News

Prof. Steve Smith recognized by POYi for Issue Reporting Picture Storytelling

UConn Journalism Prof. Steven G. Smith ’s long-term picture story about a daughter caring for her 85-year-old father in the final stages of dementia was recently recognized by the 79th Pictures of the Year International (POYi) competition.

"A Daughter's Long Goodbye, A Caregiver's Journey" shows how dementia and COVID-19 have given Leandra Manos the battle of her life.

POYi judge Nikki Kahn commented, “This is a classic picture story that carries you through a journey, with so much intimacy.”

POYi is the oldest and one of the most prestigious photojournalism competitions globally. POYi recognizes excellence in photojournalism, multimedia, visual editing and documentary storytelling. Last year, the contest attracted over 40,000 entries.

Prof. Smith’s work was recognized as a finalist in the “Issue Reporting Picture Story” category. His work has been recognized eleven times by POYi over his career.

Over the last two years, Leandra has had many close calls with George getting out of bed and wandering around at night. Leandra’s solution is to sleep next to her father’s bed to prevent him from hurting himself. (July 9, 2021/Steven G. Smith)

 

After giving George a haircut, Leandra shows him his smiling face in a hand mirror. Both COVID-19 and dementia have made leaving the house for a haircut seem like an impossible endeavor. Leandra does most of her caretaking from her small two-bedroom home. (July 6, 2021/Steven G. Smith)

 

Leandra has a daily routine with her father, and she bathes and dresses him in the morning to prepare him for the day. Early on, the two used to manage the routine well together. Over time, George has become totally dependent on her care. (August 10, 2021/Steven G. Smith)

 

Overcome by her circumstances, Leandra sits on the front porch. One of George’s home healthcare providers unexpectedly stopped seeing George. Daily chores and yard work have been all but unattainable over the last two years because of her father’s constant needs. (November 8, 2021/Steven G. Smith)

 

Crawford to moderate book talk about women Vietnam war correspondents

You Don't Belong Here book cover
Becker's new book tells the stories of Kate Webb, an Australian iconoclast, Catherine Leroy, a French dare devil photographer, and Frances FitzGerald, a blue-blood American intellectual.

On Wednesday, March 16 from 7-8 p.m. the Westport Library is hosting a virtual event featuring journalist and author Elizabeth Becker, whose new book “You Don’t Belong Here: How Three Women Rewrote the Story of War” tells the story of three pioneering women Vietnam war correspondents. 

Becker will be in conversation with Assistant UConn Journalism Prof. Amanda J. Crawford. The event will be held on Zoom. More information and registration details here: https://westportlibrary.org/event/you-dont-belong-here-how-three-women-rewrote-the-story-of-war-with-elizabeth-becker/

Sarah Al-Arshani ’19 selected for Widening the Pipeline Fellowship

Congratulations to Sarah Al-Arshani '19, one of 25 journalists selected for the National Press Foundation's Widening the Pipeline Fellowship. The program is designed to support early-career journalists of color and help them rise to positions of influence in U.S. newsrooms. Training topics include leadership, investigative reporting, accountability reporting, data journalism, multimedia skills and in-studio media skills.

Over the next 12 months, fellows will receive training in leadership, in-depth reporting and more to expand the pipeline of diverse journalists. Fellows will meet in Washington D.C. for a three-day workshop March 20-23, then meet once a month for virtual training sessions and return to Washington for a concluding training in 2023. The journalists are based in 18 states and hail from print, radio, TV and digital newsrooms.

Sarah is currently a news reporter at Insider, Inc.

Widening the Pipeline Fellows receive one year of training in leadership, in-depth reporting and more to expand the pipeline of diverse journalists.

 

 

Kyle Huson ’16 in Beijing to Cover Paralympics

Kyle Huson '16 says his experiences at UConn have prepared him for the pressure and excitement of covering the Paralympic Games (courtesy of Kyle Huson).

When Kyle Huson ’16 (CLAS) played competitive ice hockey, he’d lug his heavy gear to the rink. Now, he carries a laptop, and for the next week and a half credentials and a passport, as he covers the U.S. Paralympic Sled Hockey Team at the Paralympic Games in Beijing.

Huson, who majored in journalism and communication, is digital content manager at USA Hockey in Colorado Springs, Colorado, writing stories, posting content, and managing its social media channels. During the Winter Olympics, which closed Feb. 20, he stayed state-side and received content from staffers who were at the Games. But during the Paralympics, March 4-13, he’ll witness the action in China firsthand and provide his own accounts.

“A lot of what I do I owe to what I learned at UConn and the journalism and communication departments,” Huson says. “What I do is not just journalism-specific in terms of writing stories, but it’s also photography and videography. I’m able to provide in-depth content from different competitions and tournaments because of what I learned in my classes at UConn.”

Read more on UConn Today ↠

Kevin Lindstrom Places in Top 20 of Hearst Photo Competition

Congratulations to UConn Senior Kevin Lindstrom for placing in the Top 20 of the 2021-22 Hearst Journalism Awards Photo One Competition. Lindstrom serves as photo editor of The Daily Campus and is a student of UConn Journalism Prof. Steve Smith.

Here is one of the images from Kevin’s winning photo entry.

UConn Men’s Soccer midfielder Mateo Leveque celebrates after scoring a goal off a penalty kick during UConn’s 2–2 tie against Creighton University on Oct. 16, 2021 in rainy conditions at Morrone Stadium. Photo by Kevin Lindstrom

The Hearst Journalism Awards program provides scholarships to students for outstanding performance in college-level journalism, with matching grants to the students’ schools. There are 103 nationally accredited undergraduate journalism programs participating in the competition in 2021-22.

UConn Journalism senior Gladi Suero wins 2021 Zavala Scholarship

Gladi Suero
UConn Journalism senior Gladi Suero is the 2021 winner of a $2000 scholarship from NAHJ New England.

Gladi Suero, a senior at the University of Connecticut who is double majoring in Journalism and Communications and double minoring in Latino Studies and Diversity Studies in American Culture, is the 2021 winner of the Hortencia Zavala Scholarship from the New England Chapter of the National Association of Hispanic Journalists.

Suero is the first in their family to attend college and has a 4.0 GPA. Suero is interested in the intersection of journalism and social justice and is currently interning at St. Vincent DePaul Mission of Waterbury, the largest homeless shelter in Connecticut.

“Latinx people have been shut out of the media for far too long. We need to have a voice in news writing and newsgathering in order for readers, Latinx or not, to get the full picture,” Suero wrote as part of the winning application. “This goes so much deeper than needing to meet diversity and inclusion expectations. This is about whose voice is telling the story and the Latinx voice is a strong, colorful, multifaceted one that needs to be heard.”

Suero, who uses they/them pronouns, is the tenth Latinx student to receive a Hortencia Zavala Scholarship. The fund was created in 2016 by Hugo Balta, a former NAHJ president, as a way to help striving Latinx students while honoring the legacy of his grandmother, Hortencia Zavala.

“It is crucial that the next generation of diverse journalists get the education and mentoring necessary to produce authentic narratives about the challenges and opportunities of the emerging majority,” Balta said. “The lack of Hispanic/Latino representation in newsrooms often produces one dimensional, biased storytelling shaping the general public’s perception of a dynamic community.”

According to the U.S. Census, there were 62.1 million Americans of Latin American descent in 2020, representing about 19% of the U.S. population. Clost to one in five Americans are Latina/o/x. In New England, Latinos are also the largest minority group, comprising 12% of the population.

The Hortencia Zavala Scholarship Fund has awarded a total of $21,000 since 2017 through NAHJ chapters to support Latino students pursuing a career in journalism. This year’s scholarship was facilitated and judged by three members of the New England Chapter of NAHJ: Mónica Hernández, an anchor for WMUR TV in New Hampshire; Steph Solís, the digital editor of the Boston Business Journal and the Providence Business Journal; and Kevin G. Andrade, a freelance journalist based in Rhode Island who specializes in issues related to immigrant communities.

Coming to a consensus on a winning applicant was difficult because all of the submissions were exemplary, according to Andrade.

“Gladi’s submission showed a commitment to NAHJ’s mission,” Andrade said. “Most impressive were the guts they demonstrated in their submitted story sample which examined issues of racism and sexual violence on the UCONN campus in a way that centered the narrative not only on those affected directly by the issues, but extending that spotlight to show how that community is taking power into its own hands as they advocate for solutions. Gladi’s willingness to tackle these topics at such an established institution demonstrated the guts necessary to fulfill our mission as journalists to speak truth to power,” he said.

‘WILDFIRE’ selected for Global Conscience World Film Festival

UConn Journalism Prof. Steven G. Smith‘s short film WILDFIRE was recently accepted into the Global Conscience World Film Festival. The film was also selected for distribution on the Global Conscience World streaming channel.

Utilizing powerful images of major blazes known as “mega-fires,” the film reflects on our relationship with fire, past and present, and asks how fire will define our future. Mega-fires are erupting at a rate seven times greater each year in the past decade. They are burning upward of 10,000 acres and sterilizing the earth with their intensity.

WILDFIRE: Forest Fires in the American West was selected as one of the “best short films of the last ten years” at the Reel Earth Environmental Film Festival in New Zealand. The film has also won awards at the Los Angeles New Media Film Festival and was featured in the Planet in Focus, International Film & Video Festival in Toronto, Canada.

The film was produced and photographed by Prof. Smith. It was written and narrated by Walter Gallacher.

Watch the film on Global Conscience World or on Vimeo:

UConn Journalism joins Planet Forward Consortium

Planet Forward, a project of the George Washington University School of Media and Public Affairs, teaches, celebrates, and rewards environmental storytelling by college students.

Through the Planet Forward Consortium, students from colleges and universities gain access to learning modules and workshops in effective environmental and science communication, participate in events, and compete in a prestigious annual storytelling contest, Storyfest.

UConn Journalism has joined the consortium through the efforts of Associate Professor Scott Wallace, who teaches our Environmental Journalism course. Learn more here: https://www.planetforward.org/consortiumschools

Alumni Spotlight: Aysha Mahmood ’14, editing Channel Kindness

Aysha Mahmood’s job is, in short, to make kindness cool, a goal as ambitious as it is straightforward. The idea alone can make people roll their eyes, she says, “especially if you consider yourself too cool to be kind.”

Mahmood ’14 (CLAS) obviously does not. She works for Born This Way Foundation, the nonprofit co-founded by Lady Gaga and her mother, Cynthia Germanotta, to promote mental health and activism in young people. Mahmood does that essentially with good news. From her home office in Windsor, Connecticut, she edits the foundation’s Channel Kindness, a digital platform that features stories by young people from around the globe about how they are changing the world.

Read the full story in UConn Magazine.

Learn about writing-based careers on 11/9 with Curtis Wong ’01

Curtis Wong ’01 (Photo by Damon Dahlen/Huffington Post)

Learn about writing-based careers at CLAS Career Night on Tuesday, November 9 at 5:30 p.m. Come network with UConn CLAS alumni working in various writing-focused careers and ask questions about their career journeys.

One of the featured speakers is Curtis Wong, a 2001 UConn Journalism graduate who is a senior culture reporter at The Huffington Post, where he covers breaking news, politics and entertainment impacting the LGBTQ community and other marginalized groups.

Wong is known in New York media circles as HuffPost’s pop diva savant and Broadway theater enthusiast. Previously, he was a Staff Writer at The Prague Post in the Czech Republic, and has also written for Billboard and The Hartford Courant, among other publications. Most of his on-campus memories involve the Daily Campus newsroom, and he still wears the Husky blue and white with pride.

Other panelists include: 
  • Nandini D’Souza-Wolfe, ’97, English, VP Global Storytelling & Editorial at Tory Burch
  • Rebecca Hasko, ’13, Sociology, Grant Writer at Economic Mobility Pathways
  • Dr. Melissa-Sue John, ’08 ’10 Ph.D., Psychology, CEO at Lauren Simone Publishing House
  • Anne McAuley Lopez, ’96, Economics, SEO Content Writer and Content Strategist at Agency Content Writer
  • Paul Orzulak, ’89, History & Political Science, Founding Partner at West Wing Writers
  • Soniya Assudani Patel, ’19, Ph.D. Neuroscience, Senior Medical Writer at Apothecom

Students should register for the event via Handshake: https://uconn.joinhandshake.com/events/786412

Writing based careers