Latest from MediaShift
- 5Across: Social Media Marketing 101
- Profiles in Courage: Social Media Editors at Big Media Outlets
- The Shutdown of UWIRE and the Implications for College Media
- Young Political Candidates Confronted by Digital Past on Facebook
- DigiFest Examines DIY to Big Budget Special Effects for Films
- 4 Minute Roundup: Murdoch-Google Spat; Ft. Hood Shooting on Twitter
- Media140 Brings Old and New Media Together, With Explosive Results
- Can Salon's Revamp Help it Stop Bleeding Money?
- Does Gawker's Publication of McSteamy Sex Tape Constitute Fair Use?
- President Obama Must Press China on Web Censorship
- Speculative Fiction Novelists Find Success with Online Donations
- Hossein Derakhshan's Arrest: One Year Later
- FT's Long Room Uses Velvet Rope Approach to Online Community
- @FakeAPStylebook Editors Explain Their Overnight Success on Twitter
- 10 Projects that Help Citizens Become Government Watchdogs
- TheDigitel.com Brings Human Context to Local News Aggregation
- Politicians Use Social Media to Bypass the Press Corps
- 4 Minute Roundup: Scoble on Twitter Lists; Time, Newsweek Hurting
- It's Now or Never For Citizen Journalists and Federal Shield Law
- Harold Evans Sees Bright Future for Print-on-Demand Newspapers
- Why the Future of Online Speech Depends on Net Neutrality
- Did the Web Kill Gourmet Magazine?
- 4 Minute Roundup: Twitter's Real-Time Search Deals; Bloomberg Rising
- The Right Way For Media Companies to Create Social Media Policies
- Kicking Ink: The Guilty Pleasures of Print
PubCamp Examines New Models, Philosophy for Public Media
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
"Public Broadcasting has a future and its all about YOU," tweeted Jonathan Coffman at the close of this weekend's bustling Public Media Camp.
Coffman, the product manager for PBS Engage, was a key organizer of the event, along with Andy Carvin, a senior strategist at NPR's Social Media Desk, and Joe and Peter Corbett, two brothers who run iStrategy Labs, a "digital word of mouth agency." Americ...
Original article from http://www.pbs.org/mediashift/2009/10/pubcamp-examines-new-models-philosophy-for-public-media293.html
Login to read full articles and enjoy our free features for members.
Related articles
feedraider "We Eat Internets" v2.0 a LAMP production by Jussi Vaihia
© 2006-2009 |
about |
blog |
help