Saturday, April 18, 2026

Alaska Press Club Conference - Quick Look Friday

 


The Alaska Press Club conference was this week in Anchorage. I've been attending at least since 2011..  As a blogger, I wanted to see what 'real' journalists were thinking and doing.  All the conferences have been well worth my time.  

I gave up trying to capture everything, even everything in just one session.  There just wasn't time between session to write things up.  Besides, it's an opportunity to meet different people.  

I'm just going to give you a sense of what some of the people were doing at the conference.  There were evening events which I didn't attend.  

Katie Eastman

Her panel was:  Human Connection:  Documenting Real Life Makes Our Stories Stronger


Katie is the "Manager of Storytelling" at a Tulsa television station KOTV.  She offered a basic framework for how she 'gets access' to the people in her stories and then shared examples of stories she's done and how the framework applied.

Access was key for her.

EMOTION    Universal Experience   Focus  What is that universal thing that can connect people?

VIDEO          Natural sound               Understanding   See who you are in your own space,

Find a space that is more universal. In the first example she was in a high school gym, which is a pretty universal experience.  

The photo to the right illustrates a problem that in the room we were in - you can't light the speaker without also lighting the screen.  In this case the screen is lit and the speaker isn't.  




Katie Orlinsky Ethics and Access for Visual Journalists The second Katie spoke about her career as a photographer with examples from Mexico (homeless migrants, some prisoners), Mali, and then Alaska - Iditarod, caribou, permafrost, and some village life.  

As I look back to the title, she did talk about being sensitive about how you think about and treat the people you photograph.  In one example she'd asked two young women if she could photograph them and they said no.  She offered them the chance to change clothes and put on make up and they agreed.  

In the picture, you can see one of her National Geographic covers.  






B.A. Parker  How to Approach First Amendment Issues with Vulnerable Communities.

If you listen to NPR at all, you know B.A. Parker as the voice of Code Switch.  This was probably the session I got most out of.  There were various examples with  nicely laid out slides that included audio clips.  This one looked at the behind the scenes debates at NPR about the use of the word 













"Racism"by the journalists.  The fight was over being able to use the word or just giving examples of behaviors and actions and letting the listener draw their own conclusions.  My sense was that this was where the Trump administration was winning and the NPR position was anticipatory compliance.  This was an example of Michele Obama's 'we take the high road' that just 



Students

There was a student showcase over lunch.  Nathan Pobieglo did a presentation of a video story he did on a loon cam.  








Murat Demir, below,  a reporter for the UAA Northern Lights newspaper, discussed his use of the Public Records Act to get information on why a taxidermy exhibit in the Consortium Library was removed - it turned out there were serious contamination issues.  


Alaska Federation of Natives, President, Co-Vice Chair, and Attorney panel on Subsistance














It seemed that if this many AFN heavy weights were going to be at the Press Club Conference, I ought to go.  It was, in their words, an abbreviated version of a much longer presentation, and we would be glad we got the short version.  

I understood their basic concern was that Subsistence Fishing was being much more regulated than other categories of fishing even though it only represented about 1% of all fish caught.  

Then they went into the many conflicts between Federal and State rules and laws as including different official definitions of subsistence and an Alaska Supreme Court case that gives all rural residents, not just Natives, but denies those rights to Natives living close to Anchorage.

For those who want to know more about this issue, there's a video on the AFN site.


A few of the people I met.   Kaitlin Armstrong who's the host and executive producer of the Alaska Myths podcast.  





Jamie Diep is Education Reporter at KTOO in Juneau and Mari Kanagy works for the Anchorage Daily News in Juneau.  



And Steve Suo is from Pro Publica.  He was up from Oregon, but Alaska is part of his territory.  

I also met Lina Mariscal of Alaska's Spanish language paper and learned more about this bi-lingual journal.  I'd put up a picture, but it really didn't turn out well and I didn't catch her a second time.  But check out Sol de Medianoche.  

2 comments:

  1. Say Steve, caught up this morning on your posts in the last week or so and want to say they're very good reads into your corner of the world, looking outward.

    I wish more folk would take the time to put 'things in context' as you do with your reporting, your analysis, and my reading through the incredibly dense world of published daily materials today. One must, and does, pick-and-choose. Your coverage of both local and large matters is what makes this widely fragile world of self-reported experience, thoughts and at times, facts, valuable.

    So, just thanks. I'm taking on each and every day a more focussed look at the world project of colonialism (as I've come to understand it much better, much more deeply) since deciding to stay in Europe. Reading on the AFN conference discussion on 'two-gear' governance structures reminds me of the terror of colonisation in the Americas by European powers. Please keep up the work of reforming the structures of centuries of war against First Peoples there.

    All good for a 'day's' work.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks Jakob. I try. Glad it connects with someone. Google Analytics says a fair number of people get to the blog every day (generally over 1000), though Statcounter offers more info about the visitors, they track a lot less than that.
    One of my favorite works on colonialism (imperialism) is Johan Galtung's The Structural Theory of Imperialism. It's very hard to read because it's got so much content in each sentence.

    He talks about three stages of colonialism:
    "Three phases of imperialism are discussed: the colonialist phase where the two centers belong to the same nation (the period of white settlers), the present neo-colonialist phase where they are tied together by means of international organizations and the neo-neo-colonialist phase for the future where the ties are established by means of rapid communication."
    This was published in the 1970s.

    ReplyDelete

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