On May 22, 2011 an F-5 tornado devastated Joplin, Missouri. In the midst of overwhelming loss, staff of the The Joplin Globe began reporting for work minutes after the twister struck. Deadline In Disaster shows how these dedicated journalists continued to report every story, every obituary and every miracle—big and small. Local film directors Beth Pike and Steve Hudnell worked with the Missouri Press Association to capture their story. Filmmakers will be on hand to discuss the recovery process after the screenings in Columbia and Ashland.
Ashland
Tuesday, May 22, 2012 • 6:30-8:30 p.m.
Southern Boone County Senior Center,
406 Douglas Drive
Columbia
Wednesday, May 23, 2012 • 6:30-8:30 p.m.
Columbia Public Library,
100 West Broadway
Fulton
Thursday, May 24, 2012 • 6:30-8:30 p.m.
Callaway County Public Library,
710 Court Street
The Columbia Public Library is having a special showing of the documentary Trustees for the Public: 200 Years of Missouri Newspapers on Monday, January 23rd at 7 p.m. in the Friends Room. After the film, Doug Crews, Executive Director of the Missouri Press Association, and Beth Pike, a member of the filmmaking team, will discuss the history and the future of Missouri newspapers. Two people who helped create this film, Beth Pike and Steve Hudnell, also helped create the local documentary Neither Here Nor There.
While this movie is not part of our monthly Center Aisle Cinema series, we’d still encourage you to attend. Check out the trailer and movie description below. (more…)
Looks at journalism and the press in Missouri’s last 200 years. Remembers such journalists as Joseph Charless, Mark Twain, Eugene Field, Joseph Pulitzer, Ernest Hemingway, Walter Williams, and others. Describes the Missouri Press Association’s role in founding the State Historical Society of Missouri in 1898 and the Missouri School of Journalism in 1998. Long-time publishers and editors of Missouri newspapers tell stories of their careers, from the days of newspaper carriers on street corners to the emergence of newspapers on the Internet. At the end of the program, Ron Powers, an award-winning journalist from Hannibal, Mo. and graduate of the Universitiy of Missouri, reads the Journalist’s creed (written by Walter Williams, Boonville, Mo.) to honor his school and his profession.
The Southern Boone County Public Library is having a special showing of the documentary Trustees for the Public: 200 Years of Missouri Newspapers, July 12th at 7 p.m at the Boone County Senior Center, 406 Douglas Dr., in Ashland. Discussion will follow with filmmaker Steve Hudnell and Doug Crews, Executive Director of the Missouri Press Association. Two people who helped create this film, Beth Pike and Steve Hudnell, also helped create the local documentary Neither Here Nor There.
While this movie is not part of our monthly Center Aisle Cinema series, we’d still encourage you to attend. Check out the trailer and movie description below.
In 1808, Joseph Charless moved to St. Louis and became the first newspaper publisher west of the Mississippi. Since then, more than 6,000 newspapers have come and gone in the Show-Me State. Travel back in time as you watch the Emmy Award-winning documentary, “Trustees for the Public: 200 Years of Missouri Newspapers.” Discussion will follow with filmmaker Steve Hudnell and Doug Crews, Executive Director of the Missouri Press Association.