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Webcasts
Webcasts for Special Events

The New School’s public programs create an ongoing dialogue between local, national and global communities that attest to the school’s mission to broaden and deepen the connections between academic knowledge and civic engagement. Beginning in the summer of 2007, The New School began partnering with FORA.tv to create a living history of these expert panels, lectures and workshops.

FORA.tv provides a free searchable database of university events to students, faculty and the public. Visitors can view unfiltered webcasts, share opinions with an online community, and access background information, related links and audio and video downloads. To view and discuss recent events at The New School, please visit FORA.tv online at http://fora.tv/partner/new_school.

For events prior to July 13, 2007, please visit our online archives.


 

Summer 2007

The Future of Journalism: The Changing Face of Cable and Broadcast News
Tuesday, June 12, 2007 7:00pm
Live webcast only; no archive available.

The Future of Journalism: Will Newspapers Become Information Geysers?
Tuesday, June 19, 2007 7:00pm
Live webcast only; no archive available.

The Future of Journalism: Should Political Advertising Have a Future?
Tuesday, June 26, 2007 7:00pm
Live webcast only; no archive available.


The Future of Journalism: The Changing Face of Cable and Broadcast News

Live webcast only; no archive available.
Tuesday, June 12, 2007

In the first of a three-part series focusing on the future of journalism, moderator Professor Stuart H. Loory, Lee Hills Chair in Free Press Studies at the Missouri School of Journalism and director of the Missouri Journalism summer program at The New School in 2007, will look at whether cable and broadcast news are superannuated and if they can save themselves from the clutches of pop culture and keep the public well informed. Loory was a Washington and international correspondent for the New York Herald Tribune, a science writer for The New York Times, White House correspondent for the Los Angeles Times, associate and managing editor of the Chicago Sun-Times, vice president and Washington and Moscow bureau chief for CNN, and general director of TV6 in Moscow, the first independent television station in Russia and a joint venture between Turner Broadcasting System and Moscow Independent Television. Other participants include Marlene Sanders, formerly of ABC and CBS News; William Small, vice chairman for News and Documentaries Emmy Awards, National Television Academy; Richard Roth, United Nations correspondent for CNN.

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The Future of Journalism: Will Newspapers Become Information Geysers?

Live webcast only; no archive available.
Tuesday, June 19, 2007

In the second of a three-part series focusing on the future of journalism, moderator Professor Stuart H. Loory, Lee Hills Chair in Free Press Studies at the Missouri School of Journalism and director of the Missouri Journalism summer program at The New School in 2007, will look at what newspapers of the future will be like and where one will have to go to find them. Will they be on the doorstep in the morning or only on the computer, cell phone, and IPod screens 24/7, and how will their role in society change? Other participants include William E. Casey Jr., vice-president, International, the Wall Street Journal; Seymour Topping, professor emeritus, Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, former Pulitzer prize director and former managing editor of the New York Times; Vivian Schiller, New York Times; and James F. Hoge, editor of Foreign Affairs and former publisher of the New York Daily News.

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The Future of Journalism: Should Political Advertising Have a Future?

Live webcast only; no archive available.
Tuesday, June 26, 2007

With each new election campaign season, political advertising becomes more dominant. One implication is that the candidate who raises the most money can dominate television screens, the Internet, front yards or the printed page with ads that sell an image using the same techniques that sell beer, sleeping pills, or lingerie. In the third of a three-part series focusing on the future of journalism, moderator Professor Stuart H. Loory, Lee Hills Chair in Free Press Studies at the Missouri School of Journalism and director of the Missouri Journalism summer program at The New School in 2007, looks at whether freedom of expression is being stifled by the inability of the public to talk back to an advertisement and if election campaigns are growing too negative. Panelists include Hank Sheinkopf of Sheinkopf Communications, with others participants to be announced.

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