Thanks Chad

I shut down our wrap-up party for a few minutes to thank a few of the many, many people who helped us hold the forum. My brain was beyond dead and I forgot to thank. Chad Capellman. Chad produced and ran this web site for us. Chad used to be on our staff. He moved […]

Read More

WE MEDIA : Calls to action

The two day WE MEDIA crush conference raised many issues, with some room for questions by the floor. WM Fellows were invited on May 2nd (the day before the WM Global Forum started) to brainstorm during an hour on some 15 major issues. WE MEDIA Director Andrew Nachison collected the answers for a tentative call […]

Read More

Who’s going to pay for media?

The audience is straying from traditional media and citizen journalism, mostly done pro bono is proliferating. So where is the money going to come from to maintain huge news organizations and how will those that do media from their heart be paid? Stephanie Flanders of the BBC led the Business Forum, discussing this issue with […]

Read More

We The World: Africa

Moderated by Rachel Rawlins (Global Voices), with Ory Okolloh (Reuters) via Satellite from Johannesburg, South Africa, Mathew Buckland (Mail & Guardian), Wilfred Kiboro (Nation Media Group), WM Fellows, Megan Knight, Middlesex University Running about 30 minutes behind schedule, the Africa portion of the We The World series, began as individuals marched back in from the […]

Read More

The beauty of the news

Today’s We Media Global conference is taking place at the very fancy Reuters Global headquarters at Canary Wharf. Yesterday we met at the BBC, at a different style of building altogether (someone actually compared it to a run down hospital). But both buildings shared something very obvious: these are news organisations. At Reuters, visitors are […]

Read More

A global call to action

Jeffery Sachs joined the Forum via satellite from Columbia University in New York to talk about poverty and famine in other parts of the world and how the interconnected world can help those plights. The media is crucial in making the West understand this interconnectivity, how a tragedy in one part of the world affects […]

Read More

Citizen wotsitsname – that film (wemedia)

Everyone knows the film, even if they can’t remember the talented director. The film has become part of our visual landscape and set a standard for those who would follow. And the film was. . . the one that showed the beating of Rodney King, the film showing the botched landing of a plane on […]

Read More

Day One audio of Richard Dreyfuss, Digital Assassins and the Citizen Journalism Forum session

Media and Civic Discourse With Richard Dreyfuss, Actor and Activist Download MP3 Citizen Journalism Forum | Who’s Making the News? A conversation moderated by Paul Holmes (Reuters), with Helen Boaden (BBC), George Brock (The Times), David Gyimah (Video Journalist), Andrew Hawken (MSN.com), Salam Pax (talkleft.com, via satellite)Part 1 | Part 2 Meet the Digital Assassins […]

Read More

We the World

While in Southern Africa there is a contrast of Zimbabwe with an arguably “non free” press and South Africa with an arguably “free” press, both countries have similar problems with accessibility isssues for the communities. These issues relate to basic infrastructure issues, such as access to the hardware for blogging, which illustrate the digital divide […]

Read More

Middle East media in major flux

Satellite television has been the primary driver or catalyst of the changes going on in the Arab media sphere, says the session’s moderator — Keith Porter from the Stanley Foundation. Porter positions panArab news channels like Jazeera and Arabiya as the spearheaders of this move towards a much more aware and accountable media regionwide, Satellite […]

Read More