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Chinatown is Changing – Draft

https://medium.com/@elissaleung/chinatown-is-changing-e1de7635eada

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Zoo’s In a Post-Pandemic Era

https://medium.com/@justin.espinal1/zoos-in-a-post-pandemic-era-894a9d4d5efb

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Fire at the Orchard- Draft

https://medium.com/@andrade3252002/photo-essay-fire-at-the-orchard-2e496970f040

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Photo Essay on Lantern Flies

By Hyunji (Ashley) Kim

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Types of Teachers (Rough photo essay draft)

https://medium.com/@leonardmelnik/what-makes-a-teacher-good-or-bad-7f641a769954

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Rough Draft Photo Essay

https://medium.com/@juliacuttone8/cross-country-sees-potential-chip-in-the-near-future-c979f1abe23

Taking more pictures at their cross country meet on Sunday. I am waiting for interview with coach and player tomorrow. Once I have that it will be finalized.

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Photo Essay Rough Draft

https://medium.com/@joset224466/79c3abffb2e0

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Flash 16 Botik is Astoria’s newest edition to the vintage consignment market

https://medium.com/@andrianakourkoumelis/flash-16-botik-is-astorias-newest-edition-to-the-vintage-consignment-market-9b2a466e6053

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Fashion Amplified: A look inside the mind behind @cunyoutfits

Photo Essay Draft link:

https://medium.com/@samantha.sollitto/fashion-amplified-12a6d0b7c498

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Intro to Radio, Continued

Example of a clever host intro:

Need to release stress? Scream into Iceland’s abyss.

Great example of a local NYC story:

At this Brooklyn restaurant, you can get Korean food with a side of Russian history

Some radio stories reported by Baruch multimedia students last year:

Discussion: The Power of Voices and Speech Patterns

When we hear someone speak, what are the different things we pick up on? What are the things we assume about them?

“NPR Voice”

During a recent long car ride whose soundtrack was a medley of NPR podcasts, I noticed a verbal mannerism during scripted segments that appeared on just about every show. I’ve heard the same tic in countless speeches, TED talks and Moth StorySLAMS — anywhere that features semi-informal first-person narration.

If I could attempt to transcribe it, it sounds kind of like, y’know … this.

That is, in addition to looser language, the speaker generously employs pauses and, particularly at the end of sentences, emphatic inflection. (This is a separate issue from upspeak, the tendency to conclude statements with question marks?) A result is the suggestion of spontaneous speech and unadulterated emotion. The irony is that such presentations are highly rehearsed, with each caesura calculated and every syllable stressed in advance.

In literary circles, the practice of poets reciting verse in singsong registers and unnatural cadences is known, derogatorily, as “poet voice.” I propose calling this phenomenon “NPR voice” (which is distinct from the supple baritones we normally associate with radio voices).

Here’s an intro by Ira Glass: see what they mean?

Decoding identity on the air:

“He was hinting at the difficult balancing act reporters face in developing their on-air voice. It isn’t just a challenge of performance — and it’s not as simple as channeling some “authentic” voice into a microphone. It requires grappling with your identity and your writing process, along with history of your institution.”

Challenging the Whiteness of Public Radio

Does public radio sound too white? NPR itself tries to find out.

The reason the sound of your own voice makes you cringe

Why your voice IS a “podcast voice”

On accent bias in the industry, by Baruch’s own Gisele Regetao:

The Many Voices of Journalism

Podcast: Gisele Regatao on NPR’s accent bias

Common speech patterns in today’s world that everyone (men, too!) use all the time:

Upspeak

Vocal fry

“Like”

According to Ira Glass:

“…listeners have always complained about young women reporting on our show. They used to complain about reporters using the word “like” and about upspeak… But we don’t get many emails like that anymore. People who don’t like listening to young women on the radio have moved on to vocal fry.”

Why old men find young women’s voices so annoying

99% Invisible podcast responds to criticism about women’s voices

So all of this leads us to the question: How can we be intentional about how we use our voices to tell the best stories as effectively as possible?

Luckily, in radio/podcasting, speaking naturally is what we actually WANT. No one wants to listen to a robot, or someone who sounds like they’re reading.

How I learned to stop worrying and love my voice