Evelyn Messinger
Evelyn Messinger (born 1950 in Annapolis, Maryland) is an American TV and print journalist, digital media pioneer, television producer, and media activist. She lives in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Education and early career
Ms Messinger received her bachelor's degree in Broadcasting from San Francisco State University in 1980, and promptly produced her first documentary, Windcatchers, and became a producer and editor at the San Francisco TV series VideoWest. She became a news editor and producer at the San Francisco bureaus of CNN and CBS, then worked in Europe producing pilots and programs for the BBC, France2 and others.
Professional career
She co-founded Internews, a global non-profit organization supporting independent media and access to quality information worldwide, with Kim Spencer and David M. Hoffman in 1982.
She was the American creator of the groundbreaking US-Soviet televised Spacebridges, which connected Soviet and American citizens, performers and lawmakers throughout the 1980s, and was the co-producer of many of these programs,[1] some of which won an Emmy Award in 1989. She was also the founding director of the Soros Foundation's Electronic Media Program (1990-1993).
Messinger is currently President of InterAct (Internews Interactive), a non-profit pioneer of digital media convergence that has specialized in citizen participation in media since 1998. In this role she served on the founding Board of Directors of Link TV, and has been instrumental in introducing new media formats to broadcast television and the Internet in projects with PBS, the World Bank, and many others.[2]
Awards
Her awards include a Webby Award in 2009 for Link TV series Global Pulse (2007-2010), a Cine Gold Eagle for the PBS documentary Thinking Twice (1982), and a first place in the San Francisco Video Festival for her documentary, Windcatchers, which ran nationally on the PBS network in 1980 as part of the Bay Area Video Coalition’s “Western Exposure” series.
Publications
Evelyn Messinger has written about media and democracy, the Internet, and digital citizenship for The Nation,[3] Whole Earth Review,[4] The Current, and The Huffington Post.[5]
References
- ↑ Spacebridges Television and US-Soviet Dialogue, University Press of America, Inc, 1989
- ↑ Quistgaard, Kaitlin (2001, June 15) Making Television Matter. Salon.com
- ↑ THE NATION (1999, November 29) Tiny Television
- ↑ WHOLE EARTH REVIEW (1993) Channel X: Pirate TV in Eastern Europe
- ↑ HUFFINGTON POST (2009, May 5) Pakistani Women Protest Taliban But Support Islamic Law