Blogs at the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism

Archive for the ‘General Information’ Category

The Reciprocity Foundation

March 16th, 2009 by Collin Orcutt

Click picture for slideshow

On the sixteenth floor of a lower Manhattan office building, in a rectangular room, on a tangerine wall, next to a gleaming white door, hangs a poster-sized piece of paper. Hand written in navy blue marker is the following quote: “Not only is another world possible, She is on her way. On a quiet day, I can hear her breathing.  -Arundhati Roy”

While few days in New York City-not even this relatively calm and overcast March morning-can be described as quiet, in this room, the small headquarters of the Reciprocity Foundation, you can still hear the breath of change. It is on the lips and in the words of Adam Bucko.

Bucko, 33, is one of the co-founders of the Reciprocity Foundation. It is an organization aimed at providing homeless and high risk youth with skills to not only exit the social service system, but also find careers in what he calls the Creative Industries—fields like new media, social entrepreneurship, design, marketing, and green economy.

“Our goal was not to just help them to become successful,” Bucko says in an even tempo, words tinged with a Polish accent, “but to turn them into change makers so they can go back to the shelters, the neighborhoods, mentor other kids, and create opportunities for their whole community.”

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Kwaku: The Chocolate Guy

March 16th, 2009 by

By Maya Pope-Chappell

Photo By Maya Pope-Chappell

Photo: Maya Pope-Chappell

Kwaku Opoku Sarpong-Agyeman, 24 sits at his computer looking at complicated line graphs.  He’s going over data from a survey he created that tests responders love of rich and creamy premium chocolates.

Sarpong-Agyeman is an Assistant Research Executive at a brand consulting company in midtown Manhattan.  His job is to make recommendations to mint and chocolate brands based on findings from online surveys, which asks responders to rate chocolates based on things like taste, packaging and perceptions of the chocolate.

His main client now is Ferrero, which makes Ferrero Rocher chocolates and Tic Tac’s.  Just before the new Tic Tac Chill hit stores, he received a box full of the new cherry and mint flavors.  He shared them with his friends and asked them what they thought of the taste and the packaging.  He also tried a few for himself.
“Most people liked the red one because it tasted more like candy,” Sarpong-Agyeman said.

In order to make good recommendations, not only does Sarpong-Agyeman have to taste the product, he has to try out the competition.

“When looking at competitors it’s kinda like a football team.  You have to scout what the other players are doing.”

Competitors of Ferrero Rocher include premium chocolate brands like Godiva Chocolatier and Lindt.  Sarpong-Agyeman has visited multiple premium chocolate boutiques in New York City and New Jersey to gauge the brand and to taste the chocolates.

So what makes a good chocolate?  “Survey’s have proven that it’s about the taste.  It’s gotta make that tummy feel yummy.”

The Diamond District

March 13th, 2009 by Alana Rigal

  Take a look into New York City’s world of diamonds.

Secret Science Club: March 4th, 2009

March 13th, 2009 by Xiomara Martinez-White

Live Blog: Obama’s Not Quite State of the Union Address

February 24th, 2009 by Michael Preston

9:03 p.m. Just tuning in… big applause for Justice Ginsberg, just back from surgery for her cancer

9:04 First Lady Michelle Obama enters to solid applause, gives some love to Joe Biden, a solider who has joined them in the gallery and waves to the crowd

9:05 The cabinet enters. Hillary! Geithner! Salazar with no cowboy hat! Gates! I’m always amazed at how much the beginning of these speeches resembles the announcing of a starting line up for a basketball game. We need Chicago Bulls announcer Ray Clay and “Sirius” from the Alan Parsons Project.

Rahmbo! Orszag! Susan Rice! Jim Jones!

9:10 Obama can be seen in the background. “Madame Speaker! The President of the United States!”

Obama’s all smiles, shaking hands, looking loose. Reid and Hoyer are in tow, as are Boehner and McConnell.

Obama has his movie star vibe on. Spreading good love all around. Hugs to Jesse Jackson III and John Lewis. A nice aside with Orrin Hatch. Kiss to Hillary. Handshakes to the SCOTUS members and a hug to Justice Ginsberg.

On to the Joint Chiefs and now up to the podium to greet Biden and Pelosi.

Obama’s first words to the crowd and now it’s time to do the damn thing….

9:16 Obama presented by Pelosi to standing ovation.

9:17 Shout out to Michelle. She gets a standing O.

9:18  Right into the recession talk:

If you haven’t been personally affected by this recession, you probably know someone who has – a friend; a neighbor; a member of your family. You don’t need to hear another list of statistics to know that our economy is in crisis, because you live it every day. It’s the worry you wake up with and the source of sleepless nights. It’s the job you thought you’d retire from but now have lost; the business you built your dreams upon that’s now hanging by a thread; the college acceptance letter your child had to put back in the envelope. The impact of this recession is real, and it is everywhere.

The “we will recover” line gets the first speech standing O of the evening.

9:21 “Short term gains were prized over long term solutions”.

9:22 Bohner looks bored, Cantor looks alseep.

“It’s an agenda that begins with jobs.”

9:23: Judd Gregg cut shot. He looks dazed.

First semi-divided applause of the night, lots of GOP’ers sitting, but I think I saw a few up on their feet.

95% of Americans will receive a tax cut. April 1, baby!

Highlights extended unemployment benefits while McConnell looks like someone farted in his general vicinity.

McCain cut shot. He looks either full of himself or actually happy to be there.

9:25: “Nobody messes with Joe!”

9:27: Trying to calm any idea of a run on the banks. “Your money is secure”.

Addressing the frozen credit markets. “Credit has stopped flowing the way it should.”

A new lending fund to help with college and auto loans. Event getting some Reps up for that proposal.

Next, housing. Refinance now, bitches!

9:30 Bank bailout…full rise for holding banks accountable for lending practices. Cut shot to The Last Honest Man.

9:31 “Those days are over,” (no free money for banks)

9:33 “My job, our job, is to solve the problem.” “It’s not about helping banks, it’s about helping people.”

LOL on the cut shot of Roland Burris. Never have I seen a more “happy to be here” face.

9:34 Regulation reform.

9:35 As Obama moves to budget, cut shot to Orszag.

9:37 Running down the historical checklist of how government has addressed major periods of turmoil by fostering innovation leads to big applause for the G.I. Bill (nice cut to Shenseki).

Gov’t helped create conditions for capitalism to take off.

9:38 The priorities: Energy, Health Care and Education.

Congress: Send me a bill with a carbon cap and renewable energy financing. Promises $15 billion for renewable energy.

“The nation that invented the automobile can not walk away from it.”

9:42 Health Care.

9:43 SCHIP gets loves from the Dems and a scattered few Republicans.

Money for cancer research gets applause. Big chunk of change going to be set aside for preventative care.

Affordable care is needed for everyone. Cut shot to Dick Luger giving some polite applause.

Bipartisan comm. on health care to meet next week. Call to action quote on health care:

I suffer no illusions that this will be an easy process. It will be hard. But I also know that nearly a century after Teddy Roosevelt first called for reform, the cost of our health care has weighed down our economy and the conscience of our nation long enough. So let there be no doubt: health care reform cannot wait, it must not wait, and it will not wait another year.

9:45 Education.

Competitive education must be made available to all children.

School reform…incentives for teacher performance. Expanded commitment to charter schools.

Asking Americans to commit to at least one year of post high school education, be it community college, 4 year university, or trade school.

2020: Ambitious goal: Highest percentage of college graduates in the world.

Hatch/Kennedy bill on public service. Cut shot to a very enthusiastic Rep. Patrick Kennedy.

9:51 Parental responsibility is key.

“We cannot pass on to them a debt we cannot pay.”

“I know we can get some consensus in here.” (laughs in the chamber)

9:52 Calls for eliminating no bid contracts, non-performing school programs, and payments to agribusiness. Also will cut funding for outdated defense spending.

Might be the read my lips line for Obama; no tax increases on families who make less than $250,000…better hope he can deliver. Here’s the passage:

But let me perfectly clear, because I know you’ll hear the same old claims that rolling back these tax breaks means a massive tax increase on the American people: if your family earns less than $250,000 a year, you will not see your taxes increased a single dime. I repeat: not one single dime. In fact, the recovery plan provides a tax cut – that’s right, a tax cut – for 95% of working families. And these checks are on the way.

9:56 Social Security and Medicare.

The war budgets are on the books officially.

9:57 McCain seems incredulent on calls to end the war as he whispers sweet nothings in Susan Collins’ ear.

9:59 Raise pay and expand health care to active and retired service

10:00 Closing of Gitmo. “Living our values doesn’t make us weaker. It makes us stronger.”

“The United States of America does not torture.” Standing O from the entire chamber.

10:04 Applause for Florida bank exec who cashed out his stake and repaid to all of his former employees.

10:06 Nice story about the student from South Carolina. “We are not quitters”.

10:07 The full close:

“These words and these stories tell us something about the spirit of the people who sent us here. They tell us that even in the most trying times, amid the most difficult circumstances, there is a generosity, a resilience, a decency, and a determination that perseveres; a willingness to take responsibility for our future and for posterity.

Their resolve must be our inspiration. Their concerns must be our cause. And we must show them and all our people that we are equal to the task before us.

I know that we haven’t agreed on every issue thus far, and there are surely times in the future when we will part ways. But I also know that every American who is sitting here tonight loves this country and wants it to succeed. That must be the starting point for every debate we have in the coming months, and where we return after those debates are done. That is the foundation on which the American people expect us to build common ground.

And if we do – if we come together and lift this nation from the depths of this crisis; if we put our people back to work and restart the engine of our prosperity; if we confront without fear the challenges of our time and summon that enduring spirit of an America that does not quit, then someday years from now our children can tell their children that this was the time when we performed, in the words that are carved into this very chamber, “something worthy to be remembered.” Thank you, God Bless you, and may God Bless the United States of America.”

Full text of the speech is here.

(((((((bkstyle audiophile))))): Folkstreams.net

February 20th, 2009 by H'Rina DeTroy

For you aspiring docmakers, check out Folkstreams.net, where you can watch shorts of American Roots Cultures. 

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Six-Words on Love & Heartbreak

February 9th, 2009 by

By Maya Pope-Chappell

Co-Editor Larry Smith reads excerpts from Six-Word Memoirs on Love & Heartbreak

Co-Editor Larry Smith reads excerpts from Six-Word Memoirs on Love & Heartbreak

Thought 140 words on Twitter was limiting? Try writing your story of love and heartbreak in six-words. Smith Magazine–an online magazine that focuses on personal narratives-presented the newest of the “Six-Word Memoirs” series, “Six-Word Memoirs on Love and Heartbreak.”

Though some of the books pages are graced by famous names like Mark Ecko, Janice Dickerson, and Dr. Drew Pinsky, the bulk of contributors are “obscures” which refer to readers of the magazine who post their own memoirs on the site.  In fact, the book has 800 total contributors, the most of any book.

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Ruby Dee’s Family First

February 7th, 2009 by Jessica C. Wakeman

8:15 The Arts Westchester previously known as the Westchester Arts Council presented “Family First” in celebration of Black History Month.

The arts council’s grand ballroom and gallery is a converted bank vault, tonight it is again transformed, this time into a theater for Ruby Dee’s talented family to preform monologues, spoken word poetry, blues and jazz.

The stage is set up like a living room with couches and comfortable arm chairs and a coffee table adorned with flowers. The stage wall is covered by a bulletin board with family photos and letters. It looks like the family’s own refrigerator commemorating the family’s achievements.

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Winter Jam 2009

February 7th, 2009 by Jeanmarie Evelly


Today, you don’t have to leave New York City to hit the slopes. The Department of Parks and Recreation has teamed up with Aura 360 to bring you the 4th annual Winter Jam. The festival brings all kinds of winter fun to the city—snowboarding, sledding, snowshoeing–you name it. Previously held in Central Park, this year the event is hitting the Lower East Side at the newly renovated East River Park.

12:00 pm I arrive at the entrance to East River Park, at Houston St and FDR Drive. The place is packed and there’s a long line to get in. The event is also being sponsored by Red Bull, which built this enormous snowboarding ramp—its “snowscraper,” that stands 9 stories high, and it’s the first thing I see.

On Thursday night, Winter Jam kicked off early with a competition between 16 of the world’s best snowboarders—including Olympians Shaun White and Travis Rice. The surprise winner was Shayne Pospisil, a 23-year-old boarder form New Jersey who took home the $50,000 prize. You can watch videos from the event here.

12:35 pm Pride of New York, a group that advocates for locally grown and produced foods, offering delicious New York goodies in the Winter Jam “warming hut.” I sample some homemade potato chips from Martin Sidor Farms on Mattituck, Long Island. The beautiful apples you see here are courtesy of Red Jacket Farms in Waterloo, NY.

 

12:40 pm Near the entrance, the festival features a snow flume that you can slide down (they provide the sleds). You have to register and sign a waiver, saying if you break a limb or two, the city’s not responsible. Sign ups are open until 3:30 pm.

1:10 pm The moment we’ve all been waiting for is here-when the snowboarders who qualified go down that giant crazy ramp. First boarder is up. He flies down the ramp and makes the jump–only to miss the other side. The crowd gasps. He’s not hurt though, no worries!

1:20 pm A few more boarders give it a try but don’t have enough momentum to make the jump–they don’t even go off the ramp, to the disappointment of the crowd. There are a few “boos” and the man standing next to me yells, “that was lame!” before heading off in another direction.

1:25 pm The sun just came out, to the delight of everyone present. But more boarders keep failing to make the ramp jump, and everyone agrees that it’s because it’s too warm and the snow is getting sticky.

1:35 pm Victory! A boarder finally makes the leap. He even does some fancy footwork mid-air. The crowd cheers.

1:41 pm I strike up a conversation with Greg Packer, who came out from Huntington, Long Island to watch the festivities. “I came out to see the snowboarders and the sled riders, and just to see the wintery sights,” he tells me. Packer came out to the event last year at Central Park, but insists that this year is better. “We have everything in New York,” he says. Everything, that is, except somewhere the ski. “And now we have it,” he adds. 

1:45 pm The crowd goes crazy over a surprise visit from Mayor Bloomberg. My best friend is one of his assistants, so I was given a heads up–and even got to met him, albeit briefly. He gives a quick speech to the crowd before heading off. My friend tells me he snowboards. I somehow can’t picture this.

2:44 pm A woman in a red ski jacket is handing out flyers for Copper Mountain, a ski resort in Denver, CO. Apparantly, the company is campaigning for a national snow day–a national holiday where kids get off from school to ski and play in the snow. You can sign their petition here.

3:55 pm The crowd is starting to dwindle, and my feet are pretty numb by now. If you missed Winter Jam, you can still celebrate at East River Park later this month. From February 16th-22nd (vacation week for New York Public Schools) the park will still offer free sledding and snowboarding lessons.

 

 

Jammin’ Out- Winter Jam 2009

February 7th, 2009 by Alana Rigal

Winter Jam 2009. This year, East River Park was home to sledding and snowboarding competitions, a snow-sculpture contest, an ice-climbing wall, live music, and much more.

Winter Jam 2009

Winter Jam 2009

The East River Park was packed. Upon entering at about 1:45 pm, I ran into Mayor Bloomberg. He seemed happy enough, and walking into the park to Maroon 5’s “This Love” as I unzipped my jacket and turned my face to the sun, I could understand why.

For New Yorkers and anyone who knows the cost of living in the City, this event is ideal. Winter fun without the stress of how large the hole in our wallets is going to be afterwards. Free hot apple cider, and fresh red apples were handed out. I sipped the sweet cider and joined hundreds of other people to watch Shaun White, a professional snowboarder, ski down a 70 foot snow flume.

70-feet tall snow flume

70-feet tall snow flume

The Sky Riders are men jumping on trampolines and doing flips in the air. I squeezed my way through the crowd, and joined people shoulder to shoulder to take pictures of these impressive acrobats. The East River sparkled, and I overheard people saying the same thing I was thinking, “I can’t believe this day in February!”

The Sky Riders

The Sky Riders

The event is sponsored by hip-hop radio station Hot 97, the Metro paper, and the Lower East Side Ecology Center, among many others.

Winter Jam is a perfect event for adults with young children. I was rather disappointed when I was ushered out with everyone as the event ended at 4 pm. Many people told me they had just found out about Winter Jam, and were excited to come next year. Last year’s event was in Central Park, and although I find Central Park to be a beautiful escape from busy city life, East River Park proved to be a success. A cool air coming off the river, and an unobstructed view of the sky made Winter Jam 2009 perfect.