1/21/2010


Contacting your Alaska legislators

Sen. Mark Begich
144 Russell Senate Office Building
Washington, DC 20510
(202) 224-3004
Fax: (202) 224-2354
E-mail: Use the form at http://begich.senate.gov

or, contact his Anchorage office:

Peterson Tower, Suite 750
510 L St
Anchorage, AK, 99501
(907) 271 - 5915
Toll free in AK (877) 501 - 6275
Fax (907) 258 - 9305


Sen. Lisa Murkowski

709 Hart Senate Office Building
Washington , DC 20510
Main: 202-224-6665
Fax: 202-224-5301
E-mail: Use the form at http://murkowski.senate.gov
or, contact her Anchorage office:

510 L Street, Suite 550
Anchorage, AK 99501
Main: 907-271-3735
Fax: 907-276-4081
Toll free: 1-877-829-6030

Rep. Don Young
Office of Congressman Don Young
2111 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, DC 20515
(202) 225-5765
Fax: (202) 225-0425
E-mail: Use the link at http://donyoung.house.gov/Contact/
or, contact his Anchorage office
Peterson Tower Building
510 L St Suite 580
Anchorage, AK 99501-1954
(907) 271-5978
Fax: (907) 271-5950

1/20/2010


Steve Lindbeck: Media change an adventure for all


A summary of our January 2010 speaker, Steve Lindbeck
By Kay Vreeland

Steve Lindbeck, President and General Manager of Alaska Public Telecommunications, Inc. (APTI), spoke to Alaska Professional Communicators Thursday, January 7, 2010, about his experience as “An Alaskan in the Media Revolution,” explaining the challenges faced by Alaska public broadcasting in today’s rapidly changing media landscape.

Lindbeck is responsible for leadership and oversight of APTI, a media organization that includes KAKM-TV, KSKA-FM and the Alaska Public Radio Network, and which reaches audiences throughout Alaska. Having moved into public broadcasting in 2007 after a 30-year career in journalism and public affairs, he sees links between the decline of print journalism in Alaska and the vigorous role of public broadcasting in the new media revolution.

However, he noted, nobody knows where the fast-paced changes are leading us.

Lindbeck started his career in newsrooms in 1971 as a cub local sports reporter at West High School. Information was scarce in Alaska because of reporters’ distance from the main sources. By the early 1980s there were two vibrant and competitive newspapers, whereas today there is only the slimmed-down Anchorage Daily News. Although there was the rise of Channel 2 as the dominant local news channel, there was no public broadcasting and no Alaska public radio network.

The dramatic changes in information delivery we have seen since that time are nothing like the change we’re going to see, said Lindbeck. A new digital way of life in media may be glimpsed today in politics in the revolution of the Obama campaign going online, which Lindbeck compared to the Kennedy campaign’s utilization of television.

A recent conference at Google headquarters named swift response to consumer preferences as the key to survival in the digital age; consumers reveal these preferences as they read, view, click, and comment. This is only one aspect of today’s media life. The iPhone has an “app” (short for “application”) to record and play back programs from NPR. Cloud computing, blog conversations, Twitter news delivery, Kindle, Wikipedia, the upcoming computer Tablet, and the “disintermediation” of social media are all showing that information is not scarce, but infinite. Media owners have less power, and audiences are more fragmented. Advertisers are changing allegiance, and many computer users seem to be content competitors against the 80 percent of original reporting that is found in daily newspapers.

As print journalism declines, online tools make news and information delivery richer than ever through access to source documents, interaction with readers, expansion of good writing on blogs, and Internet journalism. Among the good trends emerging are larger audiences and more people engaging with media. In which direction will all this go? And, how will the Internet generate revenue: non-profit and philanthropic models, or public broadcasting models?

Where does public broadcasting fit in? It has a strong brand identity. People value it. It operates with trust, quality and authenticity. There is a genuine affection and market for it. And, as distribution channels compete, public broadcasting provides local and community news and connections, said Lindbeck. As the world fragments, people are hungry for community involvement. The real question, said Lindbeck, is how public broadcasting can ride this wave.

In Alaska, KUAC in Fairbanks, APTI in Anchorage and KTOO in Juneau are working to combine and unify operations with community involvement, under a working title of “Alaska Public Media.” Calling the new unified statewide public broadcasting organization project a “transformation,” Lindbeck said that its vision statement sees it as the leader in news, education and public affairs, as well as a community builder in Alaska. Although based in the news and programming values of NPR and PBS, its central mission will lie in the Alaska content that it produces.

In conclusion, asking where all this is going, how to use the new tools and how not to be left behind, Lindbeck framed the changing broadcasting climate as an evolution analogy: We are in the position of the dinosaurs after the big asteroid hit the earth, he said. We’re going to have to figure out how to become mammals, or birds, in order to survive. That’ll take a lot of imagination, experimentation and the courage to change, but it is a very exciting time, Lindbeck concluded. It’s an adventure for everyone involved.

Current First Amendment legislation

U.S. Senate Bill 448 (S. 448) (as of Jan. 20, 2010)

Title: A bill to maintain the free flow of information to the public by providing conditions for the federally compelled disclosure of information by certain persons connected with the news media.
This bill was initially sponsored by Sen. Arlen Specter in February 2009 and has 11 co-sponsors. It was moved out of the Senate Judiciary Committee in mid-December after considerable revision. A House bill, H.R. 985, was passed in March and the Judiciary Committee considered this bill and efforts of the White House to lessen the power of judges to weigh the benefits of disclosure vs. national security in molding the final bill. S. 448 was placed on the Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 225.

Contact your representatives.

1/9/2010


Finding your voice: writer’s workshop opportunity

Both pre-published and published authors are welcome to the “Finding Your Voice” writer’s workshop, January 30 and February 6, organized by 49 Writers blog authors Andromeda Romano-Lax and Deb Vanasse. Space is limited to the first 15 paid registrants. Visit 49 Writers for details and registration information.

1/8/2010


Sinclare to discuss romance writing

Join us on February 4, when Tracy Sinclare will discuss her romance writers group.

Download a poster to help us promote this event.

Luncheon Information
11:30 a.m., Thursday, February 4
Alaska Housing Finance Corporation, first floor
Corner of Boniface and Tudor (entrance on Boniface side) Anchorage

Lunch: members $16; guests of members $18; others $20

Reservations:
1. RSVP and payment through PayPal.

2. Email: akpc at gci dot net by noon Tuesday, February 2.

3. Call 274-4723 and leave a message, including a phone number where you can be reached. When calling or sending an email, please include how many people are coming and their names.

Map to Alaska Housing Finance Corporation, location of the February 4 meeting


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More about Tracy Sinclare
Tracy Sinclare has had life-long love of romance novels. She began reading romances in the 7th grade when she discovered Victoria Holt novels and began writing romances at the age of 16 during Trigonometry. During her senior year in high school, the class dressed up as what they would be in twenty years—Tracy dressed as a romance writer. Her first novel was published in 2002 just before her 20th High School Class Reunion. When not writing romances, Tracy has worked in public relations and video production. She spent 13 years with the TransAlaska Pipeline before joining Channel 2 in 2001. She is currently the Weekend Meteorologist for KTUU. She moved to Alaska in 1972 when her father was transferred to Elmendorf Air Force Base.

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