Blogs at the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism

Posts Tagged ‘Stephen Bronner’

Dec. 6 – 12, 2008

December 15th, 2008 by Collin Orcutt

I know better than to let my lede get bogged down with sentimental mush about graduation, so let’s get straight to business:

  • Henry Stewart’s entertaining review of the not-so-entertaining (by his reckoning) revival of “All My Sons” was featured in The L Magazine.
  • Linnea Covington offered a somewhat more positive review of the new Nolita bistro Lulu in her piece for New York Press.
  • Jenni Avins profiled multi-talented artist Alex Kopps for Foam magazine.
  • Nicole Turso’s profile of a real Queens character – a kiddie entertainer who calls him The Balloonatic – made the Queens Courier.
  • Karina Ioffee also notched a byline in the Courier with her profile of a popular Jackson Heights sari tailor.
  • Collin Orcutt and Michael Preston proved the value of follow up with this video piece about a high school hoops standout’s decision to attend Villanova. The video was featured on sports reporter Adam Zagoria’s blog — as was the duo’s earlier profile of the athlete.
  • Ben Fractenberg’s opinion piece about the Internet, the Obama campaign and finding one’s self through a connection to others made The Huffington Post.

Our News Service was very busy this week:

  • Nicholas Martinez and Brian Winkowski offered a video piece about the fight to save Admirals’ Row in the old Brooklyn Navy Yard.
  • Nick Loomis and Jim Flood did a video on the revival of the growler – a vessel guaranteed to make for fresher and less expensive beer drinking.
  • Geneva Sands-Sadowitz gets down to the nitty gritty of urban composting in this video story.
  • Adeola Oladele’s latest video focuses on some immigrant grad students and what they want to see from the Obama Administration.
  • Jessica Wakeman found a Harlem jazz club with hot music – and a great backstory — in this video piece.
  • Joe Walker and Sophia Tewa profiled two young Brooklyn entrepreneurs who are recycling vinyl records into fashion accessories.
  • Caitlin Drexler got the story behind Commerce Bank’s now-you-see-it-now-you-don’t transformation into TD.
  • Stephen Bronner and Clark Merrefield obtained Margaret Truman’s FBI file for our latest I-Team special.
  • Valerie Lapinski chronicled the latest clash between Central Park horse carriage operators and animal rights activists in this Sounslides presentation.
  • In case you missed them, the final installments of this semester’s audio podcasts – Culture Shock, This Place Called Home and Health Pods — can be found here.

Okay, I promised not to lede with mawkish sentiment, but I didn’t say anything about ending with it.

I want to thank the member of the Class of ‘08 for their help in bringing the News Service to new heights, especially during this historic election year. Your energy, enthusiasm, dedication and hard work have been inspiring to me – and to the Class of ‘09, which is following your fine example.

Do not hesitate to call, email or visit any time I can be of help. If you want to drop by and just shoot the breeze, that’s fine, too – one of the great parts of working in a newsroom is when friends drop by.

So good luck and congrats to all – and keep those stories coming.

Nov. 22 – Dec. 5, 2008

December 7th, 2008 by Collin Orcutt

I took a week off from Clips of the Week – but our reporters didn’t rest. Here are some offerings from the past two weeks:

  • Rima Abdelkader scored a scoop with this interview with the victim of a suspected Election Night hate attack. Her piece appeared on the News Service, and is scheduled to be published by In Focus, a monthly newspaper based in Southern California.
  • Alana Rigal reported from the red carpet outside the Gotham Awards, and co-produced this video for the Daily News’ website.
  • Henry Stewart offers some off-beat holiday gift ideas in this fun piece for The L Magazine.
  • Francesa Levy has the lowdown on the most and least family friendly cities in the U.S. Check out her story and slideshow at Forbes.com.
  • I’m just catching up to this fine Marathon story Kristen Joy Watts wrote for Law Times about a group of runners from Toronto who call themselves the Fatboys Running Club.
  • Kate Lurie’s feature about a group of former prisoners who performed their off-Broadway show about life in a Manhattan half-way house for a grateful audience at the Greenhaven Correctional Facility merited full-page treatment in the Daily News.
  • Stephen Bronner shared a byline on this Daily News story about protests at Rent-a-Center outlets.
  • Matt Townsend contributed to this Daily News article about complaints over a new Burger King ad campaign.
  • The city’s efforts to push its new regulation mandating chain restaurants to post calorie counts was chronicled in this video by Aisha Al-Muslim and Mirva Lempiainen. Their story is featured on the News Service.
  • Cristiana Oliveira hit a Manhattan food pantry on Thanksgiving Eve, and found a huge line of folks waiting for turkeys and trimmings to take home. Her video made the News Service.
  • Kieran Meadows and H’Rina DeTroy reported on the effort to force building owners to provide parking for bicycles in this video piece for the News Service.
  • Mary Stachyra’s story and slideshow about the 75th anniversary of Prohibition’s end made the News Service.
  • Michael Preston and Collin Orcutt profiled an up-and-coming high school basketball star. Their video was picked up by sportcaster Adam Zagoria’s blog.
  • Sergey Kadinsky’s Flushing River photo essay as featured on the Forgotten New York website.
  • One of Candice Johnson’s Election Day photos made about.com.
  • Three of our recent podcasts – Culture Shock, HealthPods and This Place Called Home – were broadcast Dec. 1 on radio station WHCR.

Congrats to all – and keep ‘em coming!

Oct. 18 – 24, 2008

October 26th, 2008 by Collin Orcutt

Not surprisingly, there’s a strong election theme this week – a sign of much more to come. Here are some of our reporters’ latest pieces:

  • Rima Abdelkader’s story about the challenge foreign-language journalists are having translating “maverick,” “Joe Sixpack,” and other colloquial campaign phrases made Off The Bus. The article became our latest election piece to get big pickup, and drove a large amount of traffic to our News Service.
  • Maya J. Pope-Chappell wrote about Colin Powell’s endorsement of Barack Obama for the Amsterdam News. You’ll have to register to gain access to the site, but it’s well worth the effort.
  • Adeola Oladele profiled a Kenyan woman who can’t vote in the U.S. election, but is trying to make an impact by joining a Harlem-based group that traveled to Pennsylvania to register voters. Adeola’s broadcast piece can be found on the News Service.
  • Ria Julien and Sandra Roa exhibited great planning and timing with this News Service broadcast story in which they covered a swearing-in ceremony for naturalized U.S. citizens on Oct. 10 – just in time for the new Americans to make the New York voter registration deadline.
  • If you missed the live This Place Called Home podcast, produced by Tyler Mitter, Linnea Covington, and Celina Fang, you’ll find it here.
  • Just call Sergey Kadinsky Mr. Queens. He put a fun lede on this Queens Courier short about some teens’ sewer-diving misadventure. He wrote a piece for the Queens Tribune about a schoolyard reconstruction project – and he recently was profiled by the paper (by the Class of ‘07’s Joe Orovic). The Trib pieces aren’t on-line – I have copies in my office. Come on by for a look.
  • Karina Ioffee’s powerful story about the parents of a murder victim who attended the killer’s sentencing was featured in the Queens Chronicle.
  • Collin Orcutt played Friday afternoon quarterback, offering football predictions for the Men’s Fitness blog.
  • Matt Townsend scored a solo byline in the Daily News with his article about the return of the Concorde – as a museum piece.
  • Stephen Bronner contributed to a Daily News story about pedestrian fatalities in Brooklyn and Manhattan.
  • Barry Paddock covered a fire that killed a great-grandmother for the News.

Congrats to all – and keep ‘em coming.

September 13 – 19, 2008

September 28th, 2008 by Collin Orcutt

There’s no “I” in team — but there is one in “clip.” I’m not even sure exactly what I mean by that, but I happily noticed that teamwork played a role in some of this week’s work. Here’s a sampling:

  • Dan Macht found a great local angle to the story of the week (and likely beyond). He wrote a piece for Crain’s  New York Business about the impact Lehman Brothers’ fall could have on charities and foundations. Dan gave himself a head start: he began researching and pitched his article before the bankruptcy was official. Rosaleen Ortiz snapped an eerie nighttime photo of Lehman’s headquarters to go with Dan’s story.
  • Barry Paddock and Matt Townsend also worked the Lehman story, talking to shell-shocked employees for the Daily News.
  • Matt contributed to a local primary story package for City Hall that also included pieces by Joshua Cinelli and our Class of ‘07 pal Andrew Hawkins.
  • Francesca Levy shows — and tells — what kind of digs a million bucks will get you in cities around the world in this story/slideshow package she put together for Forbes.
  • Mathew Warren scored a solo byline and some prime real estate in the Times’ Metro Section with his fun takeout on circus and sideshow performers who bring their acts to clubs and private parties.
  • Walking along 41st Street just isn’t the same anymore. Valerie Lapinski captured that spirit and more in her radio story about the closing of “Rent.” Her piece was featured on WNYC.
  • Rebecca Harshbarger weaves some great information and images into her first-person piece for The New Vision about the Seven Wonders of Kampala.
  • Here are some amazing numbers: One man, 20 cannoli, six minutes. Megan McGibney hit Little Italy for this fun nypost.com video piece on the annual cannoli-eating contest
  • Sarah Trefethen witnessed lots of pie eating when she headed upstate to cover a boating festival. She focused, of course, on the local angle: The South Street Seaport Museum’s W.O. Decker took Tugboat of the Year honors. Her story and photo made Downtown Express.
  • On his first day out for the Daily News, Stephen Bronner covered a dramatic rescue story.
  • Speaking of the Daily News, Lee Hernandez scored a clip with his interview of actress Dania Ramirez, who spoke about the upcoming season of “Heroes.”

Congrats to all — and keep ‘em coming!

July 26 – August 8, 2008

August 13th, 2008 by Collin Orcutt

We’ve hit August, but they’re hardly the dog days for us. Here are some of the latest example of the Class of ’08’s fine work:

  • Rebecca Harshbarger contributed to this Washington Post A-1 story about abducted Ugandans. She’s also been writing many pieces for The New Vision, including this story about the apparent rising asthma rate in Uganda.
  • Claudia Cruz also got the wood this week, notching the front page of Diario Libre with her story about the grand opening of a Mets training camp in Boca Chica, where she met Dominican President Fernandez.
  • Francesca Levy made the BusinessWeek.com’s homepage with her timely story on lost luggage. Be sure to check out the accompanying slideshow.
  • Kate Lurie is everywhere these days, it seems. You’ll find some of her latest work on abcnews.com, marieclaire.com and in the Daily News.
  • Speaking of the Daily News, Allison Esposito helped the student reporters at Children’s Press Line assemble this story about the Sikh community’s battle again hate crimes.
  • Roisin O’Connor-Mcuinn has been very busy at Time Out New York. I love this piece about the rollgate at the Jay Street-Borough Hall Station. She answers a question I’ve had for years — but I never bothered to look into, now much to my chagrin.
  • Mathew Warren contributed to this New York Times subway story of another sort: the MetroCard machine foul-up that snagged thousands of credit card users.
  • Emily Mayer produced this fun nypost.com video with the grabber title, “Seven Days to Sex Appeal.”
  • Fritzie Andrade helped put together this lively nytimes.com video about a fledgling band promoter. It’s part of the ongoing “Breaking in” series.
  • Clark Merrefield takes a literary turn in this Point Reyes Light article: He interviewed new U.S. Poet Laureate Kay Ryan.
  • Also working hard on the West Coast is Shuka Kalantari, who interviewed an Iranian musician for KPFA radio. Check out Shuka’s blog for QUEST, a science- and environment-driven KQED multimedia series.
  • Danny Teigman found a sweet — or rather, sweets — story for Newsday: an Oyster Bay bakery that delivers desserts directly to customers’ docked boats.
  • Come up with your own headline for this one-of-kind bank robbery story Jessica Firger wrote for The Brooklyn Paper. She also contributed this more uplifting piece about a local Little League team headed to a top tournament in Puerto Rico.
  • Steve Pacer’s story about Canadian shoppers flooding Buffalo, spurred by the declining (U.S.) Dollar, has been picked up by central and northern New York radio station WRVO. You listen to his piece at the Public Radio Exchange . You’ll have to set up a free account — it’s quick and well worth the effort.
  • Fritzie Andrade helped produce a NYTimes.com video about the return of the Zeppelin (not Led Zeppelin — the German airship).
  • Mathew Warren shared the byline on this New York Times story about a fatal upper East Side fire.
  • Jessica Firger nicely turns some phrases in this Brooklyn Paper piece about how the owner of Debbie’s Reins, an equestrian shop in Gowanus, is riding off into the sunset.
  • Clark Merrefield’s latest article for the Point Reyes Light is the story of an anger management teacher with an alleged anger management problem.
  • Stephen Bronner has the scoop on the city’s newest Family Justice Center in this Queens Courier article. This was a story Stephen has been trying to snag for months. His persistence paid off: he became the first reporter to get a tour of the facility and to interview its director.
  • Dan Macht’s been contributing to The Telegraph’s political blog, and got to write about the much-talked-about Paris Hilton campaign video.
  • If Danny Teigman comes back sporting a tan, this story may have something to do with it: He wrote a major battle-of-the-beaches takeout for Newsday on how Long Island and New Jersey shore towns are vying for visitors.
  • Eliot Caroom, writing for abcnews.com/Nightline, profiled about a demographic group that’s getting hit harder than most by high gas prices: country folks with long commutes to city jobs.
  • Barry Paddock did a story about a mode of transportation that’s not oil dependent: he wrote a very sweet piece for the Daily News about some Queens kids headed for the national Soap Box Derby championships.
  • Allison Esposito helped the young reporters at Children’s Press Line put together a story for the Daily News about how Queens was excluded from a program that gives poor families vouchers to buy healthful foods at Greenmarkets.
  • Maureen Ker’s story about the “cosplay” phenomenon — youths massing in public dressed as anime characters — made am New York, along with a gallery of her photos. The piece has been picked up by fan sites and the Florida Sun-Sentinel’s website.
  • Carl Winfield wrote a news-you-can-use (but hopefully won’t have to) story for BusinessWeek.com about how to negotiate a severance package. You’ll find a companion video and story here. * Speaking of BusinessWeek.com, check out the video of Francesca Levy’s interview with the new dean of UC Berkeley’s business school.

Congrats to all — and keep ‘em coming!

July 5 – July 18, 2008

July 30th, 2008 by Collin Orcutt

Prescription for a steamy July day: Dress in loose clothes, drink plenty of liquids and check out these cool clips:

  • Barry Paddock made it into The Boss’ private suite (The Boss, in this case, meaning Steinbrenner — Springsteen doesn’t hit town until next week) as part of the Daily News’ All-Star coverage. But I’m partial to this very sweet story Barry wrote this week about a retiring postal worker.
  • High oil prices mean trouble for jelly-bean eaters. Carl Winfield explains in BusinessWeek.
  • Mathew Warren scored a solo byline in the Times with this story about the campaign to stop the “stop snitching” campaign.
  • Lots of proof this week that all news is local. Claudia Cruz covered a news conference by Dominican President Fernandez for Diario Libre — and found a New York angle involving Assembly Member Adriano Espaillat.
  • Clark Merrefield packed quite a bit of detail into this story about a vicious beating in Point Reyes, Calif.
  • Back on this coast, Stephen Bronner wrote a piece about convicted sex offenders living in Queens for the Queens Courier — and included a map.
  • Jessica Firger’s story in The Brooklyn Paper about a homeless man in Park Slope got some notice from authorities, who promised to help the man get his Social Security checks.
  • Danny Teigman wrote this very timely story for Newsday about steps being taken by Hempstead officials to battle the heat.
  • In our alumni corner, Kate Pastor interviewed Tiki Barber for an amNY story about how the former football star and other celebrities are doing public service announcements promoting affordable housing.
  • In our faculty corner, Prof. Trudy Lieberman took to our TV studio to host the debut edition of Talking Health, a new series of health-related Webcasts for journalists.

Feb. 23 – Feb. 29

February 29th, 2008 by Joe Filippazzo
  • Matt Townsend placed stories about Orchard Street’s struggles – and Hillary Clinton’s struggles – on the New York Observer’s website.
  • Loren Bonner followed up on the Victory Memorial Hospital closure saga for the Brooklyn Paper.
  • Linnea Covington also made the Brooklyn Paper with her profile of a local karaoke king.
  • Henry Stewart and Joe Filippazzo shared the front page of the Feb. 25 Brooklyn Daily Eagle with stories about Coney Island and Gerritsen Beach, respectively.
  • Stephen Bronner did a quick turnaround for amNY, covering a City Council hearing on a new wireless information system for cops and firefighters.
  • Cristina Alesci’s story about picking insurance policies made the Daily News’ Your Money section.
  • Barry Paddock also was busy for the Daily News, earning three contributor tags in one day, and sharing a byline on this murder story where he trounced the competition.
  • Two multimedia packages from Sandeep’s class, featuring some impressive teamwork, made the news service site: Lakshmi Gandhi, Christiana Oliveira and Dana Oliver combined to tell how 1,000 more fruit and vegetable carts are coming to city streets.
  • Linnea Covington, Dan Macht and Mellissa Seecharan teamed to cover a protest of a company that runs senior citizen housing in New York and around the nation.

Our alumni were hard at work, too:

Feb 16 – Feb 22, 2008

February 22nd, 2008 by Joe Filippazzo
  • Check out Dana Oliver’s story about Chinese New Year’s celebrations in Sunset Park. (PDF)
  • Daniel Macht and Rosaleen Ortiz put together a multi-media piece for Off The Bus on what some voters of the future (already gearing up for the 2020 election) are thinking about during the current campaign.
  • Joe Filippazzo’s neighborhood profile of St. Albans made amNY.
  • Lakshmi Gandhi’s guide to a podcast interview with author Manil Suri appeared on SAJA’s website.
  • Mathew Warren was part of the team that produced the New York Times’ front-page story on the arrest of a suspect in the slaying of an Upper East Side therapist.
  • Eliot Caroom’s story about a controversy over a composting toilet found a home in the Daily News.
  • Stephen Bronner joined Eliot in the News’ Bronx section with his story about a Valentine’s Day push to teach teens how to avoid abusive relationships.
  • Cristina Alesci pointed out how credit card companies aren’t following the fed’s led in cutting interest rates in this Daily News business section piece.

Our alumni also are going strong:

Feb 9 – Feb 15, 2008

February 15th, 2008 by Joe Filippazzo
  • AnnMarie Costella’s story about a Brooklyn do-gooder has a great lede. Check it out in the Bay News.
  • AnnMarie and Melissa Seecharan combined efforts on a companion video, which I’ve posted on the News Service site.
  • Stephen Bronner’s Jersey City profile made amNY.
  • Mathew Warren shared a byline on this Times pre-primary piece.
  • Barry Paddock contributed to the Daily News’ Giants victory hoopla.
  • Cristina Alesci scored a Daily News clip with this piece about a survey that sheds doubts on whether the Washington tax rebate plan will boost the economy.
  • Joining Cristina in Monday’s Daily News business section was alum Emily Stewart, whose piece on mutual funds with low investment minimums originated in Prof. Saunder’s class.
  • Sebastian Bednarski worked Fashion Week for the NY Post, producing this video.
  • Dmitry Kiper wrote about GodTube.com, a fast-growing video-sharing and social-networking site with Christian content for the Christian Science Monitor.