Tag Archives: journalism

NAHJ in NYC: Region 2 Conference

 

 

Today is the last day to save $10 on registration for the National Association of Hispanic Journalist’s Region 2 Conference at New York University.

For more information and for a schedule of the two-day event, filled with multimedia training and lectures, visit http://bit.ly/eYKUe3

The event kicks off Friday evening at 5:30 p.m. with a special conversation with Soledad O’Brien. Read more about it here: http://bit.ly/fXKMbO

Registration fees range from $20 for NAHJ student members to $40 for regular members. This includes open bar at Friday night’s reception, and for breakfast on Saturday: coffee and bagels.

For further info go to www.nahj.org or email nahjregion2@gmail.com

Friday’s location info:

“New York University’s Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute (20 Cooper Square, between 5th and 6th Streets, 7th Floor television studio), on Friday, February 4, 5:30-7 p.m. Photo ID required for entry. Call 212.998.8044 for more information. Seating is on a first-come, first-served basis (Subways: 6, Astor Place; N, R, 8th Street).”

 

 

CU – NAHJ Presents: Freelancing in Latin America – AUDIO RECORDING

Click below to hear the panel.


Current J‐School students and freelance veterans Manuel Rueda (has broad experience in radio broadcast working from Colombia), Camilo Smith (has extensively covered Mexican hip hop for print and online), and Sandro Maraita (has written for Peruvian and other international magazines) talked about pitching and selling their work to US outlets and give practical tips.

They shared a panel with two distinguished journalists: Juan Manuel Robles, magazine writer, editor and blog journalist from Lima, Peru who is pursuing a creative writing degree at NYU, and Seth Kugel, longtime freelancer for The New York Times and GlobalPost, who is currently traveling all over Latin America, on a budget for the Times’ Frugal Traveler column.

Photos and post by Svetlana Didorenko.

Right + click here to download audio

Recap: Freelancing Advice from the Cabot Prize Panel

By Camilo H. Smith

 

Four  award-winning journalists working in Latin America joined Maria Moors Cabot Prize director Joshua Friedman in October for a panel discussion on the challenges of working as an independent journalist. The event was moderated by Sandro Mairata (J ´11).  The panelists offered advice on thriving as a U.S.  journalist abroad and the economic challenges such a venture entails. Accounts of covering government corruption, censorship and violence filled  the discussion.  These topics make up much of the work of the Cabot award winners on the panel, which included Norman Gall, Tyler Bridges (above), Joaquim Ibarz and Carlos Fernando Chamorro.The idea of sacrificing for your craft was repeated during the panel, especially from expat journalists such as Bridges and Gall. It’s a challenge that´s shaped by every reporter´s own path, said Bridges.

With so many mainstream publications cutting back their Latin America coverage, the time is ripe for freelancers to make a go at it alone. ¨What you want to try to do is have some regular gigs, so that the Miami Herald or New York Times might call you.,¨ Bridges said.