Ellen Hume
ellenhume.com ellenhume@ellenhume.com
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| DIRECTOR: Center on Media and Society,
University of Massachusetts Boston. Senior research fellow, creating
a new program in media and communications studies. Teaching "News
Media and Political Power" to undergraduates. |
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MEDIA ANALYST: Writer and lecturer about journalism's
role in democracy; the Internet; civic engagement and ethics.
Recent projects: "The Media Missionaries," a report
on U.S.-sponsored media development around the world (Knight Foundation,
2003); consultant, USAID; advisor, Facing History and Ourselves;
lecturer, Media and Democracy seminar for high school teachers,
Harvard University (2001-2002); newsroom trainer, Committee of
Concerned Journalists (2002-3); chapter author, "Resource
Journalism" in Democracy and New Media (MIT Press, 2003);,
"Talk Show Culture" chapter for the Encyclopedia of
International Media and Communications, Vol. 4 (Elsevier Science,
2003); USAID trainer, investigative journalism, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
(Oct. 2003); speaker, International Communications Forum, (Sarajevo,
Sept. 2000), lecturer, Central Bohemia University, (Pilsen Nov.
2000), Masaryk University (Brno, November, 1999); The Nordic Journalists
Center (Aarhus, Denmark 2001), University of Oslo (Norway, November,
2002.) Returned to USA in 2001 after two years in Prague working
on democracy, media and women's rights issues in formerly Communist
Central Europe.
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EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR: The Democracy Project, PBS (February
1996-June 1998): Founding director of American public television's
effort to create engaging political news programming for television
and the Internet, to encourage deeper citizen involvement in both
national and local public affairs. Oversaw PBS's 1996 and 1998
election coverage, creating PBS Debate Night, a national Congressional
leadership debate paired with local candidate debates on PBS stations
across the country. In 1997, launched "Follow the Money),"
PBS's experimental weekly series and website on the role of money
in American politics. Ran workshops and supervised grants for
local television shows, outreach programs and websites.
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TELEVISION COMMENTATOR AND LECTURER: Frequent commentator
on New England Cable News. Former weekly panelist on CNN's "Reliable
Sources" program from 1993 - 1997 and PBS's "Washington
Week in Review" from 1979 - 1988; moderator of the second
televised 1998 Massachusetts Gubernatorial Debate; co-anchor of
PBS's live broadcasts in July 1995 of the Waco hearings in Congress;
former moderator of "The Editors" for Canadian public
television; periodic commentator on NBC's "Meet the Press"
and other programs. Panelist, Freedom House conference on Central
Europe journalism and the courts (Warsaw, Oct. 1999); moderator,
media panel at the Freedom Forum's anniversary of the Fall of
the Berlin Wall conference (Berlin, November, 1999). Lectured
at the Aspen Institute, the Freedom Forum, The Carter Center,
the Kennedy Library, the Massachusetts Superior Court Judges'
Educational Conference, National Conference of State Legislatures,
the Brookings Institution, the Women's Campaign Fund, the Council
on Foundations, universities including American, Berkeley, City
College of London, Columbia, Duke, George Washington, Georgetown,
Harvard, M.I.T., New York University, Princeton, Texas, and Masaryk
and Western Bohemia Universities in the Czech Republic, as well
as other academic and civic groups.
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SENIOR FELLOW:The Annenberg Washington
Program in Communications Studies, (1993-February 1996): Analyzed
journalism and its evolving role in policy-making and America's
political culture, including the tabloid trend and the Internet.
Authored prize-winning report, "Tabloids, Talk Radio and
the Future of News" which describes how technology-assisted
improvements in journalism could serve both the journalist's
market imperatives and the public interest.
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EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR AND SENIOR FELLOW: Harvard University's
Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy (1988-1993):
Served as Director Marvin Kalb's administrator for this $1.4 million
research center at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government. Taught
graduate seminars. Designed and staffed research projects on U.S.
presidential campaign coverage, Race, Press and Politics and the
U.S. press coverage of Tiananmen Square. Raised over $1 million
for the Center from foundations, individuals and companies. Edited
various papers and reports. Created and moderated conferences
on journalism ethics and other related subjects. Served on the
admissions committee for the Kennedy School of Government's mid-career
master's degree program.
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TEACHER: Senior Research Fellow, UMass Boston (current);
teaching courses on "Journalism and Democracy" including
political campaigns, war coverage, hate speech and free press
issues. Adjunct Lecturer, Harvard University's Kennedy School
of Government, (1990-93). Taught graduate seminars for public
policy students on how the media, politics and government interact
and what might be done to improve the process. Taught Media/Politics
classes in Kennedy School Executive Programs for state officials,
military and other groups, and media sessions in the New Members
of Congress seminars throughout the 1980s. Teacher, Northwestern
University's Medill School of Journalism, 1993-94): Taught "The
Journalist and the Politician" seminar to broadcast and print
students in Medill's Washington semester, including ethics, race
and gender issues, new technologies, civic journalism, political
agenda-setting and other issues.
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AUTHOR AND JOURNALIST: Chapter author, The Morality of
the Mass Media, (University of Texas, 1993); True to Ourselves
(September, 1998, Jossey-Bass); and Democracy and New Media (MIT
Press, 2003); "Talk Show Culture" chapter for the Encyclopedia
of International Media and Communications, Vol. 4 (Elsevier Science,
2003). Also, "Tabloids, Talk Radio and the Future of News"
monograph (Annenberg Washington Program, August 1995) and "Restoring
the Bond: Campaign Lessons for '92" report on U.S. presidential
campaign coverage (The Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics
and Public Policy, Harvard University, November 1991); "The
New Paradigm for News" in The Annals of the American Academy
of Political and Social Science (Vol. 546, July 1996); "Wired
World: The Serf Surfs" paper for City College of London World
Technology Conference (London, June, 1999); "Journalism and
Citizenship" Nieman Reports (May, 2000); "The Weight
of Watergate," Media Studies Journal (Spring 1997). Op-ed
pieces and reviews have included; "Put the Privacy Zone Off
Limits" (The Los Angeles Times, April 1992), "Women
and Perestroika" (The Los Angeles Times, November 1990) and
"Why the Press Blew the Savings and Loan Scandal" (The
New York Times, May 1990).
**White House and political correspondent, The Wall Street Journal
(1983-88). Covered the White House during President Reagan's last
two years in office, as well as congressional and presidential
policy-making and campaigns. Specialized in writing about political
trends, examining what the voters were looking for, doing "focus
groups" to go with NBC/Wall Street Journal national polls.
Covered Jesse Jackson, Geraldine Ferraro and other candidates.
**Reporter, Los Angeles Times (1975-83). Covered Congress and
George Bush's 1980 presidential campaign. On Thanksgiving Day,
1979 flew into war-torn Phnom Penh in the back of a Flying Tigers
cargo plane, as one of the first U.S. reporters into the capitol
after the Vietnamese invasion. Covered the Three Mile Island nuclear
accident and investigative projects. During congressional recesses,
covered politics from the ground up, walking precincts with candidates
and writing about the tax revolt, reapportionment, campaign dirty
tricks and other issues. As a metro reporter in Los Angeles, covered
everything from health care to murders, forest fires, movie stars,
the Patty Hearst and Chowchilla kidnappings, and an exclusive
jailhouse interview with would-be presidential assassin Sara Jane
Moore.
**Business and financial reporter, Detroit Free Press (1973-5).
Black capitalism, retailing, the energy crisis and other business
stories. Also: Education reporter, The Ypsilanti (Mich.) Press
(1972-3); public service director and copywriter, KTMS AM-FM radio,
Santa Barbara (1970-2); feature writer, Santa Barbara News Press
(1969-70); general assignment reporter, Somerville (Mass.) Journal
(1969).
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OTHER PROJECTS: Commissioner, President's Commission on
Protecting and Reducing Government Secrecy (1995 - 97). This commission,
chaired by Sen. Patrick Moynihan, created Secrecy, a report and
strategy for how to reform both the nation's classified national
security information system and the granting of security clearances.
Member, Twentieth Century Fund Task Force on the Presidential
Debate Process (1995); Delegation leader, assisting Russian journalists
in Moscow, St. Petersburg and Novosibirsk as they covered their
first free legislative election (November 1993). The journalism
seminars were sponsored by the Center for War, Peace and the News
Media at New York University.
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HONORS and AFFILIATIONS: Honorary Doctorates (Kenyon College,
2001) and Daniel Webster College (1990); Radcliffe Alumnae Recognition
Award (1993), Big Sisters' Association Award (1989), Dana Hall
School Alumni Award (1988). Winner, Angel Award, Center for Excellence
in Media (1997); Bart Richards Award for Media Criticism (1996)
for "Tabloids, Talk Radio and the Future of News;" special
citation, Lowell Mellett Awards Program, for "Campaign Lessons
for '92" report. Currently featured in "Who's Who."
Judge, Schorr Awards, WBUR public radio; Judge, World Technology
Network journalism awards (1999). Fellow, Kennedy Institute of
Politics at Harvard University (1981). Selector, Nieman Fellowships
(1993), Shorenstein Center Fellowships (1989-93). Former judge
for the Robert Kennedy Journalism awards, White House Press Association
Dirksen Awards, and the National Press Club Fourth Estate awards.
Member, the Council on Foreign Relations, Czech Women's Forum,
Study Circles, the National Press Club. Member, Advisory Board
of the Shorenstein Center; Advisory Board, Center for International Media Assistance at the National Endowment for
Democracy. Incorporator,
Harvard magazine. Former adviser, Newspaper Research Journal,
Who Cares magazine and Harvard International Review.
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