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FROM THE COMBAT ZONE: Marshall Thompson, a soldier/journalist, reveals how the news is shaped -- and sometimes covered up -- in Iraq. Click the News index for a link to story. / Photo by Gideon Oakes

Today's word on journalism

Tuesday, February 6, 2007

News from the vast wasteland:

"I'm here to propose that we replace the bad old bargain that past FCCs struck with the media moguls with a new American Media Contract. It goes like this. We, the American people have given broadcasters free use of the nation's most valuable spectrum, and we expect something in return. We expect this:
1. A right to media that strengthens our democracy
2. A right to local stations that are actually local
3. A right to media that looks and sounds like America
4. A right to news that isn't canned and radio playlists that aren't for sale
5. A right to programming that isn't so damned bad so damned often."

--Michael J. Copps. Federal Communications Commission, 2007 (Thanks to alert WORDster Mark Larson)

Journalism professor co-authors book on Lost Boy of Sudan to accompany National Geographic film

January 23, 2007 | A Utah State University professor has collaborated with a Lost Boy of Sudan on the memoir God Grew Tired of Us, a National Geographic Press book published this week.

Michael S. Sweeney, head of the journalism and communication department, and John Bul Dau, a member of the Dinka tribe who immigrated to the United States from East Africa in 2001, worked on the book over the summer and fall of 2006.

Dau is featured in a documentary film with the same name as the book. The film -- directed by Christopher Quinn, narrated by Nicole Kidman, and executive-produced by Brad Pitt -- debuted at the Sundance Film Festival in 2006. It won the top awards from Sundance critics and audiences in the documentary category. The National Geographic bought the rights and began distributing the film to theaters nationwide last weekend.

The film and book chronicle how Dau fled to safety as a teenager after his Sudanese village was shelled during Sudan's civil war between black Christians and Arab Muslims. Dau then spent nearly 14 years in refugee camps in Ethiopia and Kenya as one of thousands of "Lost Boys," so called because most were young orphans who grew up together with little adult supervision.

Filmmaker Quinn found Dau and two other Lost Boys featured in the movie at the Kakuma Refugee Camp in Kenya and began documenting their lives.

Dau was allowed to enter the United States in August 2001 and settled in Syracuse, N.Y. Despite never having seen much of the technology Americans take for granted, he was expected to be self-sufficient within 90 days of his arrival.

"John not only survived, he thrived," Sweeney said. "He has carved out a wonderful new life, with a college education, a steady job, and a wife and child. He truly is living the American dream. That's amazing in itself, but what really blows me away is how upbeat John is after having had so many terrible things happen to him."

The title of the book and film comes from a phrase Dau uttered on camera in an attempt to explain the horrific events that befell the Lost Boys. He was shot at, beaten, and shelled. He nearly starved to death and once had to swim across a crocodile-infested river. He buried many friends who fell victim to disease in the refugee camps. Yet he learned English, kept his strong faith, got a good education, and despite long odds has found a new home.

This is Sweeney's sixth book, and his fourth for the National Geographic.

 

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