« Previous page |
Next page » |
For the first time since the advent of TV journalism, there's something new to learn, said Stephen Shepard, dean of CUNY's graduate school of journalism. Click through to find out how Shepard is preparing for the new industry.
Media Circus returns to Brooklyn on July 9th with a night devoted to the future of journalism school.What is the role of a trade school in an era where everyone is a publisher? Gelf's monthly speaking series on all things media will examine J-school from the eyes of the people closest to it.
Gelf's Varsity Letters sports reading series returns on Thursday, July 2, at 7:30 p.m., with a night dedicated to baseball. At this free monthly event in DUMBO, Brooklyn, hosted by Gelf and Jan Larsen Art, Scott Price, Selena Roberts, and members of the New York Daily News sports investigative team will read from and talk about their work, and take questions.
Click through to see graphic novelist Josh Neufeld reveal "how to become an obscure alternative cartoonist specializing in real-life topics."
At July's Non-Motivational Speaker Series, New Yorker cartoonist Farley Katz confabulates the secret, bushy society that is the Mustache Club. Click through for the revelatory video.
The Non-Motivational Speaker Series returns to Brooklyn, on Thursday, June 25 at 7:30 p.m [at the recession-castrating price of FREE]. Come hear Molly Crabapple, modern-day Victorian muse and creator of the world's largest chain of burlesque life-drawing classes; New Yorker cartoonist and Cartoon Lounge blogger Farley Katz; and Josh Neufeld, longtime illustrator and author of acclaimed graphic novel A.D.: New Orleans After the Deluge, soon to be published in hardcover.
Full article » | by Adam Rosen
If the thought of moving a dead cat disgusts you, then you might be a racist, says scientist Paul Bloom. See the video of his Geeking Out presentation after the jump.
Matthew Alper doesn't believe in God, but he knows why you might. Click through for videos from Alper's talk at June's Geeking Out.
According to astrophysicist Mario Livio, mathematicians love to sit around and come up theories that have no application, until years later. See the video of his Geeking Out presentation after the jump.
Geeking Out returns! Gelf's monthly science reading is back at JLA Studios in DUMBO, Brooklyn on June 18th at 7:30 pm. This month, we'll be discussing the interaction between science and religion with speakers including: astrophysicist and Is God a Mathematician? author Mario Livio; psychologist Paul Bloom, the author of Descartes' Baby; and The GOD Part of the Brain author Matthew Alper, one of the founders of the field of neurotheology. The work of local artists will be on display as well.
« Previous page |
Next page » |
The Gelflog brings you all the same sports, media & world coverage you’ve come to love from Gelf Magazine, but shorter and faster. If you’d like, subscribe to the Gelflog feed.
Subscribe to the Gelflog RSS