Applications due for inaugural Kennerly Institute on Photojournalism & Communication Leadership

Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist, David Hume Kennerly has teamed with the Center on Communication Leadership & Policy for a unique one-week summer Institute, June 20-25, 2010. Blending an extraordinary hands-on assignment-photography experience with intensive academic inquiry, the Kennerly Institute is tailored for individuals seeking to hone their photojournalistic skills and to become leading-edge visual communicators. Applications are due April 20, 2010. To learn more go to the Kennerly Institute website…….Continue Reading Applications due for inaugural Kennerly Institute on Photojournalism & Communication Leadership

Why Washington Doesn’t Work Anymore

What killed bipartisanship in the governing of America? Basically, I think, it was the jet plane and Blackberries. In fact, those two mechanical marvels may break up the whole nation into, say, 350 million countries. A country for every man, woman and child. Why can't the representatives of we, the people, agree on even the things they agree on? The answer is that they don't know each other. In the old days there was a community called Washington — or maybe just Georgetown — where Republicans and Democrats lived together. They carpooled. They had dinner with each other and exchanged……Continue Reading Why Washington Doesn’t Work Anymore

A Historic Moment for Health Care? Building a Birthright

The New York Times ran an op-ed by Senior Fellow Richard Reeves about the recently passed health care bill. "President Obama's success in moving toward universal health care (the core of the reform package is expanding the number of Americans covered) will become part of the American social fabric, a birthright, like Social Security and Medicare," Reeves wrote. "And the Republicans were right too, in understanding that this bill is a significant expansion of the American welfare state."……Continue Reading A Historic Moment for Health Care? Building a Birthright

‘Top Secret: The Battle for the Pentagon Papers’

TheatreMania writes: "Geoffrey Cowan and Leroy Aarons crackling drama about that pivotal moment in history, Top Secret: The Battle for the Pentagon Papers, is now being presented at the New York Theatre Workshop in a brilliantly acted production under John Rubenstein's tight direction. Not only is it a great story, it's also great theater."……Continue Reading ‘Top Secret: The Battle for the Pentagon Papers’

Top Secret lifts veil on Pentagon Papers fight

The Associated Press writes, "This love affair with journalistic revelations in the face of great odds is artfully rekindled in 'Top Secret: The Battle for the Pentagon Papers,' an engaging, well-acted, historical drama by Geoffrey Cowan and Leroy Aarons. With cloak-and-dagger intrigue, government suppression, courtroom drama and an unusual theatrical format, the play will please theater enthusiasts and history buffs alike. … The 'write what you know' maxim couldn't be more apropos in this case, evidenced by Cowan and Aarons' clear presentation of the facts and splendidly nuanced dialogue, which consistently rings true."……Continue Reading Top Secret lifts veil on Pentagon Papers fight

Oscar’s cracked glass ceiling

The Los Angeles Times featured a study by Faculty Fellow Stacy L. Smith. The LAT reported: "The population might be more than 50% female, but actresses nabbed only 29.9% of the 4,379 speaking parts in the 100 top-grossing films of 2007, according to a recently released study by Stacy L. Smith, a professor at the Annenberg School for Communications & Journalism at USC. Only 2.7% of the directors on those films were women, but when they did step behind the camera, the percentage of female characters jumped dramatically, to as high as 44.6%, compared with 29.3% when the director was……Continue Reading Oscar’s cracked glass ceiling

The Best of times: MPAA’s Dan Glickman prepares to move on

Film Journal featured Senior Fellow Dan Glickman's leadership of the Motion Picture Association of America and his decision to step down as chairman and CEO to head Refugees International. Of his work with the MPAA, he said, "No other industry, on a day-to-day basis, impacts in the same way how people feel about themselves." Looking back, he says of this "very, very spectacular opportunity" to represent Hollywood in Washington, D.C. and around the world: "I am just very glad to have been a part of it."……Continue Reading The Best of times: MPAA’s Dan Glickman prepares to move on