Podcasts about digital media initiative

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Best podcasts about digital media initiative

Latest podcast episodes about digital media initiative

We Makin It
How We Transition with Preston Miller

We Makin It

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2019 59:18


Tune in this week where I talk to Preston Miller. Choreographer, Coach, Director of Digital Media Initiative at Gibney about life transitions! Rest in Power Sandra Bland. We talk about the talents we secretly water as we work towards larger goals. We talk about what happens when it really isn't meant for you. And so much more. May this inspire you to keep moving during Mental Health Awareness Month. As always, Make It Live, Make it Breathe, Just Make it See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Brooklyn Free Speech Radio
How We Move With Preston Miler

Brooklyn Free Speech Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2019 59:18


Tune in this week where I talk to Preston Miller. Choreographer, Coach, Director of Digital Media Initiative at Gibneyabout life transitions! Rest in Power Sandra Bland. We talk about the talents we secretly water as we work towardslarger goals. We talk about what happens when it really isn't meant for you. And so much more. May this inspire you tokeep moving during Mental Health Awareness Month. As always, Make It Live, Make it Breathe, Just Make it!

Brooklyn Free Speech Radio
We Makin It: Full-Time Part-Time Our Time With Shantel Prado

Brooklyn Free Speech Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2019 55:55


This week I sit down with Shantel Prado, a Dancer, Maker, and the Manger of the Digital Media Initiative at GibneyDance. Is money a tool? Was full-time an opportunity for her plan ahead? Are we both tired of all it? Tune in to find outon this week's episode of We Makin It. Always remember to make it live...make it breathe...you just gotta make it!

We Makin It
Full-Time Part Time All The Time with Shantel Prado

We Makin It

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2019 52:50


Tune this week to my continued conversation about working full-time in addition to an artistic practice with special guest Shantel Prado! Dancer, Maker and Manger of the Digital Media Initiative at Gibney! Is money a tool or is it just plain evil? Did she take full-time to get ahead? Are we just trying to be summer time fine? Find out on this week's episode. As always make it live...make it breathe...just make it! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

The Media Show
Liddiment and Hastings leave the Trust; Women in the media; Mirror complaint

The Media Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2014 28:06


Two of the founding members of the BBC Trust leave their position this week. David Liddiment and Alison Hastings have seen the governing body through some tough times over the last few years, dealing with upsets like Savile, executive pay and the collapse of the Digital Media Initiative. Steve Hewlett talks to them about the challenges, dilemmas, and their views on the future of what some have described as a discredited arm of the organisation.The House of Lords heard evidence this week about the representation of women in news and current affairs broadcasting both on and off screen. A number of recent studies have indicated concern about of women in terms of employment, casting and participation. Steve Hewlett hears from two experts who gave evidence to the Inquiry - Suzanne Franks, Professor of Journalism at City University London and author of 'Women and Journalism' and Jane Martinson, Head of Media at the Guardian. Steve also hears from Dorothy Byrne, Head of News and Current Affairs at Channel 4.The Independent Press Standards Organisation (Ipso) says it's considering whether to continue with a full investigation into the Sunday Mirror for the sex sting carried out against MP Brooks Newmark, despite the complaint against the newspaper being dropped. It would be the first time that a press regulator has continued to investigate a complaint in the absence of a complainant, and could be a significant precedent. Steve talks to Jane Martinson, Head of Media at the Guardian, who has been following the story.Producer: Katy Takatsuki.

The Media Show
DMI project; Royal pictures; media ownership; journalists in Egypt

The Media Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2014 28:14


Former BBC director general Mark Thompson apologised to MPs this week for the failure of the £100m Digital Media Initiative. The project, that was meant to allow BBC staff to create, share and store content in a new digital system, was suspended in 2012. The DMI project is one of a series of controversies at the BBC that has prompted parliamentarians to grill former and current bosses. Steve Hewlett talks to the chair of the Commons Public Accounts Committee Margaret Hodge on why she hopes this is the last saga she'll have to investigate at the BBC.Long lens photographs of the Duchess of Cambridge getting off a plane en route to Mustique with Prince George have appeared on the cover of Hello! magazine. Some say the publication of the photos appears to be at odds with past objections to "private" photographs of members of the royal family taken in public places. So, under what circumstances can pictures of the Royals be published? Steve Hewlett discusses the issue with Max Cisotti, who runs the agency which sold the pictures to Hello!, royal correspondent Robert Jobson, and former palace press secretary Dickie Arbiter.Communications watchdog Ofcom should have the final say on issues of media ownership rather than the culture secretary. The House of Lords Communications Committee says the watchdog should also carry out regular reviews of the media landscape that would "set the context" for any future decisions. Lord Inglewood, the chair of the committee, joins Steve Hewlett to discuss the findings.And as protests in take place in Nairobi in support of detained Al-Jazeera correspondent Peter Greste, we speak to the broadcaster's head of newsgathering about the dangers now facing journalists in Egypt.Producer: Katy Takatsuki.

The Media Show
NFL in the UK; DMI failure; News UK; Sky results

The Media Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2014 28:16


Public spending watchdog the National Audit Office has criticised the BBC for "not having a sufficient grip" on a failed IT project which wasted almost one hundred million pounds. The Digital Media Initiative was abandoned in May last year. Guardian reporter Tara Conlan joins Steve with the latest details of the story.Britain's biggest pay-TV operator BSkyB is due to report its latest results tomorrow. For the past two years, Sky has attracted fewer new television customers and its facing increasing competition; rival BT recently spent nearly £2 billion on sports rights, while competitor Netflix offers dramas and films. Steve Hewlett discusses with analyst Claire Enders whether suggestions like moving into mobile are feasible to help it compete.It's the American Super Bowl final this weekend. The NFL's biggest night is one of the most watched sporting events in the world, and it brings in advertising revenues worth millions. In the UK, the final is shown on Sky and Channel 4 and the NFL says its fan base here is growing; there are even rumours that a London based team might be created. Chris Parsons, NFL's Vice President, International talks to Steve about breaking the UK market, and the league's vision for becoming a mainstream sport.Today sees the launch by News UK of a news academy for young journalists. Rupert Murdoch's company, which owns The Sun, The Times and The Sunday Times, is increasingly releasing press releases about carol services, charity events, and the like, to promote itself. Steve Hewlett ask Director of Communications Guto Harri whether this is part of a grand plan to reshape the public's perception of an organisation plighted by accusations of phone hacking.Presenter: Steve Hewlett Producer: Katy Takatsuki Editor: Andrew Smith.

Feedback
19/07/2013

Feedback

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2013 27:32


This week the BBC announced that the Today programme is to get a new presenter - a female one. Mishal Husain will join the Today line-up in the Autumn and, along with Sarah Montague, will take the ratio from 1 in 5 female to male presenters, to 2 in 6. Feedback listeners welcome the announcement. But it's not all jubilation. We hear reaction to the BBC's Annual Report. Some of it made for "grim reading" according to the DG Lord Hall. £5 million spent on three separate inquiries into the Jimmy Savile scandal, as well as £25 million paid out in severance payments, and £98 million lost on the failed Digital Media Initiative. Roger Bolton speaks to Lord Hennessy and asks whether his new Radio 4 series 'Reflections' is a bit too soft on his political interviewees. We explore the art of the political interview with a man who's met them all. And as outraged comments about The Archers' Matt and Lilian story that was only broadcast digitally continue to fill our postbag, we ask the boss of Digital Radio UK how easy and widespread digital listening really is. Finally - Operation Drop-out returns! It's time, once again, to call on the good men and women who so diligently wrote to us last year with their examples of interviews where dropped telephone lines, sub-standard digital connections, and woeful mobiles had disrupted their listening pleasure. Listeners spotted some telephonic trouble in the Today studio this week - but are Today the only culprits? We'll be putting questions to the technology department soon so consider yourself conscripted for the cause. Producer: Will Yates A Whistledown production for BBC Radio 4.

The Media Show
David Liddiment on BBC severance pay

The Media Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2013 28:31


The BBC Trust came in for strong criticism this week in a National Audit Office report on severance payments for senior BBC managers. Following this, Public Accounts Committee chairman Margaret Hodge MP said "There are real issues for the Trust - what are they there for but to protect licence-fee payers interests?" She added the Digital Media Initiative project, recently shut down at a cost of £100m, as another case where the governance structure appeared not to be working properly. Steve puts the case for reform to BBC Trustee David Liddiment.Channel 4 is to broadcast a film of a murder trial next week, the first UK case to be shown in almost 20 years. It comes as the government confirms that Appeal Court hearings may be televised from October, subject to restrictions. The director of C4's "The Murder Trial", Nick Holt, discusses the programme and the issues with Simon Bucks, associate editor, Sky News and Frances Gibb, legal correspondent of The Times. The programme will be shown on C4 on 9th July at 9pm.And Nick Robinson, BBC political editor, updates Steve on developments in the press regulation process. This follows confirmation that the industry's alternative Royal Charter will be considered next week by the Privy Council, some three months before the possible date for considering the charter approved by Parliament.Presenter: Steve Hewlett Producer: Simon Tillotson Editor: Andy Smith.