Chicago's Media Scene: Rising Stars
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Chicago provides an ideal laboratory for experimentation in journalism, with philanthropic funding allowing journalists and their colleagues the opportunity to try out new ways of gathering news and telling stories to ensure that the city is adequately covered in an age of changing media habits.
Philadelphia is experimenting with new ways of thinking about journalism. This experiment could have an impact across the entire country. Philadelphia is now a leader when it comes to finding new methods for gathering and distributing community information and helping citizens engage in local government and hold them accountable.
These young journalists are not only lauded for their work, but also act as mentors in Chicago and encourage collaboration. Rewriting its narrative while giving its stories back to its people is their goal.
The TRiiBE is a project created by three Black Northwestern University Alumni in February 2017, to change narratives about their hometown and to give back the stories to the residents. The TRiiBE aims to empower local residents through journalism while giving them the power to tell stories of their own.
Kalyn and Melissa Sanchez are education reporters who have won multiple awards for their coverage about the digital divide that exists in Chicago schools. Their reporting had a positive impact on policymakers, and improved chicago illinois downtown, watch this video,'s technology system. They were named as finalists in the Peter Lisagor Award of Excellence in Education Reporting in 2013.
Sarah Karp, staff writer at The Chicago Reporter, won the Casey Medal of meritorious journalism for her series of stories about Chicago youth who are incarcerated and their struggles with staying in school. These stories have made waves on media platforms, inspiring the Illinois Department of Corrections into implementing changes that improved prison conditions, allowing the inmates to enroll in high school again or find comparable work upon release.
Karp's efforts to help crack babies get out of jail, and into treatment programs for those with substance use disorders or mental illnesses, earned her the Justice Leadership Award of Treatment Alternatives for Safe Communities.
Journalism's uncertain future continues to be hampered by financial problems. To promote innovation and not simply support one particular model, those supporting journalism must adopt an inclusive strategy to ensure they are encouraging innovation in all forms. To achieve this, it is important to invest in business operations that lower costs for newsrooms, while also creating additional revenue. Also, entrepreneurs and executives can be coached to help them succeed in their leadership roles.
Philadelphia is experimenting with new ways of thinking about journalism. This experiment could have an impact across the entire country. Philadelphia is now a leader when it comes to finding new methods for gathering and distributing community information and helping citizens engage in local government and hold them accountable.
These young journalists are not only lauded for their work, but also act as mentors in Chicago and encourage collaboration. Rewriting its narrative while giving its stories back to its people is their goal.
The TRiiBE is a project created by three Black Northwestern University Alumni in February 2017, to change narratives about their hometown and to give back the stories to the residents. The TRiiBE aims to empower local residents through journalism while giving them the power to tell stories of their own.
Kalyn and Melissa Sanchez are education reporters who have won multiple awards for their coverage about the digital divide that exists in Chicago schools. Their reporting had a positive impact on policymakers, and improved chicago illinois downtown, watch this video,'s technology system. They were named as finalists in the Peter Lisagor Award of Excellence in Education Reporting in 2013.
Sarah Karp, staff writer at The Chicago Reporter, won the Casey Medal of meritorious journalism for her series of stories about Chicago youth who are incarcerated and their struggles with staying in school. These stories have made waves on media platforms, inspiring the Illinois Department of Corrections into implementing changes that improved prison conditions, allowing the inmates to enroll in high school again or find comparable work upon release.
Karp's efforts to help crack babies get out of jail, and into treatment programs for those with substance use disorders or mental illnesses, earned her the Justice Leadership Award of Treatment Alternatives for Safe Communities.
Journalism's uncertain future continues to be hampered by financial problems. To promote innovation and not simply support one particular model, those supporting journalism must adopt an inclusive strategy to ensure they are encouraging innovation in all forms. To achieve this, it is important to invest in business operations that lower costs for newsrooms, while also creating additional revenue. Also, entrepreneurs and executives can be coached to help them succeed in their leadership roles.
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