DC -- GWU -- School of Media & Public Affairs:
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IP Address: 3.144.172.115 -- Domain: Amazon Technologies
I love well-behaved spiders! They are, in fact, how most people find my site. Unfortunately, my network has a limited bandwidth and pictures take up bandwidth. Spiders ask for lots and lots of pages and chew up lots and lots of bandwidth which slows things down considerably for regular folk. To counter this, you'll see all the text on the page but the images are being suppressed. Also, some system options like merges are being blocked for you.
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- Specific picture descriptions: Photos above with "i" icons next to the bracketed sequence numbers (e.g. "[1] ") are described as follows:
- SMPA_131114_024.JPG: Jack Morton Auditorium
During the Great Depression (1929-1939), Jack Morton held a number of jobs in movie theaters in North Carolina. His boss, a kind man who believed in him, encouraged him to pursue a college education. In January 1932, Jack Morton took a train to Washington DC, carrying his life savings. From 1932 to 1936, George Washington University became a place where his most important accomplishments began. Thee student activities eventually led to his working as a producer with the most well-known entertainers of the day, including his good friends Bob Hope, Jack Benny, and George Burns.
Today, Jack Morton Worldwide is a highly successful brand communications company producing events all over the world.
With little in his pocket but the benevolence of others, Jack Morton began a life based on the principle of helping people. His greatest joys have come from providing opportunities for the many men and women with whom he has been fortunate enough to work. And in encouraging their success.
This auditorium is named in recognition of Jack Morton's life, career, and generosity to his alma mater.
Spring 2001
- SMPA_131114_030.JPG: In Memory of
Katharine Meyer Graham
1917-2001
Publisher of The Washington Post
Winner of the Pulitzer Prize
George Washington University Trustee
- SMPA_131114_038.JPG: Stephen Joel Trachtenberg
Born: 1937
President: 1988-2007, George Washington University
University professor of public service, 2007
Everett Raymond Kinstler, artist
Portrait unveiled May 6, 2009
- SMPA_131114_053.JPG: The School of Media and Public Affairs Presents
"Editorial Cartooning: Politics Through Art"
"Stop them damn pictures!!" raged the infuriated politician, "I don't care what the paper writes about me. My constituents can't read. But, damn it, they can see the pictures!"
So said political operative Boss Tweed, who famously raged about the devastating lampoons launched by Thomas Nast -- a cartoon attack that would eventually bring down Tweed and end his corrupt reign over New York City.
Today "them #!&% pictures" zip across the new digital landscape -- needling, infuriating, engaging and entertaining people on the web, in emails, on smart phones and iPads. From traditional newsprint to the blogosphere, Facebook and the Twitterverse, political cartooning is alive and well.
From the beginning of our country's history up to today, cartoons have played an important role in US political life. Paul Revere and Ben Franklin roused the rabble with cartoons, leading a revolution. Since then, political cartoons have called us to defend the nation from foreign foes and defend our freedoms from domestic forces. They make us stop and think -- and maybe stop and laugh.
As the journalism industry figures out how to survive the shift to the light speed and micro-news cycles of the digital age, one small corner is adapting and even flourishing. Political cartoons, though as old as newspapering itself, are perfect foil to the hyper speeds and truncated attention spans of today's media consumers.
This exhibit, drawn from submissions by members of the American Association of Editorial Cartoonists, represents a selection of the nation's cartoonists and caricaturists who are expressing their views on American politics and issues of national importance. It was co-curated with cartoonist Scott Stantis of the Chicago Tribune.
- SMPA_131114_071.JPG: From Doodles to Dancing Animation:
Inspiration comes to artist Ann Telnaes for her digital animations from news items, audio files, and other research. She is one of the only US editorial cartoonists producing multiple animated cartoons per week. Her work for the website of the Washington Post reflects on current affairs in the form of 15-20 second animations.
She begins with hand-drawn sketches and then produces final inks that are scanned into a computer and digitally colored. She combines those digital files in animation software with an audio track and sound effects to produce the finished product.
Telnaes was the second woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Cartooning (2001). Before beginning her career as an editorial cartoonist, Telnaes worked for several years as a designer for Walt Disney Imagineering.
- SMPA_131114_074.JPG: Mr. Axlerod, Rome is burning! What would Caesar have us do?
Put up these campaign posters attacking Romney's record at Bain!
- SMPA_131114_076.JPG: What are we celebrating, father?
I have no idea!
- SMPA_131114_079.JPG: I'm so glad the primary vote is Tuesday... all the political attack ads on TV have been really vicious.
- SMPA_131114_087.JPG: I apologize to the Afghans for the quran burning
- SMPA_131114_091.JPG: President Obama urges Americans to be patient on the economy.
These things take time.
Patient -- me.
Impatient -- My landlord, My Phone Company, My Power Company.
- SMPA_131114_092.JPG: The Frat Pack Fundraiser in Vegas! Enter to win dinner with The Donald and The Mitt...
Everybody loved Mitt Romney sometime...
Callista's man can 'cause he sprinkles it with love and makes the world taste good...
Then I got and spoil it all by saying somethin' stupid like I still think Obama was born in Kenya....
- SMPA_131114_095.JPG: Callista dearest, they just don't appreciate a TRUE INTELLECTUAL
- SMPA_131114_097.JPG: Economy... Congress... Debt
Uh, oh... stop... ! we're out of road!!
- SMPA_131114_099.JPG: The Nanny
Liberty Big Gulp
Drop it, chubs!
- SMPA_131114_106.JPG: We've come too far to turn back now...
- SMPA_131114_108.JPG: Superpacs.... democracy....
Yep -- appears to have been beaten to death with a checkbook ...
- SMPA_131114_111.JPG: Jim Crow... Voter I.D. laws
- SMPA_131114_118.JPG: An Artist's Tools
The items in this display are part of the process editorial cartoonist Matt Wuerker uses to produce his art for POLITICO.
Within the span of approximately four hours, his work begins in the 19th Century and ends in the 21st Century. He sketches out his concepts first in pencil and adds penned ink to the best draft. Next, he fills the scene with watercolors. Finally, he scans his cartoons digitally, color corrects it on a computer, and sends it to the publication's production staff for inclusion on the editorial page.
Wuerker is the 2012 recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Cartooning. Over the past 25 years, his work has appeared in publications ranging from The Washington Post, The Los Angeles Times, and The New York Times to Smithsonian and The Nation.
- SMPA_131114_121.JPG: Another failed climate conference! More time lost! This is bad!
Yep. In fact, the data suggests...
We're at 97% probability for the end of civilization.
What?! That's terrible!
Isn't it?
Sure... if you're a human.
- SMPA_131114_125.JPG: How dare you politicize Bin Laden!?
- SMPA_131114_128.JPG: Tea Party...
Something is definitely wrong here...
- SMPA_131114_132.JPG: Which are worse... left wing or right wing bumper stickers?
I love my husband (even though he's a homophobe)
I love my wife (even though she wants to destroy the institution of marriage)
Make love not war.
US love it or leave it.
This land is my land, this land is your land.
God bless America.
I pause for paws.
I pause for grizzlies and pit bulls. The rest I pull over, hunt down, and kill.
Somewhere in Texas, a village got its idiot back.
Obama is the socialist, Muslim, illegal alien antichrist.
I'd rather be drinking fair trade coffee.
I'd rather be at a Tea Party.
If you can read this... You're not Sarah Palin.
If you can read this... You're a Liberal Elitist.
Darwin
Jesus
Democrats do it on the left.
Republicans do it on the right.
Yes
No
My other car is a bicycle.
My other car is a Turbo Hemi Hummer. If you don't like it call 1-800-EAT-#%&!
Peace
Target site
REDNBLUE
- SMPA_131114_135.JPG: What War on Women?
NO equal pay.
NO child services.
NO contraception.
NO P Parenthood.
- Wikipedia Description: George Washington University School of Media and Public Affairs
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The School of Media and Public Affairs (SMPA) at the George Washington University in Washington, DC, a school in the Columbian College of Arts and Sciences, offers both undergraduate and graduate programs in journalism and political and international communication. The School's director is Frank Sesno, former CNN correspondent, creator of PBS's Planet Forward and professor.
Undergraduate Programs:
SMPA offers two undergraduate degrees in Political Communication and Journalism & Mass Communication, as well as a five year BA/MA program with George Washington's Graduate School of Political Management. The school is highly competitive within the university, and offers facilities and opportunities to SMPA students not accessible to other students, such as invititations to attend lectures and taped events filmed within the Jack Morton Auditorium and access to top-of-the-line filming/editing equipment.
Graduate Programs:
The School of Media and Public Affairs offers a Master of Arts degree in Media and Public Affairs. Additionally, the school offers a joint MA degree in Global Communication in conjunction with the Elliott School of International Affairs. With the SMPA Documentary Center, the school offers a Certificate in Documentary Filmmaking.
Media and Public Affairs Building:
The School of Media and Public Affairs is housed in the Media and Public Affairs building at 805 21st St, NW. It additionally houses the Graduate School of Political Management and the Trachtenberg School of Public Policy and Public Administration (SPPPA). The Jack Morton Auditorium is on the first floor of the building. The Morton Auditorium is also the former site of taping for CNN's Crossfire.
The university broke ground on the site (a former parking lot) in 1999 and opened it in early 2001. SMPA students were initially charged an extra $500/semester for two years to help cover the cost of the building.
- Bigger photos? To save server space, the full-sized versions of these images have either not been loaded to the server or have been removed from the server. (Only some pages are loaded with full-sized images and those usually get removed after three months.)
I still have them though. If you want me to email them to you, please send an email to guthrie.bruce@gmail.com
and I can email them to you, or, depending on the number of images, just repost the page again will the full-sized images.
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- Photo Contact: [Email Bruce Guthrie].