News

Prof. Sissel McCarthy addresses Foreign Correspondents inaugural awards ceremony

Journalists from around the globe turned out for the Association of Foreign Correspondents USA inaugural awards and scholarships ceremony at the Roosevelt House on Nov. 4. Hunter College Journalism Program Director Sissel McCarthy kicked off the event with a speech about the growing threat to journalism and journalists here and abroad. “Tonight is an opportunity to celebrate the important work foreign journalists and indeed all journalists are doing around the world. Foreign correspondents, like so many of you here tonight, are on the frontlines in the battle of information to hold those in power accountable,” said McCarthy, who also emceed the event. “According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, in 2018, 56 journalists were killed, 250 jailed and 65 went missing,  making it one of the most dangerous years ever to be a journalist. We also remember tonight the 19 who have been killed already this year, many of them in Mexico, which now is the most deadly country in the world to be a journalist.” Several foreign correspondents echoed these remarks, describing firsthand the risks they have faced in their countries.  

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Celebrating the life of Peter Parisi

Peter Parisi Photo

Please join us in celebrating the life of Peter Parisi (1941-2019).

Tues, Nov. 26 | 6:30PM  | RSVP
Lang Hall (HN 424)
Followed by reception at Blackbox (HN 543)

A faculty member in Film and Media at Hunter College for many years, Peter passed away on July 5, 2019.

Peter lived a full life and was known in many ways as a father, a grandfather, a friend, a professor, a journalist, and a lover of animals, music and literature.

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News literacy expert visits Hunter College

News Literacy Expert Screenshot

Students in Professor Sissel McCarthy’s MEDIA 211 class learned all about bias, fairness, and balance in the news media from one of the nation’s preeminent scholars on news literacy.

Professor Howard Schneider has been on a crusade to teach students how to think more critically about the news they’re consuming since he founded the Center for News Literacy at Stony Brook University in 2006. He began his guest lecture at Hunter by asking how many people thought the news media was biased.  Nearly all 100 students in the lecture hall raised their hand, which Schneider expected.

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