Come coprire efficacemente i cambiamenti climatici
Ven 19 aprile 2024
16:00 - 16:50
Gratuito
Calcolo distanza...
Climate change is probably the most urgent topic of our time. Still, the audience seems avoidant at best. Is there a solution to this conundrum?
In this panel, we will explore the boundaries of solutions-based journalism, and the idea of reducing the carbon footprint in video and TV production of global stories. How can we change our formats to meet the audience where they are? Can we be playful and entertaining in the delivery, and serious on the facts? What can we learn from successful social media narratives? We will also touch upon themes such as eco-feminism and look at the inspiring new and legacy leaders that stir the conversation.
This year, climate change and the environment are a priority for media companies, academia, foundations, and sponsors; how do we engage the audience though? How can we take this urgent, global and intersectional topic to our viewers and readers and make an impact?
Modificato più di un mese fa
Pagine coinvolte
Palazzo Graziani (Perugia)
Costruzione di origine medioevale Palazzo Graziani è stato sottoposto ad interventi che nel corso dei secoli ne hanno modificato ed ampliato la struttura. Situato in Corso Vannucci, l’immobile è sede della Fondazione Cassa di Risparmio ed ora anche della nuova Fondazione CARIPERUGIA ARTE. Nel 1895 Annibale Brugnoli realizzò quattro grandi quadri ad olio sulle pareti e quattro grandi dipinti murali sulla volta di quello che successivamente venne chiamato “Salone del Brugnoli”, ancora oggi la sala di maggior pregio dell’intero complesso.
Juan Manuel Benitez
Juan Manuel Benítez is the Philip S. Balboni professor of Local Journalism at Columbia University. There, he’s part of a team developing a new climate-focused curriculum for journalism students. For two decades, he worked as a television anchor and reporter for the local news station NY1, where he mainly covered New York City politics and climate issues. In 2022, Benítez won an NY Emmy Award for his coverage of Mayor Bill de Blasio's record on climate change and adaptation. As a journalist based in New York, Benítez has also worked as a radio host for WNYC and as a political analyst for MSNBC.
Anna Bressanin
Anna Bressanin is a BBC senior editor, filmmaker and journalist based in New York, currently leading the video strategy for BBC Future Planet, commissioning and producing short documentaries and video series. Anna also loves writing magazine articles on food, history, and culture for BBC Travel. As a filmmaker, she directed multiple award-winning documentaries, the first BBC VR film in India and covered major US and global news. She created LongShots, the BBC's first Documentary Film Festival and led the BBC digital documentary platform BBC Reel in North America. Born in Italy, she lived in Germany, France, Belgium, before moving to the US.
Adam Levy
Adam Levy is a climate scientist, turned science journalist and communicator. Adam is the creator of the award winning climate change YouTube channel ClimateAdam, which aims to explore complex climate change ideas, while embracing the playful format of the platform. In addition, Adam has worked with a wide range of publications (e.g. BBC, Nature, Deutsche Welle) to communicate science and climate to diverse audiences.
Amy Westervelt
Amy Westervelt is an award-winning investigative climate journalist who has been on the climate beat for more than 20 years, reporting for a wide range of outlets, including Inside Climate News, The Washington Post, The Guardian, The Intercept, NPR, and many more. In 2017, she started the podcast production company Critical Frequency, which launched the first "true-crime" climate podcast, Drilled, in 2018. Today, Drilled has expanded into a multimedia investigative newsroom focused on climate accountability, and Critical Frequency has produced more than two dozen narrative, reported podcasts on subjects ranging from Indigenous rights to climate litigation. In 2023, Amy was named a Covering Climate Now’s Journalist of the Year. Her work has previously received Murrow, ONA, SEJ, Rachel Carson, and Folio awards, as well as a Peabody nomination. She is based in Costa Rica.