Border Initiative, Super Journalists, CO2 to Rocks, Signs

Border Initiative, Super Journalists, CO2 to Rocks, Signs

Top of Mind with Julie Rose - Season 1, Episode 13

  • Feb 25, 2015 7:00 am
  • 1:42:56 mins
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Kino Border Initiative (1:11) Guest: Reverend Sean Carroll, Executive Director of the Kino Border Initiative  The Department of Homeland Security will run out of funding on Friday unless Congress can agree on a budget for the agency that secures our borders. The stand-off is tied to Republican trying to undo President Obama’s executive action on immigration. There’s ongoing political disagreement about how to handle the problem of people crossing into the U.S. illegally. After a decade’s decline in the number of illegal migrants begin apprehended at the U.S.-Mexico border, the department of Customs and Border Protection says 2014 saw a spike. They attribute that increase to unaccompanied children and families turning themselves in over the summer. Discussion on this side of the border often focuses on what to do with nearly half-a-million illegal migrants who were apprehended last year. Jail them? Send them back to Mexico? The side of the story we rarely hear about is what happens to those people once they’re dropped off on the side of the border.  “For many if not all, it’s the most traumatic experience of their lives,” says Carroll on deportation.  “We have a lot of mothers who are separated from their children who are in the United States. There are no words,” says Carroll, “to describe the experience of a mother who cannot be with her children.”  Super Journalist (20:00) Guest: Lewis DVorkin, Chief Product Officer at Forbes Media  In 2013, the Pew Research Center says 82% of Americans got news on a desktop or laptop and more than had said they received news on a mobile device. Many young people get their news almost exclusively from what shows up from friends and sponsors on Facebook or Twitter feeds. This shifts in news consumption is helping usher in a new role for journalists.  “I have always believed that the mission of journalism is to inform,” says DVorkin.  “If they’re going to understand their audience they need to understand what the audience consumes and how they consume their stories,” say

Episode Segments

Super Journalist

Feb 25, 2015
19 m

Guest: Lewis DVorkin, Chief Product Officer at Forbes Media  In 2013, the Pew Research Center says 82% of Americans got news on a desktop or laptop and more than had said they received news on a mobile device. Many young people get their news almost exclusively from what shows up from friends and sponsors on Facebook or Twitter feeds. This shifts in news consumption is helping usher in a new role for journalists.  “I have always believed that the mission of journalism is to inform,” says DVorkin.  “If they’re going to understand their audience they need to understand what the audience consumes and how they consume their stories,” says DVorkin on journalists.  “Today’s most successful journalists,” says DVorkin “will be the most knowledgeable about a specific category.”

Guest: Lewis DVorkin, Chief Product Officer at Forbes Media  In 2013, the Pew Research Center says 82% of Americans got news on a desktop or laptop and more than had said they received news on a mobile device. Many young people get their news almost exclusively from what shows up from friends and sponsors on Facebook or Twitter feeds. This shifts in news consumption is helping usher in a new role for journalists.  “I have always believed that the mission of journalism is to inform,” says DVorkin.  “If they’re going to understand their audience they need to understand what the audience consumes and how they consume their stories,” says DVorkin on journalists.  “Today’s most successful journalists,” says DVorkin “will be the most knowledgeable about a specific category.”