My Favorite Websites

These are links to some of my favourite places on the web.
This is a mixed bag that I find useful, inspiring, thought-provoking, intelligent, practical and even hilarious.

Photo Library, Library of Congress

For fans and students of photography, the U.S. Library of Congress offers a Photo Library from which you can order real prints, at very reasonable prices, from negatives shot by photographers like Walker Evans and Dorothea Lange. The photo library contains 52 collections, large portions of which have been digitized. http://lcweb2.loc.gov/pp/pphome.html

International Center of Photography (ICP), New York

The International Center of Photography is a museum, a school and a center for photographers and photography. ICP celebrates photography’s diversity in its many roles as an agent of social change, a medium of aesthetic expression, a tool for scientific or historical research, and a repository for personal experience and memory.
www.icp.org

Sebastião Salgado, photojournalist

In my opinion, economist-turned-photojournalist Sebastian Salgado (b. 1944, Brazil) is the most brilliant photojournalist of today’s generation. Widely published and exhibited, Salgado is a genius at documenting people attempting to survive in the worst of circumstances as well as exploring the eroded status of the manual worker in the age of computers and high technology. www.terra.com.br/sebastiaosalgado/

Roth and Ramberg Photography - Alberta

This team did some award winning editorial photography for me when I was at Canadian National in the style of Walker Evans. Reasonable rates considering the quality they offer.
www.rothandramberg.com

The PEW Research Center for the People and the Press

The Center is an independent opinion research group that studies attitudes toward the U.S. press, politics and public policy issues. It is best known for regular national surveys that measure public attentiveness to major news stories, and for their polling that charts trends in values and fundamental political and social attitudes.
http://people-press.org/

 

The recipe collection of Gourmet and
Bon Appetit
magazines

Billed as the world’s greatest recipe collection—and it is! Check out the recipe search that you can do by typing in what ingredients you have lying on your shelves or in the depths of your refrigerator. Restaurant reviews and recommendations for virtually any city. www.epicurious.com

Aaron Brown, today’s most intelligent news anchor

Aaron appears nightly on CNN’s 10 p.m. news slot called NewsNight. In my view, Aaron has inherited the title of Most Trusted News Anchor from his hero, Walter Cronkite. Aaron and his team consistently come up with insightful analysis and intelligent sources for stories that have been running all day and therefore have been pre-digested. He’ll send you a daily e-mail around 6:30 p.m. telling you what stories they are working on.
http://edition.cnn.com/CNN/Programs/
aaron.brown/index.html/

The Bullshit Generator,
writing help for the clueless

For those times where you need to write something, but don’t actually have anything to say, the Bullshit Generator is a perfect tool. This site will enable you to write copy such "proactively maximize our synergies," "contextualize back-end functionalities" and "regenerate mission-critical intermediaries" that sound pretty good, but are actually 100% content-free. Ideal for business plans and marketing strategies that you know won’t get read anyway.
http://www.dack.com/web/bullshit.html

Tom Friedman, NY Times columnist and winner of 3 Pulitzer Prizes (1983, 1988, 2002)

Friedman, in my estimation, is a sound thinker and writer on U.S. foreign policy. He specializes in covering the Middle East and in the words of the New York Observer is "the principal interpreter of the Arab world for the well-informed." His columns run in The New York Times on Thursdays and Sundays. Current editorials are free; back issues will cost you a few bucks. Friedman’s book The Lexus and the Olive Tree (2000) is a wonderful, clear explanation of what "globalization" really means and how each one of us has a role to play. http://www.nytimes.com/top/opinion/editorialsandoped/
oped/columnists/thomaslfriedman/index.html

Albert Mehrabian, communication pioneer and Professor Emeritus of Psychology, UCLA

In his groundbreaking book, Silent Messages (1981), Mehrabian showed that 93% of human communication takes place through body language, gestures, and voice tone. Words account for a mere 7%. Think about what means for the effectiveness of e-mail, telephone and video-conferencing. 
Mehrabian’s communication research (condensed)

Dr. Albert Mehrabian's website

Monday, October 18, 2004

Useful media and journalism websites

Here’s how some of the best describe themselves

The PEW Research Center for the People and the Press
The Center is an independent opinion research group that studies attitudes toward the press, politics and public policy issues. We are best known for regular national surveys that measure public attentiveness to major news stories, and for our polling that charts trends in values and fundamental political and social attitudes. 
http://people-press.org/

The Media Center (at the American Institute)
The Media Center helps individuals and organizations worldwide acquire intelligence and apply insight into the future role and use of media and enabling technology.
http://www.mediacenter.org/

The Center for Media and Public Affairs (CMPA)
The Center for Media and Public Affairs is a nonpartisan research and educational organization which conducts scientific studies of the news and entertainment media. MPA election studies have played a major role in the ongoing debate over improving the election process. Our continuing analysis and tabulation of late night political jokes provides a lighter look at major news makers. CMPA is one of the few groups to study the important role the media plays in communicating information about health risks and scientific issues.
http://www.cmpa.com/

MediaChannel
MediaChannel is a media issues supersite, featuring criticism, breaking news, and investigative reporting from hundreds of organizations worldwide. As the media watch the world, we watch the media.
http://www.mediachannel.org/

Columbia Journalism Review (CJR)
CJR was founded in 1961 to "assess the performance of journalism in all its forms; to call attention to its shortcomings and strengths; to help define and refine the standards of honest, responsible service; to help stimulate continuing improvement in the profession; and to speak out for what is right, fair and decent."
http://www.cjr.org/

Tons more resources at:
http://www.newswatch.org/