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Nashville Stories

August 15, 2008

 

Chips Quinn Scholars capture essential Nashville stories Friday, Aug. 15, 2008. Stories include Centennial dog park, coffee culture, Nashville morning, western wear, gourmet paletas, Lower Broadway, Nashville’s Farmer’s Market and Vanderbilt’s band camp.

*Nashville Cowboy Bleu, a sales associate at Trail West explains western wear.
*The Nashville Farmers Market is growing, seeing more customers every day.
*Vanderbilt’s Marching Band Camp includes more than just Vanderbilt marchers, all local university students are invited to play.
*Lower Broadway, a former rodeo rider tells the story of Downtown Nashville, past and present.
*The Centennial Dog Park is all about the puppy love.
*What is a Nashville morning? Interviews with people going about their morning routine.
*Exploring Nashville’s coffee house culture at Fidos in Hillsboro Village.
*Las Paletas, a family owned business in Nashville sells freshly made paletas.

Scholars Capture Nashville: Assignment One

August 15, 2008

 

Chips Quinn Scholars produced seven news videos Thursday, Aug. 14, 2008. The videos range from coffee to guitars.

*Nashville’s favorite coffee house, Bongo Java roasts its coffee beans in-house at its east side cafe.
*Vanderbilt University’s greenhouse manager keeps the plants blooming for research and more.
*The Frist Center for Visual Arts offers hands-on experience for young and old.
*The Nashville Zoo has been recognized as one of the top zoos in the U.S. because of its nature-like and hands-on exhibits.
*Gruhn Guitars is a mainstay in downtown Nashville. George Gruhn talks about how he got started and why his collection continues to grow.
*The Parthenon in Centennial Park has one of the Nation’s largest indoor statues, Athena, which was created by a local Nashville sculptor.
*The Boxing Resource Center is a non-profit gym in Nashville that trains men and women for fitness or competition.

Pancaked

August 14, 2008

A line of hungry customers often wraps around the Pancake Pantry building on the southern edge of the Hillsboro Village neighborhood in Nashville. The restaurant opened in 1961 and quickly became a place where locals, tourists and the stars mix for breakfast and lunch.

Too Weird to Franchise

August 14, 2008

Bongo Java is a gathering place for all of Nashville. Located across the street from Belmont University in the hip Belmont-Hillsboro Village neighborhood, Bongo attracts musicians, students and artists.

Ghost Dancer

August 14, 2008

Artist Alice Aycock’s sculpture “Ghost Ballet for the East Bank Machineworks” was funded by the Metropolitan Nashville Arts Commission and unveiled along the banks of the Cumberland River in 2007. Ghost Ballet is 100 feet high, 100 feet wide and 60 feet deep, and is made of steel, industrial metals and neon.

Country to Cupcakes

August 14, 2008

Gigi’s Cup Cakes is a gourmet cupcake shop owned by Gina Butler, a former country singer turned baker. Butler’s passion for baking came from years of baking with her mother and grandmother.

Vander-Built Green

August 14, 2008

Vanderbilt’s Freshman Commons is an environmentally friendly building and certified as a a Gold level building from the U.S. Green Building Council’s Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Green Building Rating System.

Art or Not?

August 14, 2008

The Color as Field: American Painting, 1950-75 exhibit at the Frist in Nashville challenges visitors to decide what is art. The exhibit has 41 paintings by artists like Kenneth Noland, Jules Olitski, Frank Stella and Sam Gilliam.

Pop Up Art

August 13, 2008

A new pop up art book exhibit at the Nashville Public Library mixes literature and art. The new exhibit appeals to library visitors of all ages.

Introspection — due Friday, Aug. 8

August 1, 2008

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Hey Scholars!

This will be our final blog posting, as some of you are finishing your internships TODAY. Hard to believe! (But I will send out a few more e-mails to our group.) My question is a simple one: What do you know now re: journalism or your job/paper or yourself that you wish you had known at the start of your internship?

Signed,

Your Career Coach-with-the-emphasis-on-career!

Sourcing — Due Friday, Aug. 1

July 22, 2008

Hey Chipsters!

We know that the more sources contributing to a story, the richer and more accurate the story is.  The hard part is working them all into a story that’s only 10 inches or 50 seconds  long. Do your papers/eds require a minimum number of sources per story? Do you go beyond the min. no. in your reporting? Do all the people you talk to find their way into your story? How do you get the maximum sourcing bang in such a short space? Examples from your own work? Coach Col.

  

Multimedia — Due Sunday, July 20

July 15, 2008

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Hey Chipsters!

Please share a tip or question involving the practicalities of multimedia.

Examples of tips: When I’m recording, I try to make sure to ask questions that get my sources to elaborate rather than “yes-no” questions. And: When I’m shooting video of something that involves a process (an emergency drill; a county/state fair animal/plant/mineral judging, etc.), I try to make sure I get footage of each step in the process.

Examples of questions: When I report for an audio slide show, how/when do I switch among notebook, camera, recorder? And where do I physically put the two that I’m not using at the moment? And: Can anyone direct me to an example (or Web site) of a particularly excellent journalistic audio slide show and/or video?

If you can answer a colleague’s question as this thread goes along or elaborate on a tip (including the above), please do! That’s the point of this thread. Thanks! — Your Coach

SOS — Due July 14

July 9, 2008

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Good morning, Chipsters!

We’ve got some requests for help:

– “I thought it might be helpful if we exchanged tips on how to stay organized in a hectic news environment. Usually I’m really good at this sort of thing and people come to me for advice. But now I’m struggling to keep everything straight in my head and on paper. I think it’s super important to have some sort of system to organize stories, contacts, important dates, etc. I feel like I’ve veered off the organization path and could use a few bread crumbs to find my way back.”

– “I’ve been having some major anxiety/stress/paranoia about making errors. It’s gotten to the point where I’ve made a mistake more than three times. I always double check my stories and I’ve told my editor that I am concerned and I’m not just trying to blow it off, but I’m afraid that it’s starting to make a bad impression with my editor. My editor has told me that people are human and make mistakes, but they should be avoided. I have gathered tips from other reporters and my editors about fact checking. I know that I can only do my best, but I’m really starting to doubt myself.”

– “I’m not sure how to come up with enterprise story ideas. Every time I come up with one, I think of at least three reasons why it isn’t an idea. Can you talk about finding good ideas and the process of seeing them through to story form?”

What advice or suggestions can we offer “Hansel/Gretel,” “Doubting” and “Following Through”?

Enterprise — Due Monday, July 7

June 30, 2008

colleenfitzpatrick.<br>  jpg Hello Inkslingers and Snapshotters!
Our jumping-off point this week is this Scholar’s condundrum: “I usually can get creative about enterprise stories. But often I have trouble following through on them. I struggle with letting myself get into long enterprise pieces. I am afraid that I will put tons of time into it, and it will never run. Or I’m afraid that it will end up consuming me.”

Who else feels this way? What have you done to overcome this feeling — or what can you imagine yourself doing that might help in overcoming it? How are you doing with balancing your assigned stories with your enterprise work? — Coach Col

Ledes…Due Friday, June 27

June 21, 2008

Hey Chipsters! Four weeks down for some of you – and a good time to review your goals. I’ll be sending individual e-mails this week reminding you of your goals.

Two questions for our blog this week: One — please share a lead you wrote that you really liked — and tell us why you liked it. (Russel,  please do the same with a photo.) Or tell us about an experience you had about finding and/or revising a lead. 

Two: Some folks are considering going to UNITY — but are concerned about costs and the time away from their internships. Any advice for these Chipsters (esp. if they’ve just graduated and will be looking for a job)?   

Story ideas — due Friday, June 20

June 15, 2008

colleenfitzpatrick.<br>  jpgHello Scholars!  This week, please share one lesson you’ve learned in connection with pitching a photo or story idea. Your lesson could involve telling us how you came up with the idea, how you researched it, how you pitched the story or photo to your editor, etc. — and it can stem from a successful or unsuccessful effort (remember, the most lasting/valuable/important lessons often come from our setbacks — and if we’re pushing ourselves, we’ll have more  than a few of these in life!). Deadline — end of the day on Friday, June 20.  

Story Org — deadline Sun., June 15

June 9, 2008

colleenfitzpatrick.<br>  jpgHello Scholars!

Hope your weeks are off to a good start. This week’s topic: Organizing stories (hang in there Russel, I’m sending out a photo-related e-mail just for you).

 As CQ Coach Mary Ann Hogan says in her column, there are no right and wrong ways to organize stories. And you can use different approaches, depending on story type, topic, length. What follows are a few approaches, along with an exercise that I’d like you to respond to by Sunday.   

 – Approach 1, from Mary Ann:  http://www.chipsquinn.org/skills/ask/ask.aspx?id=569

– Approach 2:  Generally keep “like” information together in a story. If you’re writing about an issue and its pros and cons, group the pros together and the cons together and link them with a transition sentence or graph or two. Or let’s say you’re writing about someone’s appointment to head up a local org or agency and the appointment is controversial. Think about the story in chunks: person’s background and qualifications; what the critics say; what the supporters say; what the person’s plans are for the agency; info about the agency itself (budget, employees, etc.) Write your lead, then see how it makes sense to arrange the chunks, paying attention, of course, to your transitions.

– Approach 3: Figure out what your focus/lead (including off-lead, if there is one) is. Write it. Read it and ask yourself: What’s the most urgent, immediate question that this sentence raises?  The answer to that question will be your next sentence. Then read what you’ve written and ask: What question does this new sentence (or combination of sentences) raise? Lay down the answer as your next sentence, etc. This method not only helps the story unfold in a logical way, it also can result in good strong transitions between sentences and paragraphs. 

So, using this last approach, consider the following sentence:

“The Cottonwood School Board narrowly voted last night to slash in half the funding for the high school’s football team, effectively ending a program that has produced seven state champions in as many years.”

What’s your next sentence? (Again, as a reader, what question do you most want the answer to, right now? That answer is your next sentence — feel free to invent the facts you need as you write this sentence.)

So — one sentence from all. By Sunday, June 15. 

(We won’t share the sentences until they’re all in — so if you want to say something else in connection with this thread, please write out a separate comment under this post. Thanks!)

Speed — Deadline Sat., June 7

June 3, 2008

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Hello Scholars! Welcome aboard, Princella and Elida, Candace and Chloe, and Sharahn and Brian. I think with this week, everyone in our group has started — anyone not? I wish you a rockin’ start with the stories!

For our first blog discussion, I’d like you each to share one thing that you do — reporting- , editing-, writing-, photography-, research-wise — that saves you time and makes you more efficient on the job. (Chloe, you can resend the great tip you e-mailed us last week.) Also, for the scholars who are starting this week, please also tell us what skill(s) you’d like to work on this summer.

Deadline: Saturday (because we’re getting a late start this week). If someone else has already taken your tip for working quickly, you gotta think of another one. No repeats!
Have a great week! Colleen

Welcome CQS Spring 2008 Class!

May 22, 2008

colleenfitzpatrick.<br>  jpg Hello Scholars! This is our place to discuss — with each other and with me – reporting, writing, editing, photography, storytelling, navigating newsrooms and other general principles that arise during your internships. Participating at least once a week (and hopefully more) in this space is required during your Chips Quinn internship, as we discussed at orientation.

Please respond to this welcome post no later than the Thursday of the week in which your internship starts — and feel free to jump in sooner. First topic: What skill(s) will you start working on immediately and why?

Deadline: Thursday of your first week

Thanks — safe travels to your internships and great good luck on Day 1!

Coach Colleen

May 16, 2008

colleen-fitzpatrick.jpgColleen Fitzpatrick of Simsbury, Conn. (email), has been a career coach for the Chips Quinn Scholars program since 2000. Previously, she was managing editor of Fine Gardening magazine and had a variety of editing and reporting jobs at newspapers nationwide. Her jobs ranged from reporter at the Daily Hampshire Gazette in Northampton, Mass., The Fresno (Calif.) Bee and The Providence (R.I.) Journal to national reporter at The Detroit News. She also has been a bureau manager at The Providence Journal, city editor at the Times Union in Albany, N.Y., and assistant news editor with Knight Ridder in Washington, D.C. She began her career in 1980 as a science-reporting intern at the San Jose (Calif.) Mercury News. She is a graduate of Stanford University and is working toward a master’s degree at Wesleyan University.

The Woman Behind Crazy Horse Memorial

May 6, 2008


(Video by Jesse Short Bull, Terrence Little Whiteman and Tonia Stands)

Side by Side

April 17, 2008

Nashville’s oldest flower shops are neighbors, in fact they are right next door to one another.


(Video by Jacqueline Lee and Sharon Yep)

Sisters in Silence

April 17, 2008

Sisters in Silence: Unspoken Voices of Nashville Women celebrates the work of women living in the Nashville Community. The work of artists, Melinda Gail Harris, Marcella Renée Stallings, and Holly Chaffin Neuhoff gives voice to those often ignored in a community.


(Video by Ana Cubias, Rickeena Richards and Andrew Villegas)

Meat and Three

April 17, 2008

Virginia’s Market is a well known lunch spot where local musicians flock for the meat and three special.


(Video by Maria Chercoles, Ashlee Clark and Chris Vongsarath)

Rare Tennessee Sunflowers

April 17, 2008

Originally thought to be extinct, a rare sunflower has been found by a Vanderbilt undergraduate student.


(Video by Matthew Cooper, Astrid Galvan and Sergio Delgado)

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