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Deborah Bonello – Frontline Club http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com Championing Independent Journalism Tue, 13 Nov 2012 13:09:35 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 This week on Frontlne blogs: from whistleblowers to Midan Tahrir http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/this_week_on_frontlne_blogs/ http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/this_week_on_frontlne_blogs/#respond Fri, 15 Apr 2011 17:28:54 +0000 http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/dev/?p=4311 For a round up of the special Frontline Club/ New Statesman whistleblowers event on Saturday 9 April, take a look at Ryan Gallagher’s posts:

Whistleblowers make the world a safer place debate

Report: Whistleblowers make the world a safer place debate Report: Whistleblowers make the world a safer place debate (II)

You can listen to the podcast here and here’s a round-up of what some of the blog posts and websites said about the event.

Following Tuesday’s event, Sophia Spring‘s blog post In the Picture: On your doorstep, photography and poverty includes a slide show of her photographs and write up of the discussion between Liz Hingley and Gideon Mendel speaking about their work with Diana Smythe, deputy editor of the British Journal of Photography.

For quotes from our panel: Dina Matar, senior lecturer in Arab media and political communication at SOAS; Faisal J. Abbas, a blogger for the Huffington Post; Hugh Miles, award-winning investigative journalist specialising in the Middle East and North Africa and Ayman Mohyeldin, Middle East-based correspondent for Al Jazeera English, take a look at Can Arab state-owned media recover from crisis of credibility?which also has video of the discussion chaired by author and broadcaster Tom Fenton.

On our Frontline blog Deborah Bonello has written from Mexico about training for journalists covering drug-related violence.

Davide Morandini, an Italian freelance photojournalist based in Cairo, Egypt explains the opposition’s decision to suspend demonstrations, and cancel today’s protests calling for the Supreme Council of Armed Forces (SCAF) to step down in Why the revolution should leave Midan Tahrir, for a moment at least.

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MRTV: The future of foreign reporting? http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/the_future_of_foreign_reporting/ http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/the_future_of_foreign_reporting/#respond Fri, 25 Mar 2011 10:43:50 +0000 http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/dev/?p=3537

 

 

After a year of working for the Financial Times as a video journalist and producer, I have returned to Mexico to pick up where I left off with MexicoReporter.com – now entering it’s second stage of life. I return unsupported by any one media organisation, although with good relationships at newspapers and broadcasters and so far (in the first month I’ve been here) a regular stream of paid work.

 

Frontline Club has asked me to blog about my work here in Mexico, as well as the process of setting up, making a living, trying not to get into too much trouble, and attempting to make ends meet.

 

So here’s the deal.

 

When I set up MexicoReporter.com in July 2007, it was mainly a marketing tool – an online portfolio through which editors could find me to commission me. I got taken on by the Mexico bureau of the Los Angeles Times as a local blogger and video journalist soon after arriving, so most of my time was taken up working for them.

 

This time around, I plan to make the site more than that – mainly prompted by the existential crisis that the media and foreign reporting currently finds itself in – see more here.

 

My approach is three-pronged.

 

Firstly, I aim to develop the site into a go-to portal for English speakers both living here in Mexico and around the world looking for news and analysis on the country. The site is part producer, part aggregator, and linked around the social networks.

 

Secondly, that in theory could lead to bigger and longer-term commissions, and relationships with foreign newspapers and broadcasters. I hope to channel those through a production company called The Mexico Bureau. I’m encouraged by partnerships I have seen such as that between The Tehran Bureau and PBS Frontline, and Foreign Policy’s Af/Pak Channel, a joint venture with the New America Foundation.

 

Thirdly, I plan to create my own video programme (which you can see embedded above) – a regular analysis format that will be a standalone MRTV production. This is in part motivated by my desire to produce quality journalism using cheap web tools, and secondly I hope may attract it’s own audience and following as a media in itself. The show will be produced by me, but hopefully will also feature content and contributions from Mexico’s freelance VJ community. It will aim to compliment, not imitate, reports from existing media coming out of Mexico, providing analysis and content rather than breaking news.

 

Of course, the main challenge in all of this will be balancing my ambitions for MexicoReporter.com with the need to bring in money through paid commissions. That and the fact that because the site is unfunded, expenses such as travel out of Mexico City are limited. But it’s a work in process – stay tuned to see how things go.

 

You can see more details about my background and my kit on the site.

 

 

 

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Video: Mexico City vendors feel the effects of swine flu http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/video_mexico_city_vendors_feel_the_effects_of_swine_flu/ http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/video_mexico_city_vendors_feel_the_effects_of_swine_flu/#respond Fri, 01 May 2009 13:47:39 +0000 http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/dev/?p=236

You can’t have failed to notice that Mexico is in the grip of a swine flu outbreak. Schools, museums and theaters are shut, people have been warned by the government not to kiss or shake hands when they say hello, and around half the people on the street are walking around wearing surgical face masks.

But the swine flu outbreak isn’t just taking its toll on people’s health. Local businesses are also starting to suffer as customers stay away. Watch the video for more.

See our complete coverage of the swine flu public health emergencies in both Mexico and the United States here.
 
Read more reports from Deborah in Mexico City during the Swine flu outbreak on her blog.
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