Showing posts with label Media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Media. Show all posts

Monday, 5 October 2015

The Wheeler Centre, Melbourne : Steve Cannane in conversation with Tony Ortega re Scientology

Scientology: Fair Game?
Scientology’s founder, L. Ron Hubbard, once defined the religion as being in service of ‘a civilisation without insanity, without criminals and without war, where the able can prosper and honest beings can have rights, and where man is free to rise to greater heights’.
Almost 60 years since its foundation, though, Scientology has become a uniquely contentious phenomenon – with many questioning its status as a religion, cult or business, and with a reputation for fiercely defensive, litigious and coercive reactions to criticism. One of the first to feel the Church’s wrath was Paulette Cooper – whose 1971 book, The Scandal of Scientology, saw her become the target of an elaborate plot which set out to destroy her credibility, frame her and land her with a 15 year prison sentence. Codenamed ‘Miss Lovely’ by Church operatives, Cooper is now the subject of investigative journalist Tony Ortega’s book, The Unbreakable Miss Lovely.
Ortega is a long-time chronicler of Scientology, and one of its leading scrutineers. Featured in Alex Gibney’s HBO documentary Going Clear, he’s the executive editor of TheLipTV and former editor-in-chief of The Village Voice. He visits Melbourne – where the world’s first inquiry into Scientology was held in1963, and Scientology was first banned in 1965 – for a chat with SteveCannane, who’s currently writing a book on Scientology’s history in Australia.

Tuesday, 21 April 2015

Do you have Religious Literacy? In a secular society, have we lost the understanding of what motivates deeply religious groups, societies, nations?

What is Religious Literacy?

Get the gist of what Religious Literacy is all about
by exploring Lapidomedia.

LAPIDO MEANS TO SPEAK UP in the Acholi dialect of Northern Uganda.  Religiously literate media work helped to end a war there between 2003-5.  We were founded by journalists to advocate for greater awareness of the faith dimension in policy, governance, and conflict in the UK and abroad.
Many news stories do not make sense - whether to journalists or policy makers who feed off what they report - without understanding religion. Lapido Media is an internationally networked, British-based philanthro-media charity, founded in 2005, that seeks to increase understanding among journalists and opinion formers of the way religion shapes world affairs. 
It’s called religious literacy.  We run media briefingspublish research and essays and work with journalists around the world.  Our stringers practise on our website the kind of religiously literate journalism we wish to see, going deeper to the sources of social motivations, and providing a resource for other journalists.  And we work with civil society groups on campaigns and media strategy to improve the flow and quality of stories with a religion dimension. 

Lapido Media e-newsletter - View email in browser | Forward to a friend
THE DAWKINS EFFECT ON RELIGIOUS DEBATE – AN APPRAISAL
HAVE New Atheism and Richard Dawkins contributed to or hindered our understanding of modern faith?

Read more here>>
EGYPT EXPORTS INTERFAITH 'BRIDGE'
AS IRAN comes in from the cold, Iranian-born artist highlighted among 47 Middle Eastern works coming to London.

Read more here>>
TOP PICKS FROM OUR WORLD MEDIA WATCH
AS the 100th Armenian genocide anniversary approaches, initial delight in Turkey's AKP government among Christians sours amidst rising sectarianism (Al-Monitor). Meanwhile, the World Bank gets religion as its president declares 'we have to have the partnership of religious leaders' to end extreme poverty (Washington Post). Finally, to mark Holocaust Day last week, the story of a Muslim country–the only European nation to boast a larger Jewish population than it had before the war (Australian Broadcasting Corporation). 

Monday, 30 September 2013

JCMA Event - Religion in the media - Sunday 6 October 2013 - 2.30pm - Richmond


Sunday 6 October, 2.30 pm - 5 pm: Religion in the media. 
 
This Forum will have panelists: 
 
 
(Director, The Centre for Advanced Journalism, University of Melbourne)
 
 
Barney Zwartz (Religion Editor, The Age)
 
 
Dr Nasya Bahfen (Journalist & Communications, Lecturer, RMIT)
 
 
MC: Margaret Coffey(ABC Radio National)
 
Venue: Richmond Town Hall333 Bridge RoadRichmond VIC 3121. (Stairs only access). Costs: $15 per person; $10 students or concession; $30 family. 
Please book and pay: www.trybooking.com/DNGU (Preferred) or Pay at Door.
Contact: Helen Heath. Tel: 9287 5590; Email: executiveofficer@jcma.org.au; Website:  jcma.org.au