May 24th, 2013

By Professor Janet Steele

This was one of the most interesting and inspiring speaker trips that I have ever experienced.

Steele in Cambodia

I first visited Phnom Penh, Cambodia for three days in October 2012, when I was evaluating the radio program "Asia Calling" for a USAID grant. Although I was only in Cambodia for a short time, it was long enough to make me want to come back. Not only was I captivated by the spirit of the journalists whom I met at the Cambodian Center for Independent Media (CCIM), but after visiting S21 and the Choeung Ek Killing Fields, I also wanted to learn more about Cambodia. I wanted to try to understand how the Cambodian people had survived such terrible times, and where they had found the strength to get on with their lives with such remarkable resiliency.

During that first very short visit, I was also struck by the similarities between journalism in Cambodia and what I had observed in other countries making the transition to democracy, especially Indonesia, Malaysia and East Timor. As an American lecturer with considerable experience in teaching about journalism theory and practice in Southeast Asia, I thought that perhaps I could make a small contribution.

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May 16th, 2013

The School of Media and Public Affairs is excited about the addition of three new faculty members who will significantly expand the school’s expertise and scholarship in key media and public affairs disciplines, such as investigative journalism, multimedia reporting, and political communication.

Cheryl W. Thompson joins us from The Washington Post, where she has distinguished herself as an award-winning investigative journalist covering politics, crime and corruption. Her fearless reporting led to the prosecution and imprisonment of former Prince George's County (MD) executive Jack Johnson. Thompson has more than 25 years of newspaper reporting experience, including at The Gainesville Sun in Florida, the Los Angeles Daily News, the Chicago Tribune and The Kansas City Star. She arrived at The Washington Post in 1997, where she was a Metro Reporter and National Reporter before moving to the Investigative Unit. She also served as a White House Correspondent during a part of President Obama’s first term.

“Investigative skills will always be in demand,” Thompson said. “I can’t wait to share what I’ve learned over the years with my students.”

Cheryl W. Thompson

Thompson, who will continue to do investigative projects for The Washington Post, is a graduate of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where she holds a bachelor’s degree in speech communication and a master’s in journalism. She also has a certificate in Investigative Reporting from the Poynter Institute for Media Studies in St. Petersburg, Fla. Thompson has been an adjunct lecturer at Georgetown and Howard universities, and the University of Alaska-Fairbanks. In 2002, Thompson was part of a team of Washington Post reporters awarded the Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting. She also is the recipient of two Salute to Excellence awards from the National Association of Black Journalists and a 2011 Emmy Award from the National Capital Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.

Imani M. Cheers is a former PBS NewsHour executive, where she managed a team of reporters, created a media literacy curriculum and directed a participatory multimedia journalism program for elementary, secondary and post-secondary students. She has 14 years of multimedia work under her belt, having produced music videos, commercials, documentary shorts and educational videos for a variety of purposes. Cheers started her career as a director and producer for Washington University in St. Louis television and has written for Newsweek and USA Today. She has also served as a producer and writer for Howard University Television. Cheers holds an undergraduate degree in Photography from Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri, as well as graduate degrees in African Studies and Research and in Mass Communications and Media Studies from Howard University. She also has a certificate in Women’s Studies from Howard University.

Imani M. Cheers

“I am thrilled to be working with a dynamic and eclectic group of experts and professionals at the School of Media and Public Affairs,” said Cheers. “I especially look forward to my interactions with very bright, talented students, honing their multimedia skills in an ever-changing media environment.”

Emily Thorson was most recently at the University of Pennsylvania, where she received her PhD in both Communication and Political Science. Her research explores how voters draw on information to form opinions about politics, and what the media can do to ensure that citizens are fully informed. Thorson’s current research focuses on how misinformation can affect attitudes even after it is successfully corrected by creating "belief echoes." She also holds an undergraduate degree in Political Science from Williams College in Williamstown, Massachusetts.

Emily Thorson


“GW’s School of Media and Public Affairs is one of the best political communication programs in the country,” said Thorson. “Their efforts to bring together theory and practice are unparalleled, and I’m excited to be teaching just steps away from the White House, the State Department, and other powerful political institutions.”

All three new faculty members begin teaching at SMPA this fall.


April 26th, 2013

Last night Professor Jason Osder's documentary, "Let the Fire Burn," won big at the Tribeca Film Festival, taking home the award for Best Editing in a Documentary Feature, as well as a special jury mention for Best New Documentary Director.

Let the Fire Burn

The jury said about the film: "'Let the Fire Burn' tells a story we were stunned to realize we didn't know. It offers a time capsule, taking us to a horrific moment in our nation's history with a masterfully structured edit that vividly mines a trove of blistering period archive images without voiceover narration. The film ensures that a criminal and senseless destruction that cost eleven deaths—five children, six adults—shakes us to our core and is remembered with utter visceral power."

Osder

The documentary explores the events leading up to and during the 1985 standoff between the extremist African-American MOVE organization and Philadelphia authorities. The police dropped two pounds of military explosives onto a city row house occupied by members of MOVE; even though firefighters were on site, the fire was not fought for over an hour. The clash between groups, destruction of 61 homes and deaths of 11 people devastated the community.

Zeba Blay of Indiewire wrote, "There have been many documentaries comprised entirely out of archival footage, but few as powerfully and masterfully structured as this one... a visually textured and fascinating piece of storytelling that steers clear of editorialization and manipulation by allowing the content to speak for itself."


April 11th, 2013

In a Democracy Seminar at Harvard's Kennedy School last week, Professor Dave Karpf highlighted some of the key findings and research on the "MoveOn Effect" in American politics. Highlighting the idea that online politics is neither limited to "clicktivism" nor comprised of "organizing without organizations," Karpf presented evidence the new media environment has given rise to a new generation of political advocacy groups that have redefined membership and fundraising regimes.

For more information, check out Karpf's latest book, The MoveOn Effect: The Unexpected Transformation of American Political Advocacy.


February 27th, 2013

GW's School of Media and Public Affairs in association with
the Center for the Study of the Presidency and Congress (CSPC) presents...

Scandal and Silence
When the Watchdog Doesn't Bark

A Debate and Discussion with
Robert Entman, J.B. and M.C. Shapiro
Professor of Media and Public Affairs

AND

Michael Isikoff, National Investigative Correspondent, NBC News
Egil "Bud" Krogh, Former Nixon Staffer & Senior Fellow, CSPC
Mara Liasson, National Political Correspondent, NPR
Frank Sesno, Director of the School of Media and Public Affairs, moderator

The conventional wisdom holds that media crave and actively pursue scandals whenever they sense corruption, keeping politicians honest, or at least fearful of being exposed. Dr. Entman's book Scandal and Silence argues instead that:

  • Media neglect most corruption, providing too little, not too much scandal coverage.
  • Feeding frenzies are the exception, not the rule.
  • It's not the media but governments and political parties that drive the scandal process and any excesses that occur.
  • Cover-ups and lying often work, and truth remains essentially unrecorded, unremembered.

Tuesday, March 5, 2013
7:00 PM
Jack Morton Auditorium
The George Washington University
801 21st Street NW
Washington, DC 20052

RSVP here.

A book signing follows the event.
#ScandalandSilence


January 7th, 2013

The School of Media and Public Affairs is in search of a leading journalist and educator to advance the school’s commitment to preparing students for our diverse, multi-platform media environment. This is a full-time, non-tenure-accruing, fixed-term, renewable faculty position offered at the rank of assistant or associate professor. The rank is commensurate with the candidate’s experience and body of work. We especially encourage applications from those who possess experience with data driven reporting, or engagement with social media and other interactive tools.

Responsibilities include teaching multi-media and other journalism courses at the undergraduate level; continuing research or creative activity; advising students; and performing department and university service.

The review of applications will begin on February 8, 2013 and will continue until the position is filled.

If interested in exploring this opportunity further, or to apply, click here.


December 27th, 2012

To close out 2012, The Nieman Journalism Lab at Harvard asked some leading media and journalism professionals their predictions for the coming year. Assistant Professor Nikki Usher was one of them. Here's what she said...

Next year, I expect to see more people taking a hard look at whether — and when — paywalls really work. We have seen evidence that they generate revenue (but not nearly enough) at the biggest sites, but I am not sure what the takeaway is for the local level. The harsh reality that hackfests, news startups without business models, and open source and hacker journalism will not provide any financial opportunity may be more clear, even if all this work leads to more reinvention in journalism.

The long slow bleed of money, advertising, and resources from newspapers will continue, and we will see (in less obvious ways) similar patterns emerge for network news. People are excited about partisan and hyper-involved cable news viewers as revenue streams (and niche viewers), but we need to remember just how small, ultimately, these audiences are in the grand scheme. (Fox News averages about 2 million viewers in prime time versus about 20 million or so for the networks.)

Assistant Professor Nikki Usher


To me, the question about partisanship is deeply concerning as these folks (on both sides) are information-seekers, while the majority of people tend to become most involved when an issue presents itself as relevant to their daily life (think the Connecticut school shooting and gun law debates). These information-seeking behaviors are deeply concerning — especially when we think about a decrease in the availability of quality local news. (If, of course, that news indeed was quality to begin with — a presumption we must question.)

It seems to me that David Carr is always right on, and his most recent column suggests a pattern that we will be increasingly cognizant of: that niche is useful — if not hamstery, and can succeed if it isn’t — because it’s niche. But online advertising is still fleeting, and no amount of social metrics canoodling, in my view, is likely to change that — even for Facebook. I would be delighted to be wrong about this.


November 30th, 2012

During a panel discussion on "Technology on Election Day: From Systematic Observation to Citizen Reporting," Professor Catie Bailard presented some of the work she has done with Professor Steven Livingston on event mapping through the Ushahidi platform. She also explained the impacts and data analysis of recent election awareness efforts in Nigeria.


November 20th, 2012

In an effort to provide journalists with the best practices to avoid perpetuating racial stereotypes of African-Americans, the Foundation to Promote Open Society and the Open Society Institute's Campaign for Black Male Achievement awarded a $50,000 grant to SMPA professors Robert Entman and Kimberly Gross along with Andrew Rojecki and Carole Bell.

The grant will fund research and a major public event next year that examines racial appeals and the role of race in the 2012 presidential election with a particular focus on how the news media covered race.

"My colleagues and I are exploring the subtle appeals to some voters' prejudices that have replaced crude, obviously racist messages in politicians' toolkits. Through experiments and close analysis of media images, we'll figure out how to sensitize journalists and citizens to coded racial communications--which we hope will discourage politicians from using such tactics," said Entman.

More details on the research and event are forthcoming.


November 19th, 2012

Professor Steven Livingston gave a lecture today at Addis Ababa University on technology and the Arab Spring.

He spoke about a chapter on which he and Professor Dave Karpf have collaborated for inclusion in a book on the Arab Spring. The students were assigned a draft copy of the chapter for their reading this week.

The professor of the class, Lucas Robinson, is a 2003 SMPA master's program graduate and is completing his PhD at the University of London's School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS). His spouse is a British diplomat in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.