Hollywood’s hiring freeze: Female, Black and Asian directors rarely worked in 2017 films
The results are in: 2017 was no different than the last 11 years for female, Black or Asian directors working on 1,100 top films.
The results are in: 2017 was no different than the last 11 years for female, Black or Asian directors working on 1,100 top films.
Martin Schneider often got things done faster than a female colleague, Nicole Hallberg, who worked at the same small employment services agency. He figured this was because of his extra experience.
Film criticism died at the birth of television. At least, that’s what former Time movie critic and editor-in-chief of Film Comment Richard Corliss said in his 1990 column, “All Thumbs: Or, Is There a Future for Film Criticism?” The cause of his concern? Two new, flashy television personalities he felt were the disintegration of the pure, academic, poetic form of written film criticism — Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel.
The U.S.-led boycott of the 1980 Moscow Olympics kept Alan Abrahamson from covering the Games. He had just earned his undergraduate journalism degree from Northwestern University and had prepared by studying Russian
Starting Friday, December 15, Snapchat will begin distributing and showing bilingual content created by USC Annenberg students who are part of the student-run Latinx media brand Dímelo.
Two Annenberg students create a USC chapter of the Asian American Journalists Association (AAJA) to empower and mentor Asian journalists.
The USC Annenberg School of Journalism today announced the launch of the Center for Health Journalism Impact Fund, which supports results-focused, explanatory and investigative reporting on the health of underserved communities.
USC Annenberg students and recent alumni were recognized at the 2017 National Arts and Entertainment Journalism Awards in a variety of categories — from soft news and profiles to commentary and the journalistic use of social media.