Come capo ufficio e corrispondente per l'Associated Press, ha coperto notizie relative a politica, conflitti, cultura e business negli Stati Uniti, Europa, ex Unione Sovietica, Medio Oriente e Asia.
E' stato un reporter embedded con i Marines e l'Air Force americana durante la guerra del 2003 in Iraw ed ha coperto i conflitti nell'Afghanistan del nord e il dispiegamento di forze statunitensi in Asia Centrale dopo gli attacchi dell'11 Settembre. Tra le storie principali che ha coperto ci sono state anche la guerra in Macedonia del 2001, la "Rivoluzione delle Rose" del 2003 in Giorgia, lo tsunami del 2004 visto dall'Indonesia, il paese più colpito, l'occupazione della scuola di Beslan nel 2004 in Russia e i disordini del 2005 in Uzbekistan. Ha scritto anche del mercato nero nucleare del Pakistan e le conseguenze dell'assassinio di Benazir Bhutto nel 2007.
Durante la sua permanenza a Stanford, ha lavorato alla scuola di design per esplorare il futuro del journalismo. E' stato co-fondatore di un progetto sulla ridefinizione del giornalismo, analizzando il modo in cui gli utenti ottengono notizie e applicando questi insight per trovare nuovi modi per coinvolgere l'utenza. Ha studiato anche management e imprenditoria strategica alla Stanford Business School, ed ha lavorato allo sviluppo di applicazioni mobile e interaction design uomo-computer nel dipartimento di computer science.
Avremo modo di parlare di giornalismo, nuove tecnologie, social media e come questi strumenti cambieranno il modo in cui i giornalisti lavorando e i lettori ottengono informazioni.
Se avete domande da proporre, compilate semplicemente il form qui sotto!
Maria Petrescu
Coming up soon: Burt Herman
Today we will have the pleasure of interviewing Burt Herman, entrepreneurial journalist and co-founder of Storify.
Burt is currently working to combine the worlds of journalism and technology to build the future of media. He is co-founder of Storify, which builds tools for journalists, bloggers and anyone to make stories by curating the social Web. He is also co-founder of Hacks/Hackers, an international non-profit organization that brings together journalists and technologists to collaborate on projects.
As a bureau chief and correspondent for The Associated Press, he covered politics, conflict, culture and business across the United States, Europe, the former Soviet Union, the Middle East and Asia.
He was an embedded reporter with the U.S. Marines and Air Force during the 2003 Iraq war and covered fighting in northern Afghanistan and the U.S. military buildup in Central Asia after the Sept. 11 attacks. Among other major stories he has covered were the 2001 Macedonia war, the 2003 "rose revolution" in Georgia, 2004 tsunami from worst-hit Indonesia, 2004 Beslan school siege in southern Russia and 2005 unrest in Uzbekistan. He also reported on Pakistan's nuclear black market and the aftermath of Benazir Bhutto's 2007 assassination.
While at Stanford on a Knight journalism fellowship, he worked at the design school to explore the future of journalism. He co-founded a project on "redesigning journalism," looking at how audiences get their news and applying those insights to find ways to engage audiences. He has also studied strategic management and entrepreneurship at the Stanford business school, and worked on mobile application development and human-computer interaction design in the computer science department.
We will have the chance to talk about journalism, new technologies, social media and how these tools will change the way journalists work and readers acquire information.
If you have a question to propose, simply fill in the form below!
Maria Petrescu