Logo

    nonprofit journalism

    Explore " nonprofit journalism" with insightful episodes like "#28 Next Generation Leaders: Q&A with Melanie Henshaw (Mvskoke)", "A.D. Q&A with Chicago Reader Publisher Tracy Baim" and "#17 Next Generation Leaders: Q&A with Tran Nguyen" from podcasts like ""Next Generation Leaders", "A.D. Q&A with A.D. Quig" and "Next Generation Leaders"" and more!

    Episodes (3)

    #28 Next Generation Leaders: Q&A with Melanie Henshaw (Mvskoke)

    #28 Next Generation Leaders: Q&A with Melanie Henshaw (Mvskoke)

    Next Generation Leaders celebrates the achievements of young alumni of the University of Oregon School of Journalism and Communication. In this episode we talk to Melanie Henshaw (Mvskoke) '22, Indigenous Affairs reporter at Street Roots, an alt weekly street paper in Portland, Oregon.  In that role she reports on tribal sovereignty, ecological destruction, climate change, social justice, and other topics. Before joining Street Roots, she was a fellow for NewsBreak, and prior to that was the desk editor and a multimedia producer for the Daily Emerald. 

    Find Melanie Henshaw Online:
    Street Roots Author Page
    Muck Rack Author Page
    Daily Emerald Author Page

    Show Notes: 
    0:01: Show introduction
    0:37: Guest introduction
    01:14: What is Street Roots?
    03:30: Melanie's educational background
    04:51: Why Melanie chose the indigenous affairs beat
    05:54: How journalism has failed indigenous communities
    08:31: Using social media as a journalist 
    10:07: Protecting your peace and privacy online
    13:42: Can and should non-indigenous reporters report on indigenous affairs?
    17:39: Takeaways from working at a college paper
    19:38: Transitioning from multimedia storytelling to writing
    22:03: Avoiding getting pigeonholed as a journalist based on background or ethnicity
    25:36: Why Melanie chose to move to Portland
    27:07: Job search advice
    29:23: Knowing your worth and negotiating for better pay and benefits
    33:54: What employers are looking for in prospective hires
    35:41: More job search advice
    38:22: Show wrap-up

    Download the transcript for this episode.

    Interested in more podcast content from the SOJC? Check out the Hearst Demystifying Media Podcast, where Damian Radcliffe gets the industry scoop from media experts. 

    A.D. Q&A with Chicago Reader Publisher Tracy Baim

    A.D. Q&A with Chicago Reader Publisher Tracy Baim
    The Chicago Reader is one of the city’s best-known free papers and one of a few remaining alt-weeklies to survive the media crunch that killed dozens across the country. Until recently, the Reader seemed like it was about to go under, too. Our guest this week is the Reader’s publisher, Tracy Baim. She’s been in the Chicago media world since she was a kid. Her mother, father and stepfather were all in the biz. Fresh out of college, she founded the LGBTQ publication the Windy City Times. In 2018, she stepped in to lead the Reader. And what a ride it’s been. When print advertising from bars, restaurants and venues dried up in the early COVID days, the paper survived thanks to a federal PPP loan, another loan from the city, a series of innovative fundraising measures and leftover investment from the paper’s co-owners, lawyer Len Goodman and real estate developer Elzie Higginbottom. But in recent months, a spat with Goodman almost brought the Reader down. He wrote a column detailing his concerns about getting his daughter vaccinated for covid. It led to an uproar and an outside fact-check that found several errors. Editors wanted a correction, an editors note, or for the story to get taken down. Goodman cried censorship, and the fight hit pause on the paper’s transition to nonprofit status, a transition that would have allowed for money from foundations and philanthropists to flow in. In this episode, Baim brings us behind the scenes of that tussle, explains where the Reader goes from here, and forecasts what a broader shift to nonprofit status for legacy media means--for example, is the Sun-Times/WBEZ merger good for all the other, smaller independent publications dotting Chicago? And is there a way for Chicago foundations to pool their money for media in a way that spreads the wealth to smaller outlets?

    #17 Next Generation Leaders: Q&A with Tran Nguyen

    #17 Next Generation Leaders: Q&A with Tran Nguyen

    Next Generation Leaders celebrates the achievements of young alumni of the University of Oregon School of Journalism and Communication.In this episode we talk to Tran Nguyen '21, who recently graduated with her Master's degree in journalism from the University of Missouri-Columbia and now works as a data reporter for San Jose Spotlight, a nonprofit digital news source for the city of San Jose, California.

    Find Tran Online: 
    LinkedIn 

    Show Notes: Coming soon!

     Episode Transcript: Coming soon!

    Logo

    © 2024 Podcastworld. All rights reserved

    Stay up to date

    For any inquiries, please email us at hello@podcastworld.io