March 13, 2019 UA Professor Featured in Journalism on Screen Series
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TUCSON, Ariz. — Journalism on Screen, the University of Arizona School of Journalism's series that uses movies to explore the challenges and perils facing journalists everywhere, will host its 20th movie and post-film discussion at Tucson's Loft Cinema on Saturday. "Witnesses to Democracy," a documentary that examines the pro-democracy movement in South Korea, will be shown at 2 p.m., followed by a post-film discussion on stage with journalism professor Kim Newton, who was a photojournalist based in Asia at the time of the 1987 uprising. Man-jin Kim, the film’s director, and UA East Asian studies professors Sunyoung Yang and Nathaniel Smith also will be on stage. Newton is featured prominently in the film, which also follows the mother of slain student protester Lee Han-yeol, whose death propelled the uprising. In June 2017, Newton delivered a framed copy of his iconic image of student protesters holding up a photo of Han-yeol to South Korean President Moon Jae-in. "Although we're living in the age of Marvel superhero movies, hard-working journalists are the real superheroes, and should be celebrated as such," said Jeff Yanc, program director at The Loft Cinema, which co-sponsors the series with the School of Journalism and others. "Without them, we're all in danger, and if that doesn't warrant a superhero franchise, I don’t know what does." The series was launched in fall 2015 by professors Nancy Sharkey and William Schmidt, who were longtime journalists at The New York Times before joining the UA journalism school faculty. The screenings have averaged close to 200 viewers, with several selling out. Journalism on Screen's fourth season will conclude April 14 with the 2 p.m. screening of "State of Play" as part of a program marking the 10th anniversary of the closing of the Tucson Citizen, the city's longtime afternoon paper. A panel of former Citizen reporters and editors, including Jennifer Boice (moderator), Corky Simpson, Steve Rivera, Gabrielle Fimbres, Chuck Graham and Dylan Smith, will talk about the film starring Russell Crowe and Rachael McAdams and what it means to a community when it loses one of its daily newspapers. ### |
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Media contact: Mike Chesnick UA School of Journalism 520-626-3079 mchesnick1@email.arizona.edu |
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