Join the TMI Project for a free weekly writing workshop series facilitated by trained workshop leaders. Drop in whenever you’re available!
Free Write with TMI Project
Join the TMI Project for a free weekly writing workshop series facilitated by trained workshop leaders. Drop in whenever you’re available!
Free Write with TMI Project
Join the TMI Project for a free weekly writing workshop series facilitated by trained workshop leaders. Drop in whenever you’re available!
Free Write with TMI Project
Join the TMI Project for a free weekly writing workshop series facilitated by trained workshop leaders. Drop in whenever you’re available!
Free Write with TMI Project
Join the TMI Project for a free weekly writing workshop series facilitated by trained workshop leaders. Drop in whenever you’re available!
Free Write with TMI Project
Join the TMI Project for a free weekly writing workshop series facilitated by trained workshop leaders. Drop in whenever you’re available!
How to Save Local News (remote)
Join the River Newsroom for a roundtable discussion on new models of journalism and reimagining existing publications.
About this event:
It’s been a tough decade-plus for local media. Since 2008, US newsroom employment has fallen by 26 percent, a crisis that accelerated last year, when publications had to reduce their already meager staffs. One study estimates that journalism layoffs more than doubled in 2020, and dozens of outlets have ceased publication entirely since the start of the pandemic.
These cutbacks are hitting local media hardest. Here in the Hudson Valley and Catskills, the past few years have seen the shuttering of several longtime local newsweeklies and layoffs at larger daily papers. At the same time, the need for reliable local reporting has never been more clear—nor more urgent. Into the void of local news has flowed partisan hyperbole, unverified social media posts, and harmful disinformation. The ever-evolving COVID-19 pandemic, the perilous threats posed by climate change, the reinvigorated struggle for social and racial equity: all of these are huge stories playing out on the community level.
Fortunately, there is a lot of energy being put toward ensuring local journalism remains alive and well. And that’s happening here, as well. In this roundtable discussion, we’ll talk with journalists and publishers who are working on new models of journalism, or reimagining existing publications to ensure they remain vital to their readers.
Speakers include:
- Tim Bruno, general manager, WJFF Radio Catskill
- Chip Rowe, editor, The Highlands Current
- Alex Shiffer, publisher, Kingston Wire
- Genia Wickwire, associate publisher, Ulster Publishing
Leading with Artivism – Written & Spoken Word (virtual)
“Leading with Artivism” is a live monthly interview series, created and curated by Poet Gold in collaboration with Arts Mid-Hudson, featuring a diverse mix of Artivists (Artist Activists) who have taken up the charge through their art to highlight social issues. Participants are invited to ask questions and get an inside look at the hearts and minds of these courageous creatives.