Credits: Photo: Maria Thi Mai and Toshio Suzuki Caption: Clockwise, from top left: Ed Jahn, Aaron Scott, David Steves, Laura Gibson, Robbie Carver, Peter Frick-Wright Credits: Photos courtesy of Aaron Scott, Oregon Public Broadcasting.
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The Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT has named Oregon Public Broadcasting’s “Timber Wars” podcast as 2021 winner of the prestigious Victor K. McElheny Award for local and regional science journalism. The seven-part series tells the story of how a group of activists and scientists turned a fight over logging and animal protection into one of the biggest environmental conflicts of the 20th century a conflict that still resonates in culture wars today. The podcast is the first work of audio journalism to win the McElheny Award in the competition’s three-year history.
News Leaders Association Announces 2021 NLA Awards Winners prnewswire.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from prnewswire.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Facebook Journalism Project.
The session headed by Zielina focused on how to train staff to deal with the digital transformation and how to attract and retain talents. âWe are in a competition with other industries that may have done a better job of being attractive to their employees, creating spaces for them to develop and grow,â Zielina guaranteed, and added: âThe talent war is happening now.â
Anita Zielina, who has headed several newsrooms and provided consultancy to others, admits that
young people do not generally feel attracted to the traditional media. âYoung digital talents in their twenties and thirties want different things for their lives and their jobs. The traditional media do not coincide with what they believe a job should be. And that’s an issue, because they’re going to choose someplace else to work,â explained the journalist and consultant.
Tow Journalism Fellow, FRONTLINE/Newmark Journalism School Fellowship
Before joining FRONTLINE in 2021 as a Tow Journalism Fellow, Paula Moura previously worked as a producer for
The New York Times on the investigative video The Amazon is Still Burning. Blame Beef, which received a 2020 Award of Excellence from Pictures of the Year (POYi). She has collaborated with the
Times since 2015, as well as with ProPublica and
Foreign Policy, and she has covered the Brazilian Amazon region extensively. Moura has also worked as a journalist in Japan and has reported for outlets including
The Washington Post, NPR, WNYC,
Latino USA, Nashville Public Radio,