{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/c775c20c-79c7-4b26-9123-fb527fa2064a/777152e3-e161-4371-a116-a1a768e75ea9?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"427: Promoting A Culture Of Engaged Journalism With Andrew DeVigal","description":"<p style=\"user-select: auto;\">Today's episode is&nbsp;Andrew DeVigal. Andrew is the inaugural Chair in Journalism Innovation and Civic Engagement and the first professor of practice in the School of Journalism and Communication (SOJC). Previously, he&nbsp;served as the multimedia editor at&nbsp;<em style=\"user-select: auto;\">The New York Times</em>, where he helped guide the newspaper’s print-driven format into the multimedia era&nbsp;and&nbsp;integrated new approaches to interactive storytelling into&nbsp;<em style=\"user-select: auto;\">The Times’</em>&nbsp;long tradition of journalistic excellence to help shape the industry with techniques still in use today.</p><p style=\"user-select: auto;\">With Laura Lo Forti, DeVigal co-founded&nbsp;A Fourth Act, an interdisciplinary collective of storytellers, facilitators, researchers, designers, and technologists using stories and technology to empower audiences in becoming agents of change in their communities.</p><p style=\"user-select: auto;\">DeVigal is an Emmy-award-winning innovative strategist who builds bridges by connecting ideas and people to produce meaningful and interactive stories. With his exceptional knowledge of possibilities and deeply innovative forward thinking, he&nbsp;has consistently demonstrated his ability to lead teams, engage audiences through purposeful user experiences, and invent creative new approaches to interactive storytelling.</p><p style=\"user-select: auto;\">In our interview, we discuss what he calls the continuum of engagement, why engaged journalism matters today more than ever and how to move towards evidence based journalism in a divisive world.</p><p style=\"user-select: auto;\"><strong style=\"user-select: auto;\">Resources Mentioned In The Episode</strong></p><p style=\"user-select: auto;\"><br style=\"user-select: auto;\"></p><p style=\"user-select: auto;\"><br style=\"user-select: auto;\"></p><p style=\"user-select: auto;\"><br style=\"user-select: auto;\"></p><ul style=\"user-select: auto;\"><li style=\"user-select: auto;\"><a href=\"https://medium.com/lets-gather/the-continuum-of-engagement-89778f9d6c3a\" target=\"_blank\" style=\"user-select: auto;\">The Continuum of Engagement</a>&nbsp;- this post describes the distinction between relational and transactional engagement.</li><li style=\"user-select: auto;\"><a href=\"https://twitter.com/drewvigal\" target=\"_blank\" style=\"user-select: auto;\">@drewvigal</a>&nbsp;- My twitter login</li><li style=\"user-select: auto;\"><a href=\"https://agora.uoregon.edu/\" target=\"_blank\" style=\"user-select: auto;\">Agora Journalism Center</a>&nbsp;- the gathering place for innovation in communication and civic engagement</li><li style=\"user-select: auto;\">Listeners Podcast:&nbsp;<a href=\"https://listenerspodcast.uoregon.edu/\" target=\"_blank\" style=\"user-select: auto;\">https://listenerspodcast.uoregon.edu/</a></li></ul>","author_name":"Tayo Rockson"}