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Fresno bee
Fresno bee




fresno bee
  1. FRESNO BEE HOW TO
  2. FRESNO BEE FREE
fresno bee

A majority of the 100-plus participants stayed after the program ended to discuss follow-up ideas. Participants were invited to a successful community discussion moderated by Jim Boren, former Bee editor who is now leading Fresno’s State’s Institute for Media and Public Trust. The project began with an introductory online survey in which more than 300 residents offered their views about the divide between north and south Fresno. They brought together people who live to the north and south of Shaw Avenue, which divides the city demographically and politically, to show the impact of engagement on journalism perceptions and the participants’ media diets. In September, the Fresno Bee launched a wide-ranging community discussion “Crossing the Line” with the help of the News Co/Lab and Spaceship Media. What happens when you bring together two polarized groups for civil conversations about divisive issues? … In short, the News Co/Lab has helped us better understand our communities, and helped the community better understand us.”Ĭrossing the line with dialogue journalism “I could not agree more with the mission of the lab, which is strongly supported by the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication: to help increase America’s ‘news fluency. Working with the results of community surveys, we helped design and launch these experiments, among others, in dialogue journalism and radical transparency using proven best practices. The working group realized the people in the newsroom needed to be more open about who they are, what they do, and why they do it.

FRESNO BEE HOW TO

As the first step of our partnership, The Bee convened a newsroom working group to identify how to better connect with the paper’s audience. In 2018, the News Co/Lab began working with The Bee to enhance the community’s news fluency, with transparency and engagement as major early steps. It has a long and deep history in its region. The Fresno Bee serves California’s central San Joaquin Valley, covering a six-county area that is one of the fastest-growing regions in in the state.

fresno bee

4902 N.The Fresno Bee is “lifting the veil” - and more - to connect and collaborate with its community.

FRESNO BEE FREE

He was President of the Fresno Free College Foundation (1972-92) and Founder of non-profit KFCF-FM. They let the public know what they knew, allowing information to flow freely.”Īlex Vavoulis is Professor Emeritus at CSUF. His wife Barbara Jo said her husband told her that “it was probably the most important thing that either one of us will do in our lives.” In an article in The Fresno Bee on 12/14/92, Eli Setencich summed it up as well as anyone: “As newsmen, they had done what they had to do. Henry wrote the Amicus Brief for the Foundation.įor the late James Bort, sacrificing for principle was necessary. Board members at that time included Lesly Kimber, Blanche Nosworthy, Fresno State Professors Allen Skei and Hayward Moore, Judge Al Villa and attorney William Richert, and others. The Board of the Foundation contended that constitutional rights were being violated, including the right to a free press. The Board of Directors of the Fresno Free College Foundation entered the case as a Friend of the Court (Amicus Brief) before the 5 thAppelate Court in California and the U.S. Fresno Psychiatrist Paul Levy gave important testimony before the court. The Fresno community should be applauded for its support of the Bee Four. Professor Nancy McDermid of the San Francisco State University Speech Department spoke on “The First Amendment after 200 Years.” McDermid’s speech was recorded and broadcast on KPFA in Berkeley and KFCF in the Central Valley. This event took place on May 10 th at the Fresno Hilton with Attorney Howard Watkins presiding at the program. In 1976, Each of the Four Newsmen was honored with the Civil Liberties Award by the Fresno Chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union.

fresno bee

The Four were in jail for 15-days before Judge Hollis Best of the Superior Court released them. in a dissenting opinion argued that all of the contempt charges should have been reversed. A 2-1 majority sustained two-thirds of the contempt charges. The newsmen appealed to Fifth District Court to overturn 73 contempt citations by a Superior Court Four newsmen of The Fresno Bee were sentenced to jail until they would agree to answer questions as to how they obtained secret Fresno County Grand Jury testimony.






Fresno bee