﻿<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:itunes="http://www.itunes.com/dtds/podcast-1.0.dtd" xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/"><channel><title>ColumbiaJournalism | Blog Talk Radio Feed</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism</link><description>Webcasts and conversations from Columbia Journalism School in NYC.</description><language>en</language><copyright>2008 BlogTalkRadio.com. All Rights Reserved.</copyright><pubDate>Mon, 06 Jul 2009 20:00:00 GMT</pubDate><lastBuildDate>Fri, 01 May 2009 02:00:00 GMT</lastBuildDate><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">News</category><generator>EZ Rss 0.1</generator><image><url>http://www.blogtalkradio.com/pics/hostpics/7726cd05-61eb-4dbe-a1d2-62bef4c5c328jschoolsign2.jpg</url><title>ColumbiaJournalism | Blog Talk Radio Feed</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism</link><description>Webcasts and conversations from Columbia Journalism School in NYC.</description></image><itunes:owner><itunes:email>feeds@blogtalkradio.com</itunes:email><itunes:name>BlogTalkRadio.com</itunes:name></itunes:owner><itunes:keywords>BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:image href="http://www.blogtalkradio.com/pics/hostpics/7726cd05-61eb-4dbe-a1d2-62bef4c5c328jschoolsign2.jpg" /><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:category text="News &amp; Politics" /><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:subtitle>Webcasts and conversations from Columbia Journalism School in NYC.</itunes:subtitle><item><title>Career Services and Student Services at Columbia Journalism School - May 01,2009</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/05/01/Career-Services-and-Student-Services</link><description><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation about career services and student services/ student life at the J-school. SPEAKERS: Ernest Sotomayor, Asst. Dean for Career Services and Melanie Huff, Asst. Dean of Students. Call in with your questions or e-mail them to dos@jrn.columbia.edu. See our full lineup of webcasts: http://bit.ly/columbiawebcasts	

TIPS FROM DEAN SOTOMAYOR:
Prepping for Jschool: http://bit.ly/Zuivd
Getting started on your career planning: http://bit.ly/D4UsM
Who came to our Career Expo: http://bit.ly/hjDc1
Spring Calendar: http://bit.ly/wfAAb
Our internship policy: http://bit.ly/se9OV
<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/ernest-sotomayor/'>Ernest Sotomayor</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/ernest-sotomayor.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/ernest-sotomayor.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/melanie-huff/'>Melanie Huff</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/melanie-huff.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/melanie-huff.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>J-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/jobs-in-journalism/'>Jobs in Journalism</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/jobs-in-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/jobs-in-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation about career services and student services/ student life at the J-school. SPEAKERS: Ernest Sotomayor, Asst. Dean for Career Services and Melanie Huff, Asst. Dean of Students. Call in with your questions or e-mail them to dos@jrn.columbia.edu. See our full lineup of webcasts: http://bit.ly/columbiawebcasts	

TIPS FROM DEAN SOTOMAYOR:
Prepping for Jschool: http://bit.ly/Zuivd
Getting started on your career planning: http://bit.ly/D4UsM
Who came to our Career Expo: http://bit.ly/hjDc1
Spring Calendar: http://bit.ly/wfAAb
Our internship policy: http://bit.ly/se9OV
<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/ernest-sotomayor/'>Ernest Sotomayor</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/ernest-sotomayor.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/ernest-sotomayor.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/melanie-huff/'>Melanie Huff</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/melanie-huff.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/melanie-huff.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>J-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/jobs-in-journalism/'>Jobs in Journalism</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/jobs-in-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/jobs-in-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">News</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/05/01/Career-Services-and-Student-Services/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/05/01/Career-Services-and-Student-Services.mp3" length="10704898" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/05/01/Career-Services-and-Student-Services</guid><pubDate>Fri, 01 May 2009 02:00:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation about career services and student services/ student life at the J-school. SPEAKERS: Ernest Sotomayor, Asst. Dean for Career Services and Melanie Huff, Asst. Dean of Students. Call in with your questions or e-mail them to dos@jrn.columbia.edu. See our full lineup of webcasts: http://bit.ly/columbiawebcasts	

TIPS FROM DEAN SOTOMAYOR:
Prepping for Jschool: http://bit.ly/Zuivd
Getting started on your career planning: http://bit.ly/D4UsM
Who came to our Career Expo: http://bit.ly/hjDc1
Spring Calendar: http://bit.ly/wfAAb
Our internship policy: http://bit.ly/se9OV
</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:44:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/05/01/Career-Services-and-Student-Services.mp3" fileSize="10704898" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/05/01/Career-Services-and-Student-Services.wma" fileSize="10704898" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>Columbia Journalism School,Ernest Sotomayor,Melanie Huff,J-school,Jobs in Journalism,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>Career Services and Student Services at Columbia Journalism School</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>Jane Mayer &amp; George Packer in conversation - Apr 30,2009</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/30/Jane-Mayer-George-Packer-in-conversation</link><description><![CDATA[The J. Anthony Lukas Prize Project and the Columbia Journalism School present a conversation between celebrated New Yorker writers Jane Mayer and George Packer. Mayer's latest book, "The Dark Side: Inside Story of How the War on Terror Turned Into a War on American Ideals, won the 2009 J. Anthony Lukas Book Prize.  Packer, a former judge for the Lukas Book Prize, is the
author most recently of "The Assassin's Gate: America in Iraq." His new book, "Interesting Times: Writings from a Turbulent Decade" is coming out in fall 2009. Listen in as they discuss the art of narrative nonfiction, the state of writing today and much, much more. More about the prizes at LukasPrize.org<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/lukas-prize-project/'>Lukas Prize Project</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/lukas-prize-project.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/lukas-prize-project.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j.-anthony-lukas/'>J. Anthony Lukas</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j.-anthony-lukas.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j.-anthony-lukas.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/jane-mayer/'>Jane Mayer</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/jane-mayer.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/jane-mayer.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/george-packer/'>George Packer</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/george-packer.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/george-packer.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[The J. Anthony Lukas Prize Project and the Columbia Journalism School present a conversation between celebrated New Yorker writers Jane Mayer and George Packer. Mayer's latest book, "The Dark Side: Inside Story of How the War on Terror Turned Into a War on American Ideals, won the 2009 J. Anthony Lukas Book Prize.  Packer, a former judge for the Lukas Book Prize, is the
author most recently of "The Assassin's Gate: America in Iraq." His new book, "Interesting Times: Writings from a Turbulent Decade" is coming out in fall 2009. Listen in as they discuss the art of narrative nonfiction, the state of writing today and much, much more. More about the prizes at LukasPrize.org<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/lukas-prize-project/'>Lukas Prize Project</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/lukas-prize-project.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/lukas-prize-project.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j.-anthony-lukas/'>J. Anthony Lukas</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j.-anthony-lukas.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j.-anthony-lukas.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/jane-mayer/'>Jane Mayer</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/jane-mayer.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/jane-mayer.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/george-packer/'>George Packer</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/george-packer.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/george-packer.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">News</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/30/Jane-Mayer-George-Packer-in-conversation/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/30/Jane-Mayer-George-Packer-in-conversation.mp3" length="14044810" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/30/Jane-Mayer-George-Packer-in-conversation</guid><pubDate>Thu, 30 Apr 2009 13:30:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>The J. Anthony Lukas Prize Project and the Columbia Journalism School present a conversation between celebrated New Yorker writers Jane Mayer and George Packer. Mayer's latest book, "The Dark Side: Inside Story of How the War on Terror Turned Into a War on American Ideals, won the 2009 J. Anthony Lukas Book Prize.  Packer, a former judge for the Lukas Book Prize, is the
author most recently of "The Assassin's Gate: America in Iraq." His new book, "Interesting Times: Writings from a Turbulent Decade" is coming out in fall 2009. Listen in as they discuss the art of narrative nonfiction, the state of writing today and much, much more. More about the prizes at LukasPrize.org</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:58:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/30/Jane-Mayer-George-Packer-in-conversation.mp3" fileSize="14044810" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/30/Jane-Mayer-George-Packer-in-conversation.wma" fileSize="14044810" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>Lukas Prize Project,J. Anthony Lukas,Columbia Journalism School,Jane Mayer,George Packer,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>Jane Mayer &amp; George Packer in conversation</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>The International Experience at Columbia Journalism School - Apr 29,2009</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/29/The-International-Experience</link><description><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation about what the school is like for international students. SPEAKER: Prof. Josh Friedman, Director of International Programs. Call in with your questions or e-mail them to dos@jrn.columbia.edu See our full lineup of webcasts: http://bit.ly/columbiawebcasts	<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/josh-friedman/'>Josh Friedman</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/josh-friedman.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/josh-friedman.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>J-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/international-students/'>International students</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/international-students.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/international-students.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/studying-in-the-us/'>Studying in the US</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/studying-in-the-us.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/studying-in-the-us.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation about what the school is like for international students. SPEAKER: Prof. Josh Friedman, Director of International Programs. Call in with your questions or e-mail them to dos@jrn.columbia.edu See our full lineup of webcasts: http://bit.ly/columbiawebcasts	<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/josh-friedman/'>Josh Friedman</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/josh-friedman.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/josh-friedman.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>J-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/international-students/'>International students</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/international-students.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/international-students.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/studying-in-the-us/'>Studying in the US</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/studying-in-the-us.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/studying-in-the-us.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">News</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/29/The-International-Experience/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/29/The-International-Experience.mp3" length="14121505" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/29/The-International-Experience</guid><pubDate>Wed, 29 Apr 2009 13:00:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation about what the school is like for international students. SPEAKER: Prof. Josh Friedman, Director of International Programs. Call in with your questions or e-mail them to dos@jrn.columbia.edu See our full lineup of webcasts: http://bit.ly/columbiawebcasts	</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:58:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/29/The-International-Experience.mp3" fileSize="14121505" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/29/The-International-Experience.wma" fileSize="14121505" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>Columbia Journalism School,Josh Friedman,J-school,International students,Studying in the US,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>The International Experience at Columbia Journalism School</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>Financing Your J-school Education - Apr 28,2009</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/28/Financing-Your-J-school-Education</link><description><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation about financing your J-school education. SPEAKERS: Leon Braswell, Director of Admissions and Financial Aid; and Tarin Almanzar, Associate Director of Admissions and Financial Aid. Call in with your questions or e-mail them to dos@jrn.columbia.edu See our full lineup of webcasts: http://bit.ly/columbiawebcasts<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/leon-braswell/'>Leon Braswell</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/leon-braswell.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/leon-braswell.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/tarin-almanzar/'>Tarin Almanzar</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/tarin-almanzar.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/tarin-almanzar.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/graduate-school/'>Graduate School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/graduate-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/graduate-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>J-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation about financing your J-school education. SPEAKERS: Leon Braswell, Director of Admissions and Financial Aid; and Tarin Almanzar, Associate Director of Admissions and Financial Aid. Call in with your questions or e-mail them to dos@jrn.columbia.edu See our full lineup of webcasts: http://bit.ly/columbiawebcasts<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/leon-braswell/'>Leon Braswell</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/leon-braswell.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/leon-braswell.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/tarin-almanzar/'>Tarin Almanzar</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/tarin-almanzar.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/tarin-almanzar.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/graduate-school/'>Graduate School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/graduate-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/graduate-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>J-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">Education</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/28/Financing-Your-J-school-Education/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/28/Financing-Your-J-school-Education.mp3" length="10344199" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/28/Financing-Your-J-school-Education</guid><pubDate>Tue, 28 Apr 2009 16:30:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation about financing your J-school education. SPEAKERS: Leon Braswell, Director of Admissions and Financial Aid; and Tarin Almanzar, Associate Director of Admissions and Financial Aid. Call in with your questions or e-mail them to dos@jrn.columbia.edu See our full lineup of webcasts: http://bit.ly/columbiawebcasts</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:43:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/28/Financing-Your-J-school-Education.mp3" fileSize="10344199" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/28/Financing-Your-J-school-Education.wma" fileSize="10344199" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>Columbia Journalism School,Leon Braswell,Tarin Almanzar,Graduate School,J-school,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>Financing Your J-school Education</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>Columbia Journalism School's M.S. Program  - Apr 27,2009</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/27/The-MS-Program</link><description><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation about the school's Master of Science program. SPEAKERS: Prof. Bill Grueskin, Dean of Academic Affairs and Prof. Laura Muha, Asst. Dean for Academic Affairs. Call in with your questions or e-mail them to dos@jrn.columbia.edu See our full lineup of webcasts: http://bit.ly/columbiawebcasts<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/bill-grueskin/'>Bill Grueskin</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/bill-grueskin.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/bill-grueskin.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/laura-muha/'>Laura Muha</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/laura-muha.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/laura-muha.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>J-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/journalism-school/'>Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation about the school's Master of Science program. SPEAKERS: Prof. Bill Grueskin, Dean of Academic Affairs and Prof. Laura Muha, Asst. Dean for Academic Affairs. Call in with your questions or e-mail them to dos@jrn.columbia.edu See our full lineup of webcasts: http://bit.ly/columbiawebcasts<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/bill-grueskin/'>Bill Grueskin</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/bill-grueskin.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/bill-grueskin.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/laura-muha/'>Laura Muha</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/laura-muha.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/laura-muha.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>J-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/journalism-school/'>Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">News</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/27/The-MS-Program/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/27/The-MS-Program.mp3" length="14149927" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/27/The-MS-Program</guid><pubDate>Mon, 27 Apr 2009 16:30:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation about the school's Master of Science program. SPEAKERS: Prof. Bill Grueskin, Dean of Academic Affairs and Prof. Laura Muha, Asst. Dean for Academic Affairs. Call in with your questions or e-mail them to dos@jrn.columbia.edu See our full lineup of webcasts: http://bit.ly/columbiawebcasts</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:58:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/27/The-MS-Program.mp3" fileSize="14149927" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/27/The-MS-Program.wma" fileSize="14149927" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>Columbia Journalism School,Bill Grueskin,Laura Muha,J-school,Journalism School,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>Columbia Journalism School's M.S. Program </itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>The M.A. Program at Columbia Journalism School - Apr 24,2009</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/24/The-MA-Program-</link><description><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation about the school's Master of Arts program in specialized journalism (reporting about the arts, business, science, politics). SPEAKER: Prof. David Hajdu and students. Call in with your questions or e-mail them to dos@jrn.columbia.edu See our full lineup of webcasts: http://bit.ly/columbiawebcasts<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/david-hajdu/'>David Hajdu</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/david-hajdu.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/david-hajdu.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/catherine-shoichet/'>Catherine Shoichet</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/catherine-shoichet.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/catherine-shoichet.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/jeff-horowitz/'>Jeff Horowitz</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/jeff-horowitz.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/jeff-horowitz.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>j-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation about the school's Master of Arts program in specialized journalism (reporting about the arts, business, science, politics). SPEAKER: Prof. David Hajdu and students. Call in with your questions or e-mail them to dos@jrn.columbia.edu See our full lineup of webcasts: http://bit.ly/columbiawebcasts<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/david-hajdu/'>David Hajdu</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/david-hajdu.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/david-hajdu.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/catherine-shoichet/'>Catherine Shoichet</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/catherine-shoichet.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/catherine-shoichet.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/jeff-horowitz/'>Jeff Horowitz</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/jeff-horowitz.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/jeff-horowitz.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>j-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">News</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/24/The-MA-Program-/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/24/The-MA-Program-.mp3" length="14177512" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/24/The-MA-Program-</guid><pubDate>Fri, 24 Apr 2009 17:00:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation about the school's Master of Arts program in specialized journalism (reporting about the arts, business, science, politics). SPEAKER: Prof. David Hajdu and students. Call in with your questions or e-mail them to dos@jrn.columbia.edu See our full lineup of webcasts: http://bit.ly/columbiawebcasts</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:59:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/24/The-MA-Program-.mp3" fileSize="14177512" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/24/The-MA-Program-.wma" fileSize="14177512" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>Columbia Journalism School,David Hajdu,Catherine Shoichet,Jeff Horowitz,j-school,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>The M.A. Program at Columbia Journalism School</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>Pulitzer Prizes and the Changing Newspaper Landscape - Apr 22,2009</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/22/The-Pulitzer-Prizes</link><description><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents "Talking about the Pulitzer Prizes and the Changing Newspaper Landscape"
SPEAKER: Prof. Sig Gissler, administrator of the most influential prizes in journalism and member of the Columbia J-school faculty. See our full list of webcasts at http://bit.ly/columbiawebcasts<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/sig-gissler/'>Sig Gissler</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/sig-gissler.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/sig-gissler.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/pulitzer-prizes/'>Pulitzer Prizes</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/pulitzer-prizes.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/pulitzer-prizes.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/newspapers/'>newspapers</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/newspapers.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/newspapers.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-j-school/'>Columbia J-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents "Talking about the Pulitzer Prizes and the Changing Newspaper Landscape"
SPEAKER: Prof. Sig Gissler, administrator of the most influential prizes in journalism and member of the Columbia J-school faculty. See our full list of webcasts at http://bit.ly/columbiawebcasts<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/sig-gissler/'>Sig Gissler</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/sig-gissler.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/sig-gissler.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/pulitzer-prizes/'>Pulitzer Prizes</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/pulitzer-prizes.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/pulitzer-prizes.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/newspapers/'>newspapers</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/newspapers.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/newspapers.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-j-school/'>Columbia J-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">News</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/22/The-Pulitzer-Prizes/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/22/The-Pulitzer-Prizes.mp3" length="4307615" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/22/The-Pulitzer-Prizes</guid><pubDate>Wed, 22 Apr 2009 20:30:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Columbia Journalism School presents "Talking about the Pulitzer Prizes and the Changing Newspaper Landscape"
SPEAKER: Prof. Sig Gissler, administrator of the most influential prizes in journalism and member of the Columbia J-school faculty. See our full list of webcasts at http://bit.ly/columbiawebcasts</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:17:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/22/The-Pulitzer-Prizes.mp3" fileSize="4307615" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/22/The-Pulitzer-Prizes.wma" fileSize="4307615" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>Sig Gissler,Pulitzer Prizes,newspapers,Columbia J-school,Columbia Journalism School,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>Pulitzer Prizes and the Changing Newspaper Landscape</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>Digital Journalism at Columbia J-school - Apr 22,2009</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/22/Digital-Journalism-at-Columbia-J-school</link><description><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents "Digital Journalism at the J-school: What every student will learn." SPEAKERS: Prof. Duy Linh Tu, coordinator of the digital journalism program, along with Dave Mayers and Kenan Davis, 2009 Digital Media Fellow (all three are Columbia alums). They will describe in detail how new-media/online journalism is taught at the school (to students in all programs) and how changes in the curriculum will affect every student in the new academic year. See our full list of webcasts at http://bit.ly/columbiawebcasts<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/duy-linh-tu/'>Duy Linh Tu</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/duy-linh-tu.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/duy-linh-tu.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/digital-journalism/'>digital journalism</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/digital-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/digital-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/kenan-davis/'>Kenan Davis</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/kenan-davis.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/kenan-davis.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-j-school/'>Columbia J-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents "Digital Journalism at the J-school: What every student will learn." SPEAKERS: Prof. Duy Linh Tu, coordinator of the digital journalism program, along with Dave Mayers and Kenan Davis, 2009 Digital Media Fellow (all three are Columbia alums). They will describe in detail how new-media/online journalism is taught at the school (to students in all programs) and how changes in the curriculum will affect every student in the new academic year. See our full list of webcasts at http://bit.ly/columbiawebcasts<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/duy-linh-tu/'>Duy Linh Tu</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/duy-linh-tu.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/duy-linh-tu.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/digital-journalism/'>digital journalism</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/digital-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/digital-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/kenan-davis/'>Kenan Davis</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/kenan-davis.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/kenan-davis.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-j-school/'>Columbia J-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">Internet</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/22/Digital-Journalism-at-Columbia-J-school/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/22/Digital-Journalism-at-Columbia-J-school.mp3" length="13477639" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/22/Digital-Journalism-at-Columbia-J-school</guid><pubDate>Wed, 22 Apr 2009 16:00:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Columbia Journalism School presents "Digital Journalism at the J-school: What every student will learn." SPEAKERS: Prof. Duy Linh Tu, coordinator of the digital journalism program, along with Dave Mayers and Kenan Davis, 2009 Digital Media Fellow (all three are Columbia alums). They will describe in detail how new-media/online journalism is taught at the school (to students in all programs) and how changes in the curriculum will affect every student in the new academic year. See our full list of webcasts at http://bit.ly/columbiawebcasts</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:56:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/22/Digital-Journalism-at-Columbia-J-school.mp3" fileSize="13477639" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/22/Digital-Journalism-at-Columbia-J-school.wma" fileSize="13477639" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>Duy Linh Tu,digital journalism,Kenan Davis,Columbia J-school,Columbia Journalism School,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>Digital Journalism at Columbia J-school</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>Meet Dean Nicholas Lemann of Columbia Journalism School - Apr 20,2009</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/20/Nick-Lemann</link><description><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Nicholas Lemann, dean and New Yorker writer. He'll discuss the J-school, journalism today and much more. Call in with your questions or e-mail them to dos@jrn.columbia.edu See our full lineup of webcasts: http://bit.ly/columbiawebcasts<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/nicholas-lemann/'>Nicholas Lemann</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/nicholas-lemann.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/nicholas-lemann.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/journalism/'>Journalism</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/media/'>Media</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/media.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/media.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/nick-lemann/'>Nick Lemann</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/nick-lemann.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/nick-lemann.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Nicholas Lemann, dean and New Yorker writer. He'll discuss the J-school, journalism today and much more. Call in with your questions or e-mail them to dos@jrn.columbia.edu See our full lineup of webcasts: http://bit.ly/columbiawebcasts<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/nicholas-lemann/'>Nicholas Lemann</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/nicholas-lemann.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/nicholas-lemann.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/journalism/'>Journalism</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/media/'>Media</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/media.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/media.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/nick-lemann/'>Nick Lemann</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/nick-lemann.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/nick-lemann.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">News</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/20/Nick-Lemann/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/20/Nick-Lemann.mp3" length="10598110" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/20/Nick-Lemann</guid><pubDate>Mon, 20 Apr 2009 13:00:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Nicholas Lemann, dean and New Yorker writer. He'll discuss the J-school, journalism today and much more. Call in with your questions or e-mail them to dos@jrn.columbia.edu See our full lineup of webcasts: http://bit.ly/columbiawebcasts</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:44:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/20/Nick-Lemann.mp3" fileSize="10598110" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/04/20/Nick-Lemann.wma" fileSize="10598110" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>Columbia Journalism School,Nicholas Lemann,Journalism,Media,Nick Lemann,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>Meet Dean Nicholas Lemann of Columbia Journalism School</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>Helen Benedict, author of book and play about female American soldiers in Iraq - Mar 03,2009</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/03/03/Helen-Benedict-author-of-book-and-play-about-female-American-soldiers</link><description><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a discussion with Helen Bendict, a long-time member of the school's faculty and distinguished nonfiction writer and novelist. Her latest book is "The Lonely Soldier: The Private War of Women Serving in Iraq" (Beacon Press, April 2009) and she also has a play based on the book, "The Lonely Soldier Monologues (Women at War In Iraq)." She'll discuss her work, her career and her classes. Please join us. More on the book and the play at http://www.helenbenedict.com and http://www.lonelysoldierplay.com/
<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/helen-benedict/'>Helen Benedict</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/helen-benedict.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/helen-benedict.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/iraq/'>Iraq</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/iraq.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/iraq.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/female-soldiers/'>female soldiers</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/female-soldiers.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/female-soldiers.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/literary-nonfiction/'>literary nonfiction</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/literary-nonfiction.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/literary-nonfiction.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a discussion with Helen Bendict, a long-time member of the school's faculty and distinguished nonfiction writer and novelist. Her latest book is "The Lonely Soldier: The Private War of Women Serving in Iraq" (Beacon Press, April 2009) and she also has a play based on the book, "The Lonely Soldier Monologues (Women at War In Iraq)." She'll discuss her work, her career and her classes. Please join us. More on the book and the play at http://www.helenbenedict.com and http://www.lonelysoldierplay.com/
<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/helen-benedict/'>Helen Benedict</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/helen-benedict.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/helen-benedict.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/iraq/'>Iraq</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/iraq.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/iraq.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/female-soldiers/'>female soldiers</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/female-soldiers.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/female-soldiers.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/literary-nonfiction/'>literary nonfiction</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/literary-nonfiction.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/literary-nonfiction.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">News</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/03/03/Helen-Benedict-author-of-book-and-play-about-female-American-soldiers/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/03/03/Helen-Benedict-author-of-book-and-play-about-female-American-soldiers.mp3" length="13990266" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/03/03/Helen-Benedict-author-of-book-and-play-about-female-American-soldiers</guid><pubDate>Tue, 03 Mar 2009 17:30:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Columbia Journalism School presents a discussion with Helen Bendict, a long-time member of the school's faculty and distinguished nonfiction writer and novelist. Her latest book is "The Lonely Soldier: The Private War of Women Serving in Iraq" (Beacon Press, April 2009) and she also has a play based on the book, "The Lonely Soldier Monologues (Women at War In Iraq)." She'll discuss her work, her career and her classes. Please join us. More on the book and the play at http://www.helenbenedict.com and http://www.lonelysoldierplay.com/
</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:58:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/03/03/Helen-Benedict-author-of-book-and-play-about-female-American-soldiers.mp3" fileSize="13990266" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/03/03/Helen-Benedict-author-of-book-and-play-about-female-American-soldiers.wma" fileSize="13990266" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>Helen Benedict,Columbia Journalism School,Iraq,female soldiers,literary nonfiction,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>Helen Benedict, author of book and play about female American soldiers in Iraq</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>Launching Your Own Media Business - Feb 06,2009</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/02/06/Launching-Your-Own-Media-Business</link><description><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation about 
Launching Your Own Media Business: Tips and advice for the Changing Media Landscape

Speakers: Henry Dubroff, J'82 alum and Susan J. Marks, authors of "Battling Big Box: How Nimble Companies Can Out Maneuver Giant Competitors"

Using what they learned via Dubroff's media entrepreneurship experience and their brand-new book, our speakers will help journalists understand how they can be entrepreneurial and take charge of their careers in ways they hadn't imagined. The session will be filled with practical, actionable information and they will take your questions. Post your comments, and see resources, at http://bit.ly/dubroff<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/henry-dubroff/'>Henry Dubroff</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/henry-dubroff.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/henry-dubroff.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/susan-j.-marks/'>Susan J. Marks</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/susan-j.-marks.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/susan-j.-marks.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/media-startups/'>media startups</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/media-startups.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/media-startups.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/entrepreneurship/'>entrepreneurship</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/entrepreneurship.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/entrepreneurship.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation about 
Launching Your Own Media Business: Tips and advice for the Changing Media Landscape

Speakers: Henry Dubroff, J'82 alum and Susan J. Marks, authors of "Battling Big Box: How Nimble Companies Can Out Maneuver Giant Competitors"

Using what they learned via Dubroff's media entrepreneurship experience and their brand-new book, our speakers will help journalists understand how they can be entrepreneurial and take charge of their careers in ways they hadn't imagined. The session will be filled with practical, actionable information and they will take your questions. Post your comments, and see resources, at http://bit.ly/dubroff<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/henry-dubroff/'>Henry Dubroff</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/henry-dubroff.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/henry-dubroff.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/susan-j.-marks/'>Susan J. Marks</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/susan-j.-marks.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/susan-j.-marks.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/media-startups/'>media startups</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/media-startups.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/media-startups.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/entrepreneurship/'>entrepreneurship</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/entrepreneurship.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/entrepreneurship.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">Business</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/02/06/Launching-Your-Own-Media-Business/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/02/06/Launching-Your-Own-Media-Business.mp3" length="13955994" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/02/06/Launching-Your-Own-Media-Business</guid><pubDate>Fri, 06 Feb 2009 18:00:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation about 
Launching Your Own Media Business: Tips and advice for the Changing Media Landscape

Speakers: Henry Dubroff, J'82 alum and Susan J. Marks, authors of "Battling Big Box: How Nimble Companies Can Out Maneuver Giant Competitors"

Using what they learned via Dubroff's media entrepreneurship experience and their brand-new book, our speakers will help journalists understand how they can be entrepreneurial and take charge of their careers in ways they hadn't imagined. The session will be filled with practical, actionable information and they will take your questions. Post your comments, and see resources, at http://bit.ly/dubroff</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:58:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/02/06/Launching-Your-Own-Media-Business.mp3" fileSize="13955994" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/02/06/Launching-Your-Own-Media-Business.wma" fileSize="13955994" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>Henry Dubroff,Susan J. Marks,Columbia Journalism School,media startups,entrepreneurship,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>Launching Your Own Media Business</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>Prof. Ari Goldman, expert on religion reporting - Feb 04,2009</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/02/04/Ari-Goldman-expert-on-religion-reporting</link><description><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Prof. Ari Goldman, one of America's leading experts on religion journalism. He is a former New York Times and NY Daily News religion columnist and the author of several books on religion, including the bestselling "The Search for God at Harvard." He'll discuss his career, the state of religion reporting, his courses and more. Be sure to explore www.AriGoldman.com. Send questions to ss221[at]columbia.edu or join us live.<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/ari-goldman/'>Ari Goldman</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/ari-goldman.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/ari-goldman.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/religion-reporting/'>religion reporting</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/religion-reporting.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/religion-reporting.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/religion-journalism/'>religion journalism</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/religion-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/religion-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/search-for-god-at-harvard/'>search for god at harvard</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/search-for-god-at-harvard.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/search-for-god-at-harvard.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Prof. Ari Goldman, one of America's leading experts on religion journalism. He is a former New York Times and NY Daily News religion columnist and the author of several books on religion, including the bestselling "The Search for God at Harvard." He'll discuss his career, the state of religion reporting, his courses and more. Be sure to explore www.AriGoldman.com. Send questions to ss221[at]columbia.edu or join us live.<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/ari-goldman/'>Ari Goldman</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/ari-goldman.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/ari-goldman.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/religion-reporting/'>religion reporting</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/religion-reporting.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/religion-reporting.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/religion-journalism/'>religion journalism</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/religion-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/religion-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/search-for-god-at-harvard/'>search for god at harvard</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/search-for-god-at-harvard.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/search-for-god-at-harvard.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">Religion</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/02/04/Ari-Goldman-expert-on-religion-reporting/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/02/04/Ari-Goldman-expert-on-religion-reporting.mp3" length="14051288" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/02/04/Ari-Goldman-expert-on-religion-reporting</guid><pubDate>Wed, 04 Feb 2009 22:00:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Prof. Ari Goldman, one of America's leading experts on religion journalism. He is a former New York Times and NY Daily News religion columnist and the author of several books on religion, including the bestselling "The Search for God at Harvard." He'll discuss his career, the state of religion reporting, his courses and more. Be sure to explore www.AriGoldman.com. Send questions to ss221[at]columbia.edu or join us live.</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:58:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/02/04/Ari-Goldman-expert-on-religion-reporting.mp3" fileSize="14051288" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/02/04/Ari-Goldman-expert-on-religion-reporting.wma" fileSize="14051288" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>Ari Goldman,Columbia Journalism School,religion reporting,religion journalism,search for god at harvard,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>Prof. Ari Goldman, expert on religion reporting</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>LinkedIn for Journalists, or everything you wanted to know about LinkedIn, but were afraid to ask - Jan 23,2009</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/01/23/LinkedIn-for-Journalists</link><description><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a briefing on LinkedIn for Journalists - or, So you've Joined LinkedIn but have no idea how to use it well - or, Everything you wanted to know about LinkedIn, but were afraid to ask. Lots of journalists and other professionals join LinkedIn, but aren't using it as well as they can. Join LinkedIn experts (including an LI exec) for practical, easy-to-understand answers to questions such as:
* How can journalists use it in their day-to-day work?
* What are best practices for journalists?
* How can I use it as an effective job hunting tool?
Join us live or see our LinkedIn resources at http://snurl.com/linkedinjournos<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/linkedin/'>LinkedIn</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/linkedin.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/linkedin.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/jason-alba/'>Jason Alba</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/jason-alba.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/jason-alba.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/arik-hesseldahl/'>Arik Hesseldahl</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/arik-hesseldahl.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/arik-hesseldahl.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/kay-luo/'>Kay Luo</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/kay-luo.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/kay-luo.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a briefing on LinkedIn for Journalists - or, So you've Joined LinkedIn but have no idea how to use it well - or, Everything you wanted to know about LinkedIn, but were afraid to ask. Lots of journalists and other professionals join LinkedIn, but aren't using it as well as they can. Join LinkedIn experts (including an LI exec) for practical, easy-to-understand answers to questions such as:
* How can journalists use it in their day-to-day work?
* What are best practices for journalists?
* How can I use it as an effective job hunting tool?
Join us live or see our LinkedIn resources at http://snurl.com/linkedinjournos<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/linkedin/'>LinkedIn</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/linkedin.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/linkedin.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/jason-alba/'>Jason Alba</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/jason-alba.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/jason-alba.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/arik-hesseldahl/'>Arik Hesseldahl</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/arik-hesseldahl.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/arik-hesseldahl.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/kay-luo/'>Kay Luo</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/kay-luo.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/kay-luo.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">Internet</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/01/23/LinkedIn-for-Journalists/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/01/23/LinkedIn-for-Journalists.mp3" length="14282629" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/01/23/LinkedIn-for-Journalists</guid><pubDate>Fri, 23 Jan 2009 20:30:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Columbia Journalism School presents a briefing on LinkedIn for Journalists - or, So you've Joined LinkedIn but have no idea how to use it well - or, Everything you wanted to know about LinkedIn, but were afraid to ask. Lots of journalists and other professionals join LinkedIn, but aren't using it as well as they can. Join LinkedIn experts (including an LI exec) for practical, easy-to-understand answers to questions such as:
* How can journalists use it in their day-to-day work?
* What are best practices for journalists?
* How can I use it as an effective job hunting tool?
Join us live or see our LinkedIn resources at http://snurl.com/linkedinjournos</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:59:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/01/23/LinkedIn-for-Journalists.mp3" fileSize="14282629" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/01/23/LinkedIn-for-Journalists.wma" fileSize="14282629" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>LinkedIn,Jason Alba,Arik Hesseldahl,Kay Luo,Columbia Journalism School,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>LinkedIn for Journalists, or everything you wanted to know about LinkedIn, but were afraid to ask</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>Twitter for Journalists, or Everything You Ever Wanted to Know about Twitter, But Were Afraid to Ask - Jan 09,2009</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/01/09/Twitter-for-Journalists</link><description><![CDATA[[LOOKING FOR LINKEDIN BRIEFING? go to http://snurl.com/lijournos ]

Columbia Journalism School presents a briefing on Twitter. The  micro-blogging service, is popular with many journalists. We hear how it helped in covering the Mumbai attacks and an LA earthquake, and even helped free an American student from an Egyptian jail. But how can journalists use it in their day-to-day work? What are best practices for journalists? Whose work is worth, in Twitter terms, worth "following?" The answers to all of these questions via a webcast featuring several technology journalists and Twitter experts. Speakers include alums Arik Hesseldahl, BusinessWeek senior technology writer (@ahess247); Shel Israel, author of the forthcoming "Twitterville: Getting Closer to Customers During Tough Times" (@shelisrael); Daniel Terdiman, senior writer, CNET News.com (@greeterdan). MODERATOR: Sree Sreenivasan, Dean of Student Affairs and Columbia new media professor (@sreenet).  Post your questions/comments and see links to all these folks at http://bit.ly/twitterjournos

[LOOKING FOR LINKEDIN BRIEFING? go to http://snurl.com/lijournos ]<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/twitter/'>Twitter</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/twitter.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/twitter.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/journalists/'>Journalists</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/journalists.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/journalists.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/twitter-for-journalists/'>Twitter for Journalists</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/twitter-for-journalists.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/twitter-for-journalists.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/shel-israel/'>Shel Israel</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/shel-israel.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/shel-israel.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[[LOOKING FOR LINKEDIN BRIEFING? go to http://snurl.com/lijournos ]

Columbia Journalism School presents a briefing on Twitter. The  micro-blogging service, is popular with many journalists. We hear how it helped in covering the Mumbai attacks and an LA earthquake, and even helped free an American student from an Egyptian jail. But how can journalists use it in their day-to-day work? What are best practices for journalists? Whose work is worth, in Twitter terms, worth "following?" The answers to all of these questions via a webcast featuring several technology journalists and Twitter experts. Speakers include alums Arik Hesseldahl, BusinessWeek senior technology writer (@ahess247); Shel Israel, author of the forthcoming "Twitterville: Getting Closer to Customers During Tough Times" (@shelisrael); Daniel Terdiman, senior writer, CNET News.com (@greeterdan). MODERATOR: Sree Sreenivasan, Dean of Student Affairs and Columbia new media professor (@sreenet).  Post your questions/comments and see links to all these folks at http://bit.ly/twitterjournos

[LOOKING FOR LINKEDIN BRIEFING? go to http://snurl.com/lijournos ]<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/twitter/'>Twitter</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/twitter.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/twitter.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/journalists/'>Journalists</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/journalists.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/journalists.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/twitter-for-journalists/'>Twitter for Journalists</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/twitter-for-journalists.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/twitter-for-journalists.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/shel-israel/'>Shel Israel</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/shel-israel.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/shel-israel.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">Technology</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/01/09/Twitter-for-Journalists/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/01/09/Twitter-for-Journalists.mp3" length="21749261" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/01/09/Twitter-for-Journalists</guid><pubDate>Fri, 09 Jan 2009 18:00:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>[LOOKING FOR LINKEDIN BRIEFING? go to http://snurl.com/lijournos ]

Columbia Journalism School presents a briefing on Twitter. The  micro-blogging service, is popular with many journalists. We hear how it helped in covering the Mumbai attacks and an LA earthquake, and even helped free an American student from an Egyptian jail. But how can journalists use it in their day-to-day work? What are best practices for journalists? Whose work is worth, in Twitter terms, worth "following?" The answers to all of these questions via a webcast featuring several technology journalists and Twitter experts. Speakers include alums Arik Hesseldahl, BusinessWeek senior technology writer (@ahess247); Shel Israel, author of the forthcoming "Twitterville: Getting Closer to Customers During Tough Times" (@shelisrael); Daniel Terdiman, senior writer, CNET News.com (@greeterdan). MODERATOR: Sree Sreenivasan, Dean of Student Affairs and Columbia new media professor (@sreenet).  Post your questions/comments and see links to all these folks at http://bit.ly/twitterjournos

[LOOKING FOR LINKEDIN BRIEFING? go to http://snurl.com/lijournos ]</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>01:30:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/01/09/Twitter-for-Journalists.mp3" fileSize="21749261" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/01/09/Twitter-for-Journalists.wma" fileSize="21749261" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>Twitter,Columbia Journalism School,Journalists,Twitter for Journalists,Shel Israel,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>Twitter for Journalists, or Everything You Ever Wanted to Know about Twitter, But Were Afraid to Ask</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>Lydia Polgreen, NYT's West Africa bureau chief - Jan 07,2009</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/01/07/Lydia-Polgreen-NYTs-West-Africa-bureau-chief</link><description><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Lydia Polgreen, the
West Africa bureau chief of the New York Times and member of the Class of
2000. Polgreen, who is based in Dakar, Senegal, has won several awards for
her coverage of the region, including the George Polk Award for her
reporting in Darfur. She will soon be moving to South Asia as a NYT
correspondent. She'll discuss what it's like to be a foreign correspondent;
some of her major stories; and tips for those who want to become
international journalists.

See her archive of stories:
http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/p/lydia_polgreen/

Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast) or use the live chatroom during the webcast.<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism/'>Columbia Journalism</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-j-school/'>Columbia J-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>J-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/lydia-polgreen/'>Lydia Polgreen</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/lydia-polgreen.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/lydia-polgreen.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/west-africa/'>West Africa</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/west-africa.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/west-africa.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Lydia Polgreen, the
West Africa bureau chief of the New York Times and member of the Class of
2000. Polgreen, who is based in Dakar, Senegal, has won several awards for
her coverage of the region, including the George Polk Award for her
reporting in Darfur. She will soon be moving to South Asia as a NYT
correspondent. She'll discuss what it's like to be a foreign correspondent;
some of her major stories; and tips for those who want to become
international journalists.

See her archive of stories:
http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/p/lydia_polgreen/

Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast) or use the live chatroom during the webcast.<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism/'>Columbia Journalism</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-j-school/'>Columbia J-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>J-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/lydia-polgreen/'>Lydia Polgreen</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/lydia-polgreen.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/lydia-polgreen.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/west-africa/'>West Africa</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/west-africa.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/west-africa.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">News</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/01/07/Lydia-Polgreen-NYTs-West-Africa-bureau-chief/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/01/07/Lydia-Polgreen-NYTs-West-Africa-bureau-chief.mp3" length="13962054" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/01/07/Lydia-Polgreen-NYTs-West-Africa-bureau-chief</guid><pubDate>Wed, 07 Jan 2009 17:00:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Lydia Polgreen, the
West Africa bureau chief of the New York Times and member of the Class of
2000. Polgreen, who is based in Dakar, Senegal, has won several awards for
her coverage of the region, including the George Polk Award for her
reporting in Darfur. She will soon be moving to South Asia as a NYT
correspondent. She'll discuss what it's like to be a foreign correspondent;
some of her major stories; and tips for those who want to become
international journalists.

See her archive of stories:
http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/p/lydia_polgreen/

Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast) or use the live chatroom during the webcast.</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:58:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/01/07/Lydia-Polgreen-NYTs-West-Africa-bureau-chief.mp3" fileSize="13962054" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/01/07/Lydia-Polgreen-NYTs-West-Africa-bureau-chief.wma" fileSize="13962054" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>Columbia Journalism,Columbia J-school,J-school,Lydia Polgreen,West Africa,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>Lydia Polgreen, NYT's West Africa bureau chief</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>Prof. Marguerite Holloway, science journalism - Jan 05,2009</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/01/05/Prof-Marguerite-Holloway-science-journalism</link><description><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Prof. Marguerite
Holloway, Director of Science and Environmental Journalism. She will discuss
the M.A. program aimed at mid-career journalists, (and her specialization,
Science) and and why it's an ideal opportunity for experienced journalists
in the midst of the changing media landscape. She'll also talk about general
state of science journalism.
Her bio: http://bit.ly/aHYw

Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/marguerite-holloway/'>Marguerite Holloway</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/marguerite-holloway.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/marguerite-holloway.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>J-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/science-journalism/'>Science journalism</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/science-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/science-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/environmental-journalism/'>Environmental journalism</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/environmental-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/environmental-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Prof. Marguerite
Holloway, Director of Science and Environmental Journalism. She will discuss
the M.A. program aimed at mid-career journalists, (and her specialization,
Science) and and why it's an ideal opportunity for experienced journalists
in the midst of the changing media landscape. She'll also talk about general
state of science journalism.
Her bio: http://bit.ly/aHYw

Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/marguerite-holloway/'>Marguerite Holloway</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/marguerite-holloway.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/marguerite-holloway.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>J-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/science-journalism/'>Science journalism</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/science-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/science-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/environmental-journalism/'>Environmental journalism</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/environmental-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/environmental-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">News</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/01/05/Prof-Marguerite-Holloway-science-journalism/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/01/05/Prof-Marguerite-Holloway-science-journalism.mp3" length="11464748" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/01/05/Prof-Marguerite-Holloway-science-journalism</guid><pubDate>Mon, 05 Jan 2009 14:30:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Prof. Marguerite
Holloway, Director of Science and Environmental Journalism. She will discuss
the M.A. program aimed at mid-career journalists, (and her specialization,
Science) and and why it's an ideal opportunity for experienced journalists
in the midst of the changing media landscape. She'll also talk about general
state of science journalism.
Her bio: http://bit.ly/aHYw

Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:47:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/01/05/Prof-Marguerite-Holloway-science-journalism.mp3" fileSize="11464748" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2009/01/05/Prof-Marguerite-Holloway-science-journalism.wma" fileSize="11464748" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>Marguerite Holloway,Columbia Journalism School,J-school,Science journalism,Environmental journalism,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>Prof. Marguerite Holloway, science journalism</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>David McCormick + Lloyd Siegel, professors and NBC News professionals - Dec 11,2008</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/11/David-McCormick-Lloyd-Siegel-professors</link><description><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Professors David McCormick and Lloyd Siegel.

McCormick is vice president of Standards (NBC News). He has worked as a writer and producer for a handful of TV stations, as well as national assignment editor for NBC News; news director and bureau chief for WKYC-TV (Cleveland); producer for NBC Nightly News; manager and bureau chief for Frankfurt, London, New York, NBC News; special events producer for NBC News; and executive producer, broadcast standards, and NBC News Ombudsman.

Siegel is vice president of news partnerships for NBC News, coordinating editorial and promotional support from more than 200 NBC stations and broadcast groups for network newscasts, MSNBC on cable, and msnbc.com. Prior to that assignment, he worked as a reporter for WKYC/Cleveland and WRC/Washington, field producer in the NBC News Washington bureau, 6 pm producer for WRC, domestic news producer for NBC Nightly News, and executive producer of special broadcasts.<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/nbc-news/'>NBC News</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/nbc-news.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/nbc-news.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/tv-news/'>TV news</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/tv-news.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/tv-news.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Professors David McCormick and Lloyd Siegel.

McCormick is vice president of Standards (NBC News). He has worked as a writer and producer for a handful of TV stations, as well as national assignment editor for NBC News; news director and bureau chief for WKYC-TV (Cleveland); producer for NBC Nightly News; manager and bureau chief for Frankfurt, London, New York, NBC News; special events producer for NBC News; and executive producer, broadcast standards, and NBC News Ombudsman.

Siegel is vice president of news partnerships for NBC News, coordinating editorial and promotional support from more than 200 NBC stations and broadcast groups for network newscasts, MSNBC on cable, and msnbc.com. Prior to that assignment, he worked as a reporter for WKYC/Cleveland and WRC/Washington, field producer in the NBC News Washington bureau, 6 pm producer for WRC, domestic news producer for NBC Nightly News, and executive producer of special broadcasts.<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/nbc-news/'>NBC News</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/nbc-news.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/nbc-news.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/tv-news/'>TV news</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/tv-news.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/tv-news.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">News</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/11/David-McCormick-Lloyd-Siegel-professors/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/11/David-McCormick-Lloyd-Siegel-professors.mp3" length="10394981" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/11/David-McCormick-Lloyd-Siegel-professors</guid><pubDate>Thu, 11 Dec 2008 19:30:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Professors David McCormick and Lloyd Siegel.

McCormick is vice president of Standards (NBC News). He has worked as a writer and producer for a handful of TV stations, as well as national assignment editor for NBC News; news director and bureau chief for WKYC-TV (Cleveland); producer for NBC Nightly News; manager and bureau chief for Frankfurt, London, New York, NBC News; special events producer for NBC News; and executive producer, broadcast standards, and NBC News Ombudsman.

Siegel is vice president of news partnerships for NBC News, coordinating editorial and promotional support from more than 200 NBC stations and broadcast groups for network newscasts, MSNBC on cable, and msnbc.com. Prior to that assignment, he worked as a reporter for WKYC/Cleveland and WRC/Washington, field producer in the NBC News Washington bureau, 6 pm producer for WRC, domestic news producer for NBC Nightly News, and executive producer of special broadcasts.</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:43:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/11/David-McCormick-Lloyd-Siegel-professors.mp3" fileSize="10394981" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/11/David-McCormick-Lloyd-Siegel-professors.wma" fileSize="10394981" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>Columbia Journalism School,NBC News,TV news,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>David McCormick + Lloyd Siegel, professors and NBC News professionals</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>Dean Nicholas Lemann on the MA program - Dec 11,2008</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/11/Dean-Nicholas-Lemann-on-the-MA-program</link><description><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Nicholas Lemann, dean of the school and Henry R. Luce Professor. He has worked for several publications [among them The Washington Post, The Atlantic Monthly, and The New Yorker] and published five books. He will discuss the M.A. program (previous M.S. program discussion is in the archives at BlogTalkRadio.com/columbiajournalism) 

He'll discuss the M.A. program and why it's an ideal opportunity for experienced journalists in the midst of the changing media landscape. More on the program at www.journalism.columbia.edu/admissions

Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/nicholas-lemann/'>Nicholas Lemann</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/nicholas-lemann.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/nicholas-lemann.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-j-school/'>Columbia J-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/mid-career-journalists/'>mid-career journalists</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/mid-career-journalists.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/mid-career-journalists.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>j-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Nicholas Lemann, dean of the school and Henry R. Luce Professor. He has worked for several publications [among them The Washington Post, The Atlantic Monthly, and The New Yorker] and published five books. He will discuss the M.A. program (previous M.S. program discussion is in the archives at BlogTalkRadio.com/columbiajournalism) 

He'll discuss the M.A. program and why it's an ideal opportunity for experienced journalists in the midst of the changing media landscape. More on the program at www.journalism.columbia.edu/admissions

Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/nicholas-lemann/'>Nicholas Lemann</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/nicholas-lemann.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/nicholas-lemann.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-j-school/'>Columbia J-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/mid-career-journalists/'>mid-career journalists</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/mid-career-journalists.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/mid-career-journalists.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>j-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">News</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/11/Dean-Nicholas-Lemann-on-the-MA-program/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/11/Dean-Nicholas-Lemann-on-the-MA-program.mp3" length="7134691" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/11/Dean-Nicholas-Lemann-on-the-MA-program</guid><pubDate>Thu, 11 Dec 2008 14:30:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Nicholas Lemann, dean of the school and Henry R. Luce Professor. He has worked for several publications [among them The Washington Post, The Atlantic Monthly, and The New Yorker] and published five books. He will discuss the M.A. program (previous M.S. program discussion is in the archives at BlogTalkRadio.com/columbiajournalism) 

He'll discuss the M.A. program and why it's an ideal opportunity for experienced journalists in the midst of the changing media landscape. More on the program at www.journalism.columbia.edu/admissions

Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:29:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/11/Dean-Nicholas-Lemann-on-the-MA-program.mp3" fileSize="7134691" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/11/Dean-Nicholas-Lemann-on-the-MA-program.wma" fileSize="7134691" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>Nicholas Lemann,Columbia Journalism School,Columbia J-school,mid-career journalists,j-school,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>Dean Nicholas Lemann on the MA program</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>Victor Navasky, Director, Delacorte Center for Magazine Journalism - Dec 09,2008</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/09/Victor-Navasky-Director-Delacorte-Center-for-Magazine-Journalism</link><description><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Prof. Victor S. Navasky, who worked as an editor of The New York Times Magazine, where he also wrote a column, "In Cold Print" for The New York Times Book Review. Beginning in 1978, he was editor and then publisher of The Nation, America's oldest weekly magazine, where he is now Publisher Emeritus. He has freelanced for scores of magazines. He will discuss his career, his courses and much more.<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/victor-navasky/'>Victor Navasky</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/victor-navasky.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/victor-navasky.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/magazine-journalism/'>Magazine Journalism</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/magazine-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/magazine-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/the-nation/'>The Nation</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/the-nation.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/the-nation.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Prof. Victor S. Navasky, who worked as an editor of The New York Times Magazine, where he also wrote a column, "In Cold Print" for The New York Times Book Review. Beginning in 1978, he was editor and then publisher of The Nation, America's oldest weekly magazine, where he is now Publisher Emeritus. He has freelanced for scores of magazines. He will discuss his career, his courses and much more.<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/victor-navasky/'>Victor Navasky</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/victor-navasky.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/victor-navasky.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/magazine-journalism/'>Magazine Journalism</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/magazine-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/magazine-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/the-nation/'>The Nation</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/the-nation.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/the-nation.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">News</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/09/Victor-Navasky-Director-Delacorte-Center-for-Magazine-Journalism/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/09/Victor-Navasky-Director-Delacorte-Center-for-Magazine-Journalism.mp3" length="6666576" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/09/Victor-Navasky-Director-Delacorte-Center-for-Magazine-Journalism</guid><pubDate>Tue, 09 Dec 2008 14:00:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Prof. Victor S. Navasky, who worked as an editor of The New York Times Magazine, where he also wrote a column, "In Cold Print" for The New York Times Book Review. Beginning in 1978, he was editor and then publisher of The Nation, America's oldest weekly magazine, where he is now Publisher Emeritus. He has freelanced for scores of magazines. He will discuss his career, his courses and much more.</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:27:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/09/Victor-Navasky-Director-Delacorte-Center-for-Magazine-Journalism.mp3" fileSize="6666576" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/09/Victor-Navasky-Director-Delacorte-Center-for-Magazine-Journalism.wma" fileSize="6666576" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>Victor Navasky,Columbia Journalism School,Magazine Journalism,The Nation,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>Victor Navasky, Director, Delacorte Center for Magazine Journalism</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>Christopher Lehmann-Haupt, books expert - Dec 05,2008</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/05/Christopher-Lehmann-Haupt-books-expert-1</link><description><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Prof. Christopher Lehmann-Haupt, who has worked in the field of books all of his professional career. He has edited for Holt, Rinehart & Winston and The Dial Press, from where he moved in 1965 to become an editor on the Sunday New York Times Book Review. He's edited books by authors including Norman Mailer, Joanne Greenberg and David Irving. In 1969, he was appointed senior Daily Book Reviewer for The New York Times, a position he held until 2001, when he became chief obituary writer for The Times until his retirement in 2006. From 1965 until 2000, he wrote more than 4,000 book reviews and articles, on every subject from trout fishing to Persian archaeology. He will discuss his career, his courses and much more.

He is also Editorial Director of Delphinium Books, a small publishing house concentrating on literary fiction. <BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/christopher-lehmann-haupt/'>Christopher Lehmann-Haupt</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/christopher-lehmann-haupt.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/christopher-lehmann-haupt.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/books/'>books</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/books.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/books.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/new-york-times/'>new york times</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/new-york-times.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/new-york-times.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Prof. Christopher Lehmann-Haupt, who has worked in the field of books all of his professional career. He has edited for Holt, Rinehart & Winston and The Dial Press, from where he moved in 1965 to become an editor on the Sunday New York Times Book Review. He's edited books by authors including Norman Mailer, Joanne Greenberg and David Irving. In 1969, he was appointed senior Daily Book Reviewer for The New York Times, a position he held until 2001, when he became chief obituary writer for The Times until his retirement in 2006. From 1965 until 2000, he wrote more than 4,000 book reviews and articles, on every subject from trout fishing to Persian archaeology. He will discuss his career, his courses and much more.

He is also Editorial Director of Delphinium Books, a small publishing house concentrating on literary fiction. <BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/christopher-lehmann-haupt/'>Christopher Lehmann-Haupt</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/christopher-lehmann-haupt.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/christopher-lehmann-haupt.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/books/'>books</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/books.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/books.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/new-york-times/'>new york times</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/new-york-times.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/new-york-times.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">News</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/05/Christopher-Lehmann-Haupt-books-expert-1/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/05/Christopher-Lehmann-Haupt-books-expert-1.mp3" length="14206769" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/05/Christopher-Lehmann-Haupt-books-expert-1</guid><pubDate>Fri, 05 Dec 2008 21:00:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Prof. Christopher Lehmann-Haupt, who has worked in the field of books all of his professional career. He has edited for Holt, Rinehart &amp; Winston and The Dial Press, from where he moved in 1965 to become an editor on the Sunday New York Times Book Review. He's edited books by authors including Norman Mailer, Joanne Greenberg and David Irving. In 1969, he was appointed senior Daily Book Reviewer for The New York Times, a position he held until 2001, when he became chief obituary writer for The Times until his retirement in 2006. From 1965 until 2000, he wrote more than 4,000 book reviews and articles, on every subject from trout fishing to Persian archaeology. He will discuss his career, his courses and much more.

He is also Editorial Director of Delphinium Books, a small publishing house concentrating on literary fiction. </itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:59:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/05/Christopher-Lehmann-Haupt-books-expert-1.mp3" fileSize="14206769" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/05/Christopher-Lehmann-Haupt-books-expert-1.wma" fileSize="14206769" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>Christopher Lehmann-Haupt,Columbia Journalism School,books,new york times,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>Christopher Lehmann-Haupt, books expert</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>Walt Bogdanich, 3-time Pulitzer-Prize winning investigative reporter - Dec 05,2008</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/05/Walt-Bogdanich-3-time-Pulitzer-Prize-winning-investigative-reporter</link><description><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Prof. Walt Bogdanich, the Pulitzer-Prize winning assistant editor for The New York Times Investigations Desk.

Before joining The Times in 2001, he was an investigative producer for “60 Minutes” on CBS and before that for ABC News. Previously, he worked as an investigative reporter for The Wall Street Journal in New York and Washington. Mr. Bogdanich graduated from the University of Wisconsin in 1975 with a degree in political science. He received his master’s in journalism from Ohio State University in 1976.

Mr. Bogdanich has been awarded three Pulitzer Prizes. In 2008, he shared the award in investigative reporting with Jake Hooker for “Toxic Pipeline,” articles exposing toxic ingredients in Chinese-made products. In 2005, he won in national reporting for his series, “Death on the Tracks.” He received the 1988 Pulitzer Prize for his articles in The Wall Street Journal on substandard medical laboratories. He has also won four George Polk Awards. <BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/walt-bogdanich/'>Walt Bogdanich</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/walt-bogdanich.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/walt-bogdanich.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/investigative-reporting/'>investigative reporting</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/investigative-reporting.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/investigative-reporting.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Prof. Walt Bogdanich, the Pulitzer-Prize winning assistant editor for The New York Times Investigations Desk.

Before joining The Times in 2001, he was an investigative producer for “60 Minutes” on CBS and before that for ABC News. Previously, he worked as an investigative reporter for The Wall Street Journal in New York and Washington. Mr. Bogdanich graduated from the University of Wisconsin in 1975 with a degree in political science. He received his master’s in journalism from Ohio State University in 1976.

Mr. Bogdanich has been awarded three Pulitzer Prizes. In 2008, he shared the award in investigative reporting with Jake Hooker for “Toxic Pipeline,” articles exposing toxic ingredients in Chinese-made products. In 2005, he won in national reporting for his series, “Death on the Tracks.” He received the 1988 Pulitzer Prize for his articles in The Wall Street Journal on substandard medical laboratories. He has also won four George Polk Awards. <BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/walt-bogdanich/'>Walt Bogdanich</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/walt-bogdanich.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/walt-bogdanich.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/investigative-reporting/'>investigative reporting</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/investigative-reporting.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/investigative-reporting.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">News</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/05/Walt-Bogdanich-3-time-Pulitzer-Prize-winning-investigative-reporter/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/05/Walt-Bogdanich-3-time-Pulitzer-Prize-winning-investigative-reporter.mp3" length="13794243" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/05/Walt-Bogdanich-3-time-Pulitzer-Prize-winning-investigative-reporter</guid><pubDate>Fri, 05 Dec 2008 15:00:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Prof. Walt Bogdanich, the Pulitzer-Prize winning assistant editor for The New York Times Investigations Desk.

Before joining The Times in 2001, he was an investigative producer for “60 Minutes” on CBS and before that for ABC News. Previously, he worked as an investigative reporter for The Wall Street Journal in New York and Washington. Mr. Bogdanich graduated from the University of Wisconsin in 1975 with a degree in political science. He received his master’s in journalism from Ohio State University in 1976.

Mr. Bogdanich has been awarded three Pulitzer Prizes. In 2008, he shared the award in investigative reporting with Jake Hooker for “Toxic Pipeline,” articles exposing toxic ingredients in Chinese-made products. In 2005, he won in national reporting for his series, “Death on the Tracks.” He received the 1988 Pulitzer Prize for his articles in The Wall Street Journal on substandard medical laboratories. He has also won four George Polk Awards. </itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:57:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/05/Walt-Bogdanich-3-time-Pulitzer-Prize-winning-investigative-reporter.mp3" fileSize="13794243" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/05/Walt-Bogdanich-3-time-Pulitzer-Prize-winning-investigative-reporter.wma" fileSize="13794243" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>Walt Bogdanich,Columbia Journalism School,investigative reporting,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>Walt Bogdanich, 3-time Pulitzer-Prize winning investigative reporter</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>John Dinges, Latin America and radio journalism expert - Dec 03,2008</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/03/John-Dinges-Latin-America-and-radio-journalism-expert</link><description><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Prof. John Dinges. He is former foreign editor and managing editor of NPR, and was a reporter, author, correspondent for many years in Latin America. He is the author of three books on Latin America, the most recent of which is "The Condor Years: How Pinochet and his Allies Brought Terrorism to Three Continents." He will discuss his career, his courses and much more, Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/john-dinges/'>John Dinges</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/john-dinges.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/john-dinges.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/radio-journalism/'>radio journalism</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/radio-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/radio-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Prof. John Dinges. He is former foreign editor and managing editor of NPR, and was a reporter, author, correspondent for many years in Latin America. He is the author of three books on Latin America, the most recent of which is "The Condor Years: How Pinochet and his Allies Brought Terrorism to Three Continents." He will discuss his career, his courses and much more, Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/john-dinges/'>John Dinges</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/john-dinges.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/john-dinges.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/radio-journalism/'>radio journalism</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/radio-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/radio-journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">News</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/03/John-Dinges-Latin-America-and-radio-journalism-expert/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/03/John-Dinges-Latin-America-and-radio-journalism-expert.mp3" length="12027948" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/03/John-Dinges-Latin-America-and-radio-journalism-expert</guid><pubDate>Wed, 03 Dec 2008 19:00:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Prof. John Dinges. He is former foreign editor and managing editor of NPR, and was a reporter, author, correspondent for many years in Latin America. He is the author of three books on Latin America, the most recent of which is "The Condor Years: How Pinochet and his Allies Brought Terrorism to Three Continents." He will discuss his career, his courses and much more, Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:50:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/03/John-Dinges-Latin-America-and-radio-journalism-expert.mp3" fileSize="12027948" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/03/John-Dinges-Latin-America-and-radio-journalism-expert.wma" fileSize="12027948" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>John Dinges,Columbia Journalism School,radio journalism,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>John Dinges, Latin America and radio journalism expert</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>Richard Wald,  Fred Friendly Professor Journalism and former heard of NBC News and Herald Tribune - Dec 02,2008</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/02/Richard-Wald-professor</link><description><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Richard Wald, Fred Friendly Professor of Journalism. He has worked for the Herald Tribune, NBC News, ABC News, and the Washington Post, and now travels occasionally for the Knight Fellowships in Stanford and the Federation of American Scientists in Washington. Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/richard-wald/'>Richard Wald</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/richard-wald.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/richard-wald.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>columbia journalism school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>j-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Richard Wald, Fred Friendly Professor of Journalism. He has worked for the Herald Tribune, NBC News, ABC News, and the Washington Post, and now travels occasionally for the Knight Fellowships in Stanford and the Federation of American Scientists in Washington. Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/richard-wald/'>Richard Wald</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/richard-wald.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/richard-wald.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>columbia journalism school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>j-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">News</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/02/Richard-Wald-professor/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/02/Richard-Wald-professor.mp3" length="6969597" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/02/Richard-Wald-professor</guid><pubDate>Tue, 02 Dec 2008 21:30:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Richard Wald, Fred Friendly Professor of Journalism. He has worked for the Herald Tribune, NBC News, ABC News, and the Washington Post, and now travels occasionally for the Knight Fellowships in Stanford and the Federation of American Scientists in Washington. Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:29:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/02/Richard-Wald-professor.mp3" fileSize="6969597" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/02/Richard-Wald-professor.wma" fileSize="6969597" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>Richard Wald,columbia journalism school,j-school,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>Richard Wald,  Fred Friendly Professor Journalism and former heard of NBC News and Herald Tribune</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>David Blum, magazine writer and editor; and author - Dec 02,2008</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/02/David-Blum-professor</link><description><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with professor David Blum, who is a veteran writer and editor. David began his career as a staff reporter for The Wall Street Journal, and has been the editor-in-chief of The Village
Voice, The New York Press and 02138 Magazine.  He was previously a writer and editor at The New York Times Magazine, and
a contributing editor at New York and Esquire magazines. He has written two books: Flash in the Pan: The Life and Death
of an American Restaurant (1992), and Tick...Tick...Tick...: The Long Life & Turbulent Times of 60 Minutes (2004). He
received his B.A. degree in English literature at the University of Chicago. He'll discuss journalism, his career, his courses and much more. Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/david-blum/'>David Blum</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/david-blum.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/david-blum.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>columbia journalism school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>j-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with professor David Blum, who is a veteran writer and editor. David began his career as a staff reporter for The Wall Street Journal, and has been the editor-in-chief of The Village
Voice, The New York Press and 02138 Magazine.  He was previously a writer and editor at The New York Times Magazine, and
a contributing editor at New York and Esquire magazines. He has written two books: Flash in the Pan: The Life and Death
of an American Restaurant (1992), and Tick...Tick...Tick...: The Long Life & Turbulent Times of 60 Minutes (2004). He
received his B.A. degree in English literature at the University of Chicago. He'll discuss journalism, his career, his courses and much more. Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/david-blum/'>David Blum</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/david-blum.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/david-blum.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>columbia journalism school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>j-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">News</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/02/David-Blum-professor/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/02/David-Blum-professor.mp3" length="10337094" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/02/David-Blum-professor</guid><pubDate>Tue, 02 Dec 2008 20:30:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with professor David Blum, who is a veteran writer and editor. David began his career as a staff reporter for The Wall Street Journal, and has been the editor-in-chief of The Village
Voice, The New York Press and 02138 Magazine.  He was previously a writer and editor at The New York Times Magazine, and
a contributing editor at New York and Esquire magazines. He has written two books: Flash in the Pan: The Life and Death
of an American Restaurant (1992), and Tick...Tick...Tick...: The Long Life &amp; Turbulent Times of 60 Minutes (2004). He
received his B.A. degree in English literature at the University of Chicago. He'll discuss journalism, his career, his courses and much more. Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:43:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/02/David-Blum-professor.mp3" fileSize="10337094" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/02/David-Blum-professor.wma" fileSize="10337094" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>David Blum,columbia journalism school,j-school,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>David Blum, magazine writer and editor; and author</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>Howard French, former NYT China and West Africa correspondent; and author - Dec 02,2008</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/02/Howard-French-professor</link><description><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with professor Howard French. He has reported for the Times as bureau chief for Central America and the Caribbean, West Africa, Japan and the Koreas, and China in Shanghai. During this time, his work was twice nominated for the Pulitzer Prize, and he was twice the recipient of an Overseas Press Club Award. He will discuss his career, his courses and much more,  Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/howard-french/'>Howard French</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/howard-french.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/howard-french.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>columbia journalism school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>j-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with professor Howard French. He has reported for the Times as bureau chief for Central America and the Caribbean, West Africa, Japan and the Koreas, and China in Shanghai. During this time, his work was twice nominated for the Pulitzer Prize, and he was twice the recipient of an Overseas Press Club Award. He will discuss his career, his courses and much more,  Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/howard-french/'>Howard French</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/howard-french.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/howard-french.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>columbia journalism school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>j-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">News</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/02/Howard-French-professor/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/02/Howard-French-professor.mp3" length="13996536" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/02/Howard-French-professor</guid><pubDate>Tue, 02 Dec 2008 18:00:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with professor Howard French. He has reported for the Times as bureau chief for Central America and the Caribbean, West Africa, Japan and the Koreas, and China in Shanghai. During this time, his work was twice nominated for the Pulitzer Prize, and he was twice the recipient of an Overseas Press Club Award. He will discuss his career, his courses and much more,  Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:58:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/02/Howard-French-professor.mp3" fileSize="13996536" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/02/Howard-French-professor.wma" fileSize="13996536" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>Howard French,columbia journalism school,j-school,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>Howard French, former NYT China and West Africa correspondent; and author</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>Nicholas Lemann, dean and professor, on the MS program - Dec 01,2008</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/01/Nicholas-Lemann-dean-and-professor</link><description><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Nicholas Lemann, dean of the school and Henry R. Luce Professor. He has worked for several publications [among them The Washington Post, The Atlantic Monthly, and The New Yorker] and published five books. He will discuss the M.S. program (M.A. program discussion is on Dec. 11). Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/nicholas-lemann/'>Nicholas Lemann</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/nicholas-lemann.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/nicholas-lemann.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>columbia journalism school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>j-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Nicholas Lemann, dean of the school and Henry R. Luce Professor. He has worked for several publications [among them The Washington Post, The Atlantic Monthly, and The New Yorker] and published five books. He will discuss the M.S. program (M.A. program discussion is on Dec. 11). Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/nicholas-lemann/'>Nicholas Lemann</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/nicholas-lemann.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/nicholas-lemann.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>columbia journalism school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>j-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">News</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/01/Nicholas-Lemann-dean-and-professor/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/01/Nicholas-Lemann-dean-and-professor.mp3" length="6593016" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/01/Nicholas-Lemann-dean-and-professor</guid><pubDate>Mon, 01 Dec 2008 17:30:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Nicholas Lemann, dean of the school and Henry R. Luce Professor. He has worked for several publications [among them The Washington Post, The Atlantic Monthly, and The New Yorker] and published five books. He will discuss the M.S. program (M.A. program discussion is on Dec. 11). Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:27:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/01/Nicholas-Lemann-dean-and-professor.mp3" fileSize="6593016" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/12/01/Nicholas-Lemann-dean-and-professor.wma" fileSize="6593016" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>Nicholas Lemann,columbia journalism school,j-school,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>Nicholas Lemann, dean and professor, on the MS program</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>Stephen Fried, award-winning magazine writer and essayist - Nov 26,2008</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/11/26/Stephen-Fried-magazine-writer</link><description><![CDATA[Meet Stephen Fried, an award-winning investigative journalist and personal essayist. He is the author of three widely praised investigative books - Thing of Beauty: The Tragedy of Supermodel Gia; Bitter Pills: Inside the Hazardous World of Legal Drugs; The New Rabbi -  and an essay collection, Husbandry: Sex Love & Dirty Laundry-Inside the Minds of Married Men.  A two-time winner of the National Magazine Award, Fried has written frequently for Vanity Fair, Glamour, The Washington Post Magazine, GQ, Rolling Stone, Ladies Home Journal and Philadelphia magazine, where he was also editor-in-chief. An adjunct professor at Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism since 2002, he lives in Philadelphia with his wife, author Diane Ayres. And, yes, he did invent the word fashionista. More on him at StephenFried.com. He'll discuss his career, his classes and much, much more. Questions/comments to sree@sree.net<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/stephen-fried/'>stephen fried</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/stephen-fried.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/stephen-fried.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/magazine-writing/'>magazine writing</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/magazine-writing.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/magazine-writing.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>j-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Meet Stephen Fried, an award-winning investigative journalist and personal essayist. He is the author of three widely praised investigative books - Thing of Beauty: The Tragedy of Supermodel Gia; Bitter Pills: Inside the Hazardous World of Legal Drugs; The New Rabbi -  and an essay collection, Husbandry: Sex Love & Dirty Laundry-Inside the Minds of Married Men.  A two-time winner of the National Magazine Award, Fried has written frequently for Vanity Fair, Glamour, The Washington Post Magazine, GQ, Rolling Stone, Ladies Home Journal and Philadelphia magazine, where he was also editor-in-chief. An adjunct professor at Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism since 2002, he lives in Philadelphia with his wife, author Diane Ayres. And, yes, he did invent the word fashionista. More on him at StephenFried.com. He'll discuss his career, his classes and much, much more. Questions/comments to sree@sree.net<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/stephen-fried/'>stephen fried</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/stephen-fried.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/stephen-fried.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/magazine-writing/'>magazine writing</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/magazine-writing.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/magazine-writing.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>j-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">News</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/11/26/Stephen-Fried-magazine-writer/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/11/26/Stephen-Fried-magazine-writer.mp3" length="6890394" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/11/26/Stephen-Fried-magazine-writer</guid><pubDate>Wed, 26 Nov 2008 14:30:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Meet Stephen Fried, an award-winning investigative journalist and personal essayist. He is the author of three widely praised investigative books - Thing of Beauty: The Tragedy of Supermodel Gia; Bitter Pills: Inside the Hazardous World of Legal Drugs; The New Rabbi -  and an essay collection, Husbandry: Sex Love &amp; Dirty Laundry-Inside the Minds of Married Men.  A two-time winner of the National Magazine Award, Fried has written frequently for Vanity Fair, Glamour, The Washington Post Magazine, GQ, Rolling Stone, Ladies Home Journal and Philadelphia magazine, where he was also editor-in-chief. An adjunct professor at Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism since 2002, he lives in Philadelphia with his wife, author Diane Ayres. And, yes, he did invent the word fashionista. More on him at StephenFried.com. He'll discuss his career, his classes and much, much more. Questions/comments to sree@sree.net</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:28:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/11/26/Stephen-Fried-magazine-writer.mp3" fileSize="6890394" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/11/26/Stephen-Fried-magazine-writer.wma" fileSize="6890394" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>stephen fried,Columbia Journalism School,magazine writing,j-school,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>Stephen Fried, award-winning magazine writer and essayist</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>David Klatell, professor and former vice dean - Nov 25,2008</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/11/25/David-Klatell-professor-and-former-dean</link><description><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with David Klatell, professor and chair of international studies. He will discuss his career, the school's international programs and his courses, "Reinventing Television" and "Critical Issues in Journalism." More on him: http://snurl.com/6q3pl
Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/david-klatell/'>david klatell</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/david-klatell.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/david-klatell.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>columbia journalism school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>j-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with David Klatell, professor and chair of international studies. He will discuss his career, the school's international programs and his courses, "Reinventing Television" and "Critical Issues in Journalism." More on him: http://snurl.com/6q3pl
Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/david-klatell/'>david klatell</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/david-klatell.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/david-klatell.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>columbia journalism school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>j-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">News</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/11/25/David-Klatell-professor-and-former-dean/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/11/25/David-Klatell-professor-and-former-dean.mp3" length="13645868" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/11/25/David-Klatell-professor-and-former-dean</guid><pubDate>Tue, 25 Nov 2008 20:00:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with David Klatell, professor and chair of international studies. He will discuss his career, the school's international programs and his courses, "Reinventing Television" and "Critical Issues in Journalism." More on him: http://snurl.com/6q3pl
Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:56:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/11/25/David-Klatell-professor-and-former-dean.mp3" fileSize="13645868" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/11/25/David-Klatell-professor-and-former-dean.wma" fileSize="13645868" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>david klatell,columbia journalism school,j-school,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>David Klatell, professor and former vice dean</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>Cyndi Stivers, magazine editor and new professor - Nov 25,2008</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/11/25/Cyndi-Stivers-magazine-editor-and-professor</link><description><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Cyndi Stivers, highly-acclaimed magazine editor (Time Out New York, Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, Life, Us, Vanity Fair), former president of the American Society of Magazine Editors and one of the newest additions to our adjunct faculty. She will discuss her career, the state of the magazine industry, her new course at the school and much, much more. Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/cyndi-stivers/'>cyndi stivers</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/cyndi-stivers.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/cyndi-stivers.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>columbia journalism school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/magazines/'>magazines</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/magazines.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/magazines.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>j-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Cyndi Stivers, highly-acclaimed magazine editor (Time Out New York, Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, Life, Us, Vanity Fair), former president of the American Society of Magazine Editors and one of the newest additions to our adjunct faculty. She will discuss her career, the state of the magazine industry, her new course at the school and much, much more. Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/cyndi-stivers/'>cyndi stivers</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/cyndi-stivers.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/cyndi-stivers.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>columbia journalism school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/magazines/'>magazines</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/magazines.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/magazines.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/j-school/'>j-school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/j-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">News</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/11/25/Cyndi-Stivers-magazine-editor-and-professor/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/11/25/Cyndi-Stivers-magazine-editor-and-professor.mp3" length="13638763" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/11/25/Cyndi-Stivers-magazine-editor-and-professor</guid><pubDate>Tue, 25 Nov 2008 17:00:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Columbia Journalism School presents a conversation with Cyndi Stivers, highly-acclaimed magazine editor (Time Out New York, Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, Life, Us, Vanity Fair), former president of the American Society of Magazine Editors and one of the newest additions to our adjunct faculty. She will discuss her career, the state of the magazine industry, her new course at the school and much, much more. Send questions to ss221@columbia.edu (subject=webcast)</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>00:56:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/11/25/Cyndi-Stivers-magazine-editor-and-professor.mp3" fileSize="13638763" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/11/25/Cyndi-Stivers-magazine-editor-and-professor.wma" fileSize="13638763" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>cyndi stivers,columbia journalism school,magazines,j-school,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>Cyndi Stivers, magazine editor and new professor</itunes:subtitle></item><item><title>Floyd Abrams, first amendment expert - Nov 23,2008</title><link>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/11/23/Floyd-Abrams-first-amendment-expert</link><description><![CDATA[Get a sense of Columbia Journalism School's famed "Journalism, The Law and Society" course with this recording of a Nov. 21, 2008, lecture by Floyd Abrams, the most distinguished first amendment lawyer in the country and author of "Speaking Freely: Trials of the First Amendment" (2005). As the school's  William J. Brennan Jr. Visiting Professor, he gives two lectures each Fall to our graduate students.  More on the fascinating case about "actual malice" that he discusses - Tex Cobb vs Sports Illustrated - at http://snurl.com/6gsru ... He also discusses several important legal concepts dealing with newsgathering issues.<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/floyd-abrams/'>Floyd Abrams</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/floyd-abrams.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/floyd-abrams.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/journalism/'>journalism</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/journalism-school/'>journalism school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[Get a sense of Columbia Journalism School's famed "Journalism, The Law and Society" course with this recording of a Nov. 21, 2008, lecture by Floyd Abrams, the most distinguished first amendment lawyer in the country and author of "Speaking Freely: Trials of the First Amendment" (2005). As the school's  William J. Brennan Jr. Visiting Professor, he gives two lectures each Fall to our graduate students.  More on the fascinating case about "actual malice" that he discusses - Tex Cobb vs Sports Illustrated - at http://snurl.com/6gsru ... He also discusses several important legal concepts dealing with newsgathering issues.<BR/><BR/><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/floyd-abrams/'>Floyd Abrams</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/floyd-abrams.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/floyd-abrams.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/columbia-journalism-school/'>Columbia Journalism School</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/columbia-journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/journalism/'>journalism</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/journalism.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a> | <a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/search/journalism-school/'>journalism school</a><a href='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/rss_tiny.gif' border='0' /></a><a href='itpc://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/rss/tag/journalism-school.rss'><img src='http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/img/itunes_trans.png' border='0' /></a>  <BR/><BR/>]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/">News</category><comments>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/11/23/Floyd-Abrams-first-amendment-expert/#comments</comments><enclosure url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/11/23/Floyd-Abrams-first-amendment-expert.mp3" length="26056330" type="audio/mpeg" /><guid>http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/11/23/Floyd-Abrams-first-amendment-expert</guid><pubDate>Sun, 23 Nov 2008 05:30:00 GMT</pubDate><itunes:summary>Get a sense of Columbia Journalism School's famed "Journalism, The Law and Society" course with this recording of a Nov. 21, 2008, lecture by Floyd Abrams, the most distinguished first amendment lawyer in the country and author of "Speaking Freely: Trials of the First Amendment" (2005). As the school's  William J. Brennan Jr. Visiting Professor, he gives two lectures each Fall to our graduate students.  More on the fascinating case about "actual malice" that he discusses - Tex Cobb vs Sports Illustrated - at http://snurl.com/6gsru ... He also discusses several important legal concepts dealing with newsgathering issues.</itunes:summary><itunes:duration>01:48:00</itunes:duration><media:group><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/11/23/Floyd-Abrams-first-amendment-expert.mp3" fileSize="26056330" type="audio/mpeg" /><media:content url="http://dev3.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/11/23/Floyd-Abrams-first-amendment-expert.wma" fileSize="26056330" type="audio/x-ms-wma" /></media:group><itunes:author>ColumbiaJournalism</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:keywords>Floyd Abrams,Columbia Journalism School,journalism,journalism school,BlogTalkRadio, Blog Talk Radio</itunes:keywords><itunes:subtitle>Floyd Abrams, first amendment expert</itunes:subtitle></item></channel></rss>