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Author Archives: elizabeth griffin
Posts: 7 (archived below)
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News Story
The justice department has seized the phone record of the AP press and its reporters. AP says that this violated their first amendment right to free speech and impedes their process for gathering news. They say that the phone records can reveal anonymous sources and other information that they have gathered. The government is citing national security as its excuse.
I think this story is important because it is undisputed that journalists and news organizations are a check on government and corporations. Where their tools for delivering the news to the public be seized, we would no longer have access to information. The fact that the government always uses “national security” as an excuse has become a pattern that will filter the news we receive and will allow the government no accountability for their actions.
You can read more about it with this link:
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Questions for Hilton Als for May
1)I noticed that you usually use some sort of narrative to ease into the introduction of your subject. How do you choose a moment in their life to lead your story with?
2) Your Jane Fonda profile and your Richard Pryor profile are both very long. When you write short pieces is it hard for you to condense your writing?
3) I notice that you strive to get to know your subjects very well. How much research do you do to find out about the kind of people they really are?
4) Do you feel like you psychoanalyze your subjects given that you mention how they feel often or do you get the impression that this is how they feel from interviews?
5) How do you choose the angle of your stories?
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Questions for Hilton Als
1)How much research do you do on your subjects before you talk to anyone?
2)How do you brainstorm or determine the structure of a story?
3)What type of things do you read?
4)Who inspires you?
5)What do you hope to achieve with your writing/what is your philosophy?
6) What are your future projects?
7) What would you say is one of your weaknesses when writing a story?
8)What are some of your thoughts (positive or negative) on the state of the news industry?
Posted in Questions for Hilton Als
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Trend Proposal: Harlem Shake
After the world exhausted the famous song Gangnam Style by Korean rapper Psy, it was swept away again by a new trendy dance called “Harlem Shake.” This new meme should not be confused by the real “Harlem Shake” dance portrayed in P-Diddy’s music video back in 2001. The dance involves a single person with people in the background not paying any attention to this individual. The dance starts and the individual (usually masked or in some type of costume) starts to dance to the song. The beat drops and the scene switches to the inattentive people in the background in the previous scene joining the individual in their version of a crazy dance (usually a stroke-like dance). Each video is 30 seconds long and has been uploaded to YouTube by colleges all over the world. Harvard med students have done and CUNY had its own unofficial “Harlem Shake” challenge with Baruch, Hunter and many other CUNY colleges uploading their own version.
As many of the fun things that Baruch does, the dance as a group activity was used to release stress. It would be interesting to investigate who came up with the idea. Who organized and advertised that they were going to do the dance and how the making of the dance was used to advertise the new major at Baruch: Digital Marketing.
As possible sources I could interview the maker of the advertisement, the person who organized the dance and the students who participated as well as members of the Undergraduate Student Government who are in charge of organizing events like these.
Posted in Conflict Story
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Place: Beth Hamedrash Hagadol
Tucked between a co-op for senior citizens and a parking lot is a synagogue that at first glance looks strangely out of place. No one comes in or out. It is as if it does not exist as people walk right past it without looking twice, heading two blocks up for the livelier atmosphere on Delancey Street on the Lower East Side.
The Synagogue, Beth Hamedrash Hagadol, has the most vibrant history in the Lower East Side and is still standing because it is a city landmark. The building has been there since the early 1800’s, originally a Baptist church with impressive Christian art on the glass windows that were taken out after it became a synagogue. Inside there are high ceilings, seats in beautiful oak that complement the gold accents inside the once impressive synagogue. Today it is the ghost building of the neighborhood. The synagogue closed in 2007 after a series of storms in the late 90’s that caused a lot of damage to the building, making it inhabitable.
It is estimated that 3.5 million dollars is needed to repair the building, but Rabbi Mendl Greenbaum, The current owner of the building, wants to work with developers and make this New York City Landmark a condominium. The synagogue is more than a beautiful building. It is part of Lower East Side history, a witness of the German and Jewish immigrants that are such an ingrained part of the neighborhood and always will be.
Many organizations such as the Lower East Side Jewish Conservancy have tried to raise money to renovate the building and are outraged at the bid to destroy the building. Thus, people from the conservancy would be good sources to talk to, as well as the Jewish people in the Lower East Side who used to attend the synagogue and the Rabbi.
Factiva:
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Person Profile:Diem Boyd
Diem Boyd is the leader of the L.E.S Dwellers, an organization dedicated to stopping liquor licenses from being given out to establishments in the Lower East Side. During the day she is a hard working single mom and the rest of the time she fights for peace and quiet for her community.
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