Showing posts with label National Geographic Society. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Geographic Society. Show all posts
Tuesday, March 31, 2020
Coronavirus: National Geographic Society launches an emergency fund for journalists worldwide who want to cover the Covid-19 pandemic within their own communities.
by Thinus Ferreira
The National Geographic Society has launched an international emergency fund for journalists worldwide who want to cover the Covid-19 novel coronavirus pandemic within their own communities.
The National Geographic Society will review proposals that it receives for journalists and people who want to do citizen journalism on an ongoing basis. The work must be in English and journalists need to be at least 18 years old and older.
"In the most difficult of times, journalism can play several roles in supporting communities around the globe. It can disseminate critical information to keep people safe and informed, it can illuminate stories that bring us hope and remind us of our shared human experience, and it can help us find and share solutions to wicked problems," says National Geographic.
"As Covid-19 continues to evolve and impact communities around the globe, the National Geographic Society is launching an emergency fund for journalists all over the world who wish to cover Covid-19 within their own communities."
"This fund will place particular emphasis on delivering news to underserved populations, particularly where there is a dearth of evidence-based information getting to those who need it."
National Geographic says that the fund is designed to quickly deliver support so that both individual stories and longer series of content may be created.
The fund will distribute support ranging from $1000 to $8000 for local coverage of the preparation, response, and impact of this global pandemic as seen through evidence-based reporting.
"Beyond reporting on medical and physical health related to Covid-19, we especially encourage reporting that covers social, emotional, economic and equity issues. Narratives around the pandemic necessarily include facts and numbers, but ultimately, must also go deeper - telling the stories of inequities that Covid-19 has brought to light."
The National Geographic Society is looking for writers, photographers, videographers, audio journalists, cartographers, filmmakers, and data visualization experts who are all welcome to apply for this funding.
"Journalists should seek placement of this work within their local media ecosystems and must attribute their support to the National Geographic Society’s Emergency Fund for Journalists. National Geographic Society or National Geographic Partners may also choose to publish some of this work as part of its global coverage."
The reporting should cover any aspect of the virus and its fallout, including but not limited to, the social consequences of Covid-19 and measures to contain it, particularly related to equity - such as its impact on immigrant communities, domestic violence, and early childhood education.
The society is also looking for stories of resilience and solutions that could be applied on a regional or global scale, novel forms of data visualization or science communication to help communities better understand how to protect themselves, as well as lessons learned from local response(s) to Covid-19 that could be applied to other large-scale challenges, such as climate change or the refugee crisis.
Wednesday, January 9, 2013
A New Age of Exploration TV special coming to National Geographic Channel with once-a-week archive specials to celebrate 125th years.
With the National Geographic Society turning 125 years old, the National Geographic Channel (DStv 181) will have a special documentary once a week for the duration of 2013 from its library titles under the banner of "Explorer Top 125" as well as new titles such as A New Age of Exploration, a 125th anniversary TV special which viewers can see on Saturday 12 January at 22:00.
In A New Age of Exploration viewers will see National Geographic's explorers-in-residence Robert Ballard and Albert Lin and find out how surgeon Sam Bhayani is searching for a cure for cancer. The special will look at virus hunter dr Gary Kobinger, storm chaser Tim Samaras and feature antropologist and geneticist Spencer Wells and the Genographic Project.
Below is a line-up of the Explorer Top 125 special programming for January 2013 and the beginning of February on the National Geographic Channel:
Titanic: The Final Word with James Cameron
Saturday 12 January 22:55
James Cameron and Titanic experts seek answers to the baffling questions remaining about exactly how and why the Titanic sank. Forensic experts piece together what exactly happened during the last moments of the ship.
The Human Family Tree
Saturday 19 January 22:00
The Genographic team take random DNA samples from 200 New Yorkers to trace the ancestral footsteps of humanity and reveal how interconnected mankind really is. Everyone's lineage can be traced back some 60 000 years to the cradle of mankind in east Africa.
Last Lioness
Saturday 19 January 23:50
Lady Liuwa is the last lioness in the Liuwa Plain in Zambia. For 10 years cameraman Herbert Brauer watched her life unfold. In May 2009 a plan is made to introduce a male lion so that she may no longer be alone.
Stonehenge Decoded
Saturday 26 January 22:00
Shrouded in mystery for 4 500 years, the British archeologist Mike Parker Pearson offers a groundbreaking theory on Stonehenge - one that places this ancient monument at the centre of one of the largest prehistoric religious complexes in the world.
The Two Million Year Old Boy
Saturday 26 January 22:55
A 9 year old boy makes one of the greatest fossil finds of all time, stumbling onto the 2 million year old skeleton of a pre-human boy, and throwing everything we thought we knew about our own origins of mankind up in the air. As mankind explores the mystery of how a newly-discovered pre-human species lived and died, it may yield some answers to the ultimate question of how we became human.
What Lies Beneath: Draining the Ocean
Saturday 2 February 22:00
See a world you've never seen before - a world hidden below kilometres of water: the landscape of the ocean bed. Combining the latest scientific data with state-of-the-art special effects, this documentary drains the water from the oceans to reveal the mountains, canyons, plains and volcanoes hidden below the waves of the world.
Super Pride
Saturday 2 February 23:50
The Serengeti in northern Tanzania has one of the largest lion populations in Africa with 3 500 lions living in 300 individual prides. In central Serengeti one pride reigns supreme - a "Super Pride" boasting 22 strong lions. Few lion prides ever reach this status and it requires practically perfect conditions including plenty of prey and resilient males.
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