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Social media on television and radio news is mostly frivolous — full of celebrity gossip and uninformed opinion, said Kent Collins, 2012-2013 Donald W. Reynolds Fellow. -
Moderator Barbara Cochran, Curtis B. Hurley Chair in Public Affairs Journalism began the panel discussion with a startling statistic: 80 percent of television viewers use another device while watching TV. -
How can journalists use social media to dig deeper into issues to make stories richer and audiences bigger? -
Since the Sandy Hook Elementary shooting tragedy was the talk of America in December, it was not hard to get St. Louis area residents to tweet and Facebook their thoughts for a new public affairs program — “Stay Tuned.” -
There is no savior coming to fix the problems faced by our local communities — the solution lies within each of us. Stay Tuned relies on participation from the entire community. -
As promised here is a ‘manual’ you can use to develop your own Google + Hangouts for television news and public affairs. -
Reynolds Fellow Kent Collins has partnered with public broadcasting station KETC-TV, St. Louis, known as The Nine Network, for his 2012-2013 fellowship project at RJI. -
The mission: To put social media on steroids before, during and after the KETC weekly program and see if we can make the public forum broader and more diverse. -
An interactive, innovative television series about important community issues, created by a joint effort by the Nine Network (KETC-TV) of St. Louis and Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute (RJI) Fellow Kent Collins, premieres Nov. 8. -
Radio-Television Journalism Faculty Chairman Kent Collins is partnering with Public Broadcasting Station KETC-TV to create a new style of public affairs television journalism.