MURFREESBORO — Josh Williams, a New York Times
multimedia editor and Pulitzer Prize-winning team member, will visit with
students in MTSU's College of Mass Communication and present a free public
lecture at the university Monday, March 23.
The
public lecture, scheduled for Room 160 of the College of Education Building,
will begin at 6 p.m. You can find a searchable campus map with parking details
at http://tinyurl.com/MTSUParking14-15.
Williams,
who is based in San Francisco, works on a range of projects for Web development,
design and storytelling for The New York Times.
His work
was instrumental in the newspaper's 2013 Pulitzer Prize win for “Snow Fall: The
Avalanche at Tunnel Creek," which told the story of 16 skiers and
snowboarders caught in a February 2012 avalanche in Washington state’s Cascade
Mountains near Stevens Pass. Three died and one was seriously injured.
Williams
worked on the Times' multimedia presentation of the story, which you can
see at http://www.nytimes.com/projects/2012/snow-fall,
and led development of the mobile coverage.
He’s
received four Emmy nominations, and the Society of News Design, the Online News
Association, Pictures of the Year International and the National Press
Photographers Association, among others, have recognized his work.
“Josh
Williams is a recognized multimedia authority, and his visit will give our
students the opportunity to visualize their own careers in today and tomorrow’s
digital-storytelling world,” said Dr. Dwight Brooks, director of the MTSU
School of Journalism. “He is already doing what we’re teaching our students to
do, and he’s a master at it.”
Williams
plans to visit journalism, visual communication and public relations classes
before his evening lecture. He also will spend time with the staff of
Sidelines, MTSU’s student newspaper.
Before he
joined The New York Times, Williams was the new media projects editor at the
Las Vegas Sun, a multimedia exhibit developer at the Smithsonian Institution
and a Web developer at various Washington, D.C., nonprofits. He also serves as
an adjunct professor at the Graduate School of Journalism at the University of
California, Berkeley, and has taught at Columbia University.
Williams
has a master's degree in interactive journalism from American University and a
bachelor's degree in multimedia journalism from the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill.
The
Williams visit is sponsored by the MTSU Distinguished Lecture Committee, the
College of Mass Communication, the School of Journalism, the John Seigenthaler
Chair of Excellence in First Amendment Studies, the Department of Electronic
Media Communication and the Society of Professional Journalists, Middle
Tennessee Professional Chapter.
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