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We commonly say “I’m not hiring” or “I don’t have money to make an impact” and all these may be true.
But, as SXSW opens PanelPicker, CES calls for speakers, and conferences like NAHJ18 and ONA18 are quickly approaching, I wanted to share some practical things YOU can do to make a difference.
I have done each of these – multiple times for years. I have no money. I have a kid to fund. I am not hiring anyone. But these simple ways can have large impact.
If you truly care about inclusion and diversity in our industry – or any other industry – try a few of these tips to help make a real impact.
Please let me know if you have other tips and if you have done these too. We have more influence than we think.
]]>In 1996, while a student at Pierce Community College, I attended my first journalism conference: Journalism Association of Community Colleges (JACC).
Now, nearly 20 years later, I returned to be its keynote speaker.
This was an intense, historical talk for me… and I knew I wanted to document it. So, while the audio isn’t perfect, I did a screen capture of my talk.
NOTE: The first 30 minutes is my talk, the second 30 minutes is the Q&A.
Thank you to JACC for inviting to speak.
And thank you to everyone who has changed my life. I mention many of you.
I did not do this alone.
The video (unedited):
Some of the pics from the event:
I want you to do the same.
I hope you feel what I felt.
I am the poet.
And to be a poet while the Internet exists… man we got an opportunity!
— Poet Steve Roggenbuck, an Internet Bard at last.
This post is a plea.
This morning I saw a tweet that led me to this sad reality:
A new study finds that, in 42% of companies, low performers actually report being more engaged – more motivated and more likely to enjoy working at their organization, for example – than middle and high performers do.”
That line made me reflect on my life… and the lives of the peers I truly respect. We’re all frustrated and “unhappy.” Well, according to some people.
Why?
Because we are passionate.
Because we are not satisfied.
Because we know what it could be, which is so much more than what it currently is.
And we’re fighting for it. It’s a struggle… but we do it.
In many of my peers’ careers, including mine, you look around the organization and are in shock.
In shock because while we bust our collective asses in our struggle, others – these “low performers” – have moved up along side us.
They have failed up.
Don’t tell me you can’t immediately think of at least one name in your newsroom right now.
They’ve been there forever. Before you got there and started trying to change things… and quite honestly, they’ll be there after you leave. These people mean well… but they don’t fight for their beliefs like we do.
We – and I am not saying this is healthy – break down in tears from the frustration of our struggle. We question our own value, despite our incredible track records of change and success. We question our life and doubt all the sacrifices we’ve made along the way… even though we’d do it all over again.
But, which is understandable, we burn out. And we leave. Leave the heartbreak. (Or, which happens too, we leave the company for a better one. But we will inevitably be unsatisfied again.)
In all this… we also leave behind those satisfied “low performers” … and that’s how they move up.
Back to my plea.
I know it sucks. I know it is so crippling at times. I know you question the direction of your life. I know you think you are crazy (you must be, right, because no one is freaking out as much as you are). I know all this.
But I also know you are not alone. That you are not crazy. And that we are better off with you fighting for your beliefs.
We are better off with you in journalism – or in what ever industry you are frustratingly passionate about.
Take a break. Make a change. But don’t give up… and don’t you dare get falsely satisfied.
Stay hungry. I know it hurts sometimes, but stay hungry.
When you have doubts, look to your passionate peers. Remember Horizontal Loyalty. Re-read the Holstee Manifesto. And, occasionally, watch videos like this or this.
But stay. And make the difference.
PS: Please read this back to me if/when you see me doubting/questioning myself. Please.
]]>By the time I landed, I had coded and launched this new project.
Man, what a difference a year makes.
Frustrated (and starting to get desperate) with finding partners to collaborate/experiment with, I figured I should put off the inevitable and teach myself code. I know I wouldn’t be the best coder — like I’m not the best audio storytelling or photographer — but I respected the craft and know its power.
I had been director of development for seattletimes.com where we designed and built cool shit, which was ahead of its time… and now feels… so… quaint.
In my quest for dev skills, I tried a variety of different non-journalism, code classes… from video to web-based tutorials. I, as ONA pre-conference and NAHJ conference coordinator, recruited friends and colleagues to craft custom journalism focused all-day coding workshops.
I even offered a (nearly free) all-day, intro to Python bootcamp at USC Annenberg thanks to the awesome PyLadies.
For the record, while this benefited the community as a whole, I was doing it for me. And none of it worked… for me.
But after SXSW, inspired by Codecademy‘s Code Year (even though I had given up on it like other New Year’s resolutions) and a curious user of Google+ Hangouts, I created the Learn Code for Journalism with Me project.
Yes, it’s a loooooong name. My partner-in-crime Kim Bui openly hates it. I know.
But it comes from a series of projects I’ve hung around the domain journalismwith.me.
Anyway, the idea was a simple one and the reaction to it was overwhelming. I was clearly on to something… and I wasn’t the only one trying to solve this.
Cindy Royal of Texas State University was trying to build a curriculum, Dave Stanton (who was joining two other friends and myself in launching a cooperative consulting firm) had expressed interest and I’m sure others were trying to grapple with this issue.
But, again, what a difference a year makes.
As I wait for my plane to take me back to the City of Angels still recovering from SXSW13, the landscape for this has completely changed.
There are two projects I want to point out:
First is Sisi Wei‘s Code with me project that offers weekend coding bootcamps for about $85.
Second is For Journalism, the successfully-funded kickstarter from Stanton, which will create journalism-focused coding tutorials.
Outside giving money to For Journalism and being a cross-country supporter of Code with me, I had nothing to do with their launches.
Even if their project names sound familiar, as people have point out … to be fair, my loooong title clearly had all the right words required for any successful coding for journalism project aimed to empower the community.
For my little project that is reaching its year anniversary, I didn’t have the bandwidth to make tshirts to use crowd funding.
It was just me.
Actually, it’s not just me anymore.
It’s me and my amazing cohort of determined classmates-turned-friends that still meet every Monday at 3PM PT via Google+ Hangouts since April of last year.
We’ve abandoned Code Year and have been developing our own journalism-based, project-focused coding lessons. We’re teaching each other code and hoping to share what we learn with others.
You can hear about the LCFJWM phase 2 in this View Source podcast interview or read about what I’ve learned in this post.
What a difference a year makes. And I am so glad talented people have come into this mix and found ways to address this need… in ways I couldn’t have for lack of the bandwidth or connections.
God only knows what the next year will bring, but we all know we’re going to benefit from this work.
]]>If and when I have time, I hope to Storify the reactions and add it to this post.
My favorite, though, came from Justin Ellis, who was the person that invited me to write the piece:
]]>So we're all "reboot the J-school" and then @webjournalist is like "Forget that noise. Google it." http://t.co/C2nyPBt8
— Justin Ellis (@JustinNXT) September 24, 2012
You have to be passionate, creative and brave. Well, in some cases, more foolish than brave.
As part of the opening of Spark Camp, I was foolish enough to volunteer to be among attendees to give a talk.
In an Ignite talk “presenters share their personal and professional passions, using 20 slides that auto-advance every 15 seconds for a total of just five minutes.”
My “personal and professional passion” is Horizontal Loyalty. Here are my slides and my talking points (many of them I forgot!), but adapted for this platform.
Slide 01
Screenshot from my HorizontalLoyalty.com site.
Slide 02
Horizontal Loyalty is concept taken from Robert Krulwich‘s 2011 commencement speech to UC Berkeley Journalism School‘s graduating class.
Slide 03
For those who may not know, Krulwich is a legendary broadcast reporter known for explaining complex topics, often science related. He’s also the co-host of Radiolab. His speech was posted on Discover Magazine blog, where it began to spread across the Web.
Slide 04
First, let me tell you what Horizontal Loyalty isn’t. It’s not a cheesy stock image, an awkward high five or a corporate teaming building exercise. It hasn’t been co-opted yet.
Slide 05
As cheesy as this sounds — or this image is — Horizontal Loyalty is us. In the speech, Krulwich says don’t wait for a call from The New York Times. Don’t invest everything in your dream company. Don’t give your heart to strangers. Don’t wait your turn. Instead, invest in your friends. Look toward them, the ones you admire, and put your faith in them.
Slide 06
We support each other. We challenge each other. But, while every generation feels this way, the difference is that we can and need to build something together.
Slide 07
This is very much Web culture. We collaborate and share our work. From the concept of Open Source to in-real-life meetups, we see this collaboration coming from the Web. I’m a podcast addict and two that reflect this concept are Nerdist and WTF. These two comedians launched their own podcasts with their friends as a passion project… before their podcasts, some considered their careers were essentially over.
Slide 08
Horizontal Loyalty is in our circles. It’s here at Spark Camp. It’s in groups like Hacks/Hackers and the new ProPublica Pair Programming Project. I’m proud to say it is a core part of my work… in projects like #wjchat and Learn Code for Journalism.
Slide 09
For me, the true embodiment of Horizontal Loyalty is Tomorrow Magazine. Created by former Good Magazine editorial staffers — either fired or those who quit in solidarity — this crew decided to banned together and build something rather than to give up.
Slide 10
They decided to create one last magazine project and launched a Kickstarter campaign. By Friday, July 20, with five days remaining in the campaign, they have raised more than double their goal.
Slide 11
I believe in Horizontal Loyalty… it’s my mantra… it’s what keeps me sane… what keeps me going. But my belief in Horizontal Loyalty began in the 80s, with the film…
Slide 12
Slide 13
If you haven’t seen the movie, I don’t know what’s wrong with you. It’s about a bunch of kids… misfits… that don’t wait their turn. They take action — go on a treasure hunt — to save their homes. To do something, because the adults in their lives failed them.
Slide 14
There is a scene in the middle of the film where the Goonies could turn back and give up… return to their traditional roles riding Troy’s bucket… but Mikey, lead Goonie, gives a powerful speech…
Slide 15
“This is our time, our time… down here,” he says from the bottom of a well. It’s up to us.
Slide 16
Look, Horizontal Loyalty is not about the Web… nor is it about technology. It’s not about age, either. It’s for people who believe collaboration is a strength, not a sign of weakness.
Slide 17
The Goonies were made up by a cheerleader, a jock, loudmouth, hacker, heavy kid, four eyes and a dreamer. They are made up of us.
Slide 18
In his last words of the speech, Krulwich says “Fall in love with the work, with the people you work with… with your dreams… and their dreams. … Believe in your friends.”
Slide 19
Slide 20
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