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*'''Coop-petition: How to align with other media or groups'''
*'''Coop-petition: How to align with other media or groups'''
<ul><ul>''Jeremy Iggers, TC Daily Planet /  
<ul><ul>''Jeremy Iggers, TC Daily Planet /  
''Lew Friedland, Madison Commons'' (tentative)</ul></ul>
''Michelle Ferrier, MyTopiaCafe.com''</ul></ul>
*'''Engaging citizens: What's the secret?'''
*'''Engaging citizens: What's the secret?'''
<ul><ul>''Steve Clift & Timothy Erickson Rural Voices Project'' /  
<ul><ul>''Steve Clift & Timothy Erickson Rural Voices Project'' /  

Revision as of 20:36, 21 May 2008

Principal convenor Minnesota Journalism Center Minnesota News Council


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The Coffee House: Speed Topics

Wed., 7:45 p.m.-9 p.m. The heart of our gathering, "New Pamphleteers, New Reporters," will occur on Thursday, as our participants share best practices in three break-out periods, and informally during open-circle and break-time discussions.

Tonight, Wednesday, we set the agenda with a concept we call "speed topics," and then a set of coffee-house like roundtable discussions. The goal is to discover the wisdom which exists among the group, and figure out how to best share that wisdom on Thursday.

We start from the premise that every participant in "New Pamphleteers, New Reporters," is the expert on some piece of this emerging world of local onine news and community forums. Because we are meeting for the first time, we don't know who those experts are. And so we have made some (hopefully) intelligent choices about who among us can at least seed the conversation.

So, in that spirit, erstwhile participant-experts will follow our after-dinner speaker with "speed topics." If these "experts" have biases, they'll say so. Each individual or team will pitch for 90 seconds about a key issue facing operators of local online news communities. Then all of our participants will be invited to form coffee-house style conversations in nine areas of the McNamara Alumni Center, lead by our participant-experts around one of the nine announced topics.

By 9 p.m., we'll have both a better idea of the expertise gathered, as well as the level of interest in each topic. Together, we'll use that information to fine tune Thursday's break outs.

The nine topics

  • Defining citizen journalism: Principles and practice
      Dan Gillmor, ASU Cronkite School, Center for Citizen Media, Phoenix, Ariz.
  • Technology choices -- platforms, cost
      Mike Orren, Pegasus News / Dan Knauss, designer/developer, NewLocalMedia
  • Advertising, sponsorships and grants-- is it enough?
      Richard Anderson, VillageSoup.com / Jonathan Weber, NewWest.net
  • Citizen media and the law -- freedom and risk
      David Ardia, Berkman Center, Harvard Law School / Robert Cox, Media Bloggers Association
  • Training bloggers, writers, volunteers
      Cody Howard, Lawrence.com / Doug McGill, LargeMouth Citizen Journalism Project
  • Tending to business: Incorporating, taxes, profit/non-profit
      Todd Eskelsen, Schiff Hardin LLP / Margaret Freivogel, St. Louis Beacon
  • Coop-petition: How to align with other media or groups
      Jeremy Iggers, TC Daily Planet / Michelle Ferrier, MyTopiaCafe.com
  • Engaging citizens: What's the secret?
      Steve Clift & Timothy Erickson Rural Voices Project / Andrew Haeg, Minnesota Public Radio / Arnie Arnesen, PoliticalChowder.org
  • How to avoid burnout: Keeping the passion alive
      Deborah Galant, BaristaNet / ' Clint Baller, Birmingham (Mich.) Buzz