documentary pieces.
-Experience with Final Cut Pro.
-Familiarity with Sony 2100 and Sony 250 cameras, Panasonic High Definition HVX cameras preferred.
-Strong work ethic and ability to work as part of a team.
-Excellent communication and organizational skills.

Graduate or undergraduate students are welcome to apply.

These paid contract positions are available for the summer of 2012. The successful applicants will work in Washington, DC on The George Washington University campus.

Submit resume and reel to:
Kyle O’Connor
FACE THE FACTS USA Managing Director
cimintl@gwu.edu