Media
Fall Communications Forum explores local news, surveillance, cities and entertainment
October 14, 2011
Ethan Zuckerman, cyberscholar and activist, to lead MIT Center for Civic Media
June 23, 2011
He will direct MIT's influential group of technologists and academics committed to empowering communities around the globe by inventing and testing civic media tools and practices.
Admiral Thad Allen explains leadership during crisis
May 27, 2011
Former Sloan Fellow speaks with Dean Schmittlein about response to Deepwater Horizon oil spill.
Denialism: Media in the Age of Disinformation
June 23, 2010
Panel discussion presented by the MIT Museum and the Cambridge Science Festival
Tom Pettitt on the Gutenberg Parenthesis
May 11, 2010
Presented by the MIT Communications Forum — hosted by James Paradis with respondent Peter Donaldson
Video production studio opens in Building 24
April 30, 2010
New facility offers the latest video production technology to the MIT community.
MIT Comparative Media Studies celebrates 10th anniversary
April 26, 2010
With a day-long symposium, CMS marked 10 years of leading higher education's move toward applied humanities.
Also labeled: Comparative Media Studies
Guerrilla reporting in ‘difficult places’
April 20, 2010
Activists describe their experiences using new technology to build free media networks in countries with scant resources or oppressive regimes.
FCC's Eugene Huang on a National Broadband Policy
March 10, 2010
Presented by the Center for Future Civic Media and the MIT Communications Forum
Communications Forum on The Culture Beat and New Media
March 4, 2010
Featuring Bill Marx, Douglas McLennan, moderated by David Thorburn
Media Lab Complex formally opens this week
March 2, 2010
MIT community is invited to a free open house on Friday, followed by a public conference with architect Fumihiko Maki the following day.
Also labeled: Architecture, Arts, Campus buildings and architecture, Media Lab, Urban studies and planning
Race, Politics and American Media
November 9, 2009
Juan Williams and J. Phillip Thompson discuss how the collapse of print and other traditional news and the rise of celebrity culture have contributed to the sharp decline of in-depth stories involving race and society.
The Art of Science Television
November 4, 2009













