SPJ Business Meeting Aug. 5

Society of Professional Journalists, Madison Pro Chapter
Monthly Business Meeting
Aug. 5, 2013, 7:00 p.m.
Vintage Brewing Company, 474 S. Whitney Way, Madison

Agenda

Aug. 5, 2013

I. Call to order
II. Approval of minutes from 7/8/13 meeting
III. Treasurer’s Report
IV. Membership Report
V. President’s Report
A. Cartoonists, July 18
B. Book Event, Aug. 20
C. Wells Memorial Update
VI. Upcoming Events: September: Business Journalism Training; November: possible Covering Minority Communities training
VI. Discussion: National convention
VII. Discussion/Action: Authorize funding for Wells booklets/DVDs
VIII. Discussion/Action: Reimbursements (Terry, Lauren, Mark)
IX. Discussion: Campus chapter
X. New Business
XI. Adjourn

Votes could be taken on any Action or New Business item

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Turn Your Beat Into a Book: Aug. 20

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Aug. 1, 2013

MADISON – The Madison chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists invites area journalists and the public to a free training session on how to successfully pitch and write a book.

“Turn Your Beat Into a Book” will be held from Tuesday, Aug. 20, from 7-9:30 p.m. at Barnes & Noble Booksellers in West Towne Mall, 7433 Mineral Point Road. It will feature area book authors and publishing industry experts who will offer guidance on conceiving a book project, writing a proposal, contacting agents and publishers, and grinding out the daily work of writing (often while doing another job). A photographer will also discuss his book project. The training event will be targeted toward journalists, but members of the public with an interest in writing and photography and expertise to share with the world will also benefit.

The Wisconsin Newspaper Association Foundation is sponsoring the training.

The program is as follows:

7-8:15 pm: JOURNALISTS TURNED AUTHORS (AND A PHOTOGRAPHER!): Learn how journalists turned their reporting beats into books by trusting what they know, crafting a sharp book proposal, and putting in the hard work of writing. And hear from a photojournalist about how his book project grew out of a newspaper assignment. Featuring:

Bill Lueders, money and politics reporter, Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism, and author, “Cry Rape,” “Watchdog” and “Enemy of the State.”

Jason Stein, state Capitol reporter, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, co-author, “More Than They Bargained For”

Ron McCrea, former Capital Times, Washington Star, and Newsday editor, and author, “Building Taliesin: Frank Lloyd Wright’s Home of Love and Loss.”

Craig Schreiner, UW-Whitewater campus photographer and former Wisconsin State Journal photographer, and documentarian of “One Small Farm.”

8:15-9:30 pm: WHAT PUBLISHERS WANT: Don’t waste your time pitching a book idea that won’t pique the interest of publishers. Discover what publishers are looking for, the current landscape of the book market, and the marketability of journalists with expertise in politics, education, the environment and other topics. Featuring:

Raphael Kadushin, senior acquisitions editor, University of Wisconsin Press, and editor and contributor to numerous magazines and book collections.

Laurie Scheer, director, UW-Madison Writers’ Institute, former vice president for programming at WE: Women’s Entertainment, and author of “Creative Careers in Hollywood.”

Published works by the panelists will be available for sale at the event. Coffee, sandwiches and light snacks will also be available at the Barnes & Noble café.

RSVPs are appreciated, but not required.

Contact Mark Pitsch, president, Madison SPJ at [email protected], or 608-252-6145, to RSVP or for more information. Contact Jeanne Huie, Community Relations Manager, Barnes & Noble Booksellers, for information about Barnes & Noble, [email protected].

 

 

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SPJ Madison chapter hosts cartoonist event

Editorial cartoonists talk about their craft at a recent SPJ Madison event. From left to right, Mike Konopacki, Joe Heller, Phil Hands, and Alan Talaga.

Editorial cartoonists talk about their craft at a recent SPJ Madison event. From left to right, Mike Konopacki, Joe Heller, Phil Hands, and Alan Talaga.

Hair styles. Nose shapes. Eye spacing. Ear size.

The discussion at Brocach in downtown Madison on July 18 could have been confused with gossip at a beauty salon.

Instead it was the musings of some of the state’s top political cartoonists explaining their craft (and their favorite targets) to about 30 people at a program sponsored by the Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ) Madison chapter.

“Drawing Fire: How Cartoonists Tackle Politics with Humor,” featured:

Joe Heller, editorial cartoonist for the Green Bay Press-Gazette since 1985. His awards include eight Best of Gannett Awards, six Milwaukee Press Clubs Awards, and three John Fischetti Editorial Cartoon Awards.

Phil Hands of the Wisconsin State Journal, who recently won SPJ’s Sigma Delta Chi award for top cartoonist at a newspaper under 100,000 circulation.

Mike Konopacki, an independent labor cartoonist who began cartooning for the Madison Press Connection in 1977 and then went on to syndicate his work through the labor news service Press Associates and now Huck/Konopacki Labor Cartoons.

Alan Talaga, who contributes to the Isthmus with Jon Lyons. The words-and pictures duo won the 2012 Excellence in Journalism Award from the Milwaukee Press Club for Best Illustration or Cartoon.

Not on the panel, but joining in the discussion, was P.S. Mueller. Since 1969, when Mueller began contributing to the Daily Egyptian at Southern Illinois University-Carbondale, his cartoons have appeared in scores of alternative weeklies, magazines and books. Today he contributes to: The New YorkerReader’s DigestField and StreamBrand Week, the Funny Times, and The Onion.

The audience laughed, applauded, and hissed as each cartoonist flashed a sample of his favorite or recent work across a large screen. Then Talaga (doing double duty as panelist and moderator) quizzed the group on a series of questions, including how they got their ideas, when/how they were edited, and the future of editorial cartooning.

Later, the audience got into the act, asking panelists to discuss whom they liked to draw, why there weren’t more women and minority cartoonists, which older cartoonists influenced them, and whether liberals or conservatives got more upset at their drawings.

In an interview afterward, Konopacki said the delivery of cartoons will change as technology progresses, but the energy to comment on political and social issues is durable. “As long as there is injustice, people will fight it with every tool available,” he says.

Green Bay Press-Gazette editorial cartoonist Joe Heller shares his work with a crowd of about 30 people at a recent SPJ Madison chapter event.

Green Bay Press-Gazette editorial cartoonist Joe Heller shares his work with a crowd of about 30 people at a recent SPJ Madison chapter event.

 

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SPJ Madison monthly business meeting rescheduled for July 8

SPJ Madison meets July 8

The Madison chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists will hold its monthly business meeting Monday, July 8 at 7 pm at Vintage Brewing Company, 674 S. Whitney Way, Madison. The meeting has been rescheduled from July 1.

The agenda is as follows:

Agenda

July 8, 2013

I. Call to order
II. Approval of minutes from 6/3/13 meeting
III. Treasurer’s Report
IV. Membership Report
V. President’s Report
A. June meetup with WCIJ
B. Op-ed response
C. WFOIC meeting
D. Journalists’ Fight-Back rapid response
E. Wells Memorial aftermath
VI. Upcoming Events: July: Cartoonists; August: Authors mini-training; September: Business Journalism Training; November: possible Covering Minority Communities training; Possible Police PIOs
VI. Discussion: National convention, Region 6 director
VII. New Business
VIII. Adjourn

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Wells Memorial Key Centennial Celebration

_MG_3507Journalism will thrive so long as there’s a need for stories that explain our world and help us uncover truth.

That was the message from Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist David Maraniss, a Madison native who was the keynote speaker at the Wells Memorial Key Centennial Celebration on May 31-June 1.

The event commemorated the 100th anniversary of the election of UW-Madison graduate Wells as the Sigma Delta Chi national president and the creation of the Wells Memorial Key, the Society of Professional Journalists’ highest honor for service to the Society. Wells died in office shortly after his election, and SDX members created the Wells Key in his memory. SDX later became SPJ.

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Wells Memorial Key Centennial Celebration audio and video

Chester Wells history presentation:

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Clicks and hits: pursuing a proper online journalism strategy

By Amelia Rufer

The Internet allows consumers of news to pick and choose what they read. Journalism’s challenge is one of ethical and monetary significance: to write about topics that attract readership while serving as gatekeepers of information critical for democratic participation. News organizations need to identify the right balance between what’s interesting and what’s important.

At the recent Wells Memorial Key Centennial Celebration, the Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ) examined how ethics and profit affect the way news organizations choose what news to report. Helping readers engage may be one way to make important news the news that attracts readers.

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