• Taking matters into its own hands.
• A two-day festival of workshops, screenings, demos and spitballing about media, DIY placemaking, communications, tech, entrepreneurship, organizing, dreaming big and rabble-rousing in Appalachia.
• The people behind innovative and extraordinary things happening across the state that are blowing up stereotypes of life in West Virginia.
• One for the trouble-makers.
• Like a music festival, only less sweaty. There'll be new sessions happening all
the time, happy hours breaking out, and you can come and go as you please.
There are quiet places to work, restaurants downstairs, a bar upstairs, and a pool and gym next door. Perfecto.
• Free.
• Pulled together by the West Virginia Community Development Hub and a bevy of excellent people doing excellent things across Appalachia.
VANDALEER
THE MAKERS OF CREATE PITTSBURGH
THE WOLPERTINGER
IAN THORNTON
THE NEW WV ONLINE NEWS ASSOCIATION
MIKE COSTELLO
EMILY HILLIARD
WVU REED COLLEGE OF MEDIA
DAVE MISTICH
Generation West Virginia
Generation Morgantown
MOUNTAIN TECH MEDIA
LYNDSEY GILPIN
HIGHLAND OUTDOORS
REBECCA KIGER
RAYMOND THOMPSON
CHRISTOPHER JACKSON
Chris lusher
WTSQ CHARLESTON
CHARLESTON GAZETTE-MAIL
THE CREATOR OF CABIN FEVER FESTIVAL
BRILLIANT STREAM
JASON ADAMS
CREATE HUNTINGTON
SAM OWENS
JIMBO VALENTINE
REBECCA DROBIS
THE CREATORS OF OSAY.CO
NEW WORK BY ELAINE SHELDON
WV INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL
MINED MINDS
GABE DEWITT
COAT OF ARMS
L.I.O.N. PUBLISHERS
(LOCAL INDEPENDENT ONLINE NEWS)
TAMARACK FOUNDATION FOR THE ARTS
MUSIC CURATED BY JONI DEUTSCH
THE APPALACHIAN OUTDOOR FILM FESTIVAL
KRISTIAN THACKER
COURTNEY BALESTIER
MESH
84 AGENCY
APPALACHIAN MEDIA INSTITUTE
WEST VIRGINIA PUBLIC BROADCASTING
+ HEAPS MORE
As modern newsrooms evolve at breakneck speed, a small group of media professions in WV are rising to the challenge, launching a local chapter of the Online News Association, connecting journalism, tech and innovation.
At New Story, we’ll meet the folks behind this effort, and join them on a trip to the cutting edge.
And, journalist, technologist and Knight Fellow, Geoff Hing, will explore the potential of data visualization in today’s newsrooms.
There's a lot of "nobodies" and rabble-rousers out there at the moment running with the philosophy "it's better to ask forgiveness than permission." And we think that’s great.
Wish there was a Hunger Games Festival in your town? Sure you do. So start one.
How about a Home Brewers Festival? Don't wait for someone else. They are probably waiting for you.
We’ll learn from some of West Virginia's DIY masters on how easy it is to turn a great idea into a great weekend.
When it comes to social media, today's working newsrooms have two options: 1. figure out how to make it help their work, or 2. put their head in the sand.
Media outlets all over America are incorporating Facebook Live into their reporting and broadcasting - from NPR to local newspapers and TV affiliates.
At this breakout training session we'll explore on how outlets in West Virginia can use Facebook Live to enhance their everyday reporting and broadcasting.
Since Ian Thornton launched the Huntington Music and Arts Festival in 2010, a growing group of inventive citizens and city officials has not-so-quietly set about making Huntington the most vibrant local music, arts and culture scene in the region.
But, can noise, color and crowds really be a fully-fledged economic development strategy? We’ll ask them how The Huntington Party Effect is actually reviving areas of this fantastic little city that is bursting with chutzpah right now.
Just north of the border, the once downtrodden steel city of Pittsburgh has rebounded from its industrial doldrums in part by focusing on arts innovation and creative tech, and is widely regarded as one of the best places to live and work in America.
We welcome to New Story the architects of Create PGH and the locals behind many of the city’s coolest and most engaging creative spaces and maker initiatives - Radiant Hall, Assemble and the Co-Create Ignition Program.
OSAY is what happens when the smart kids get riled up. There’s a lot of young people out there who believe that today's politicians need to be more responsive to the demands of citizens.
In 2016, three not-to-be-trifled-with West Virginians created and launched OSAY, an online tool that helps advocates use social media to influence decision-making.
We’ll talk to the brains and brawn behind OSAY, and explore the new world of “clicktavism” in today’s America.
The strength of the local food and restaurant scene will a critical part of West Virginia’s economic future.
And some creative culinary types are doing all they can to grow the food tourism sector.
From entrepreneurial Restaurant Week promotions in Charleston and Parkersburg, to citizen-led walking tours of local restaurants and food spots, we’ll hear from inventive West Virginians growing the food buzz, and economy, where they live.
In the annus horribilis that was 2016, the 100 Days In Appalachia project gave journalists and producers in West Virginia a vehicle to provide local coverage and context that most national reporters miss or ignore.
So, what now? At New Story you’ll hear from the architects of 100 Days about what they learned from the project and their plans to continue the work. Plus, you’ll have the chance to talk to reporters about what shapes their coverage of West Virginia, and why.
Don’t be shy. You look like you’ve got something to say.
Born of the creative wellspring that is Appalshop and Whitesburg, there is a collective of young, talented and defiant filmmakers, photographers, digital makers and media producers in Eastern Kentucky determined to tell the stories of their region from their own perspectives.
But what platform will enable them to do that?
At New Story we’ll welcome the firebrands of the Appalachian Media Institute and Mountain Tech Media, and brainstorm with them the idea of a young Appalachian media collective.
Organized and curated by photographer Kristian Thacker, some of the region's best image makers, including Rebecca Kiger, Forrest MacCormack, Nate Knobel, Pang Tubhirun, Kristian Thacker, Pat Jarrett and Aaron Blum, have contributed to a special exhibition of works just for New Story. Thanks guys!
Enjoy the photos, and meet the photographers.
If you haven't noticed, Appalachian food is a thing these days. In swanky kitchens from Brooklyn to Los Angeles, mountain cuisine is “so hot right now.”
But how do we ensure Appalachia truly benefits when its food becomes trendy?
Courtney Balestier, Emily Hilliard and Mike Costello, three noted West Virginia food storytellers, will share a few ideas about how cooks, farmers and makers can capitalize on the recent buzz and take control of the brand of Appalachian food.
Sponsored by the makers of superb local craft beer, Chestnut Brew Works, Pubstomper and Big Timber, and our friends at Generation Morgantown, the New Story Knees Up on the top deck of the Media Innovation Center Friday afternoon is the perfect spot to meet new heroes and hatch grand plans. (Or just catch up with old mates, kick back and revel in your past glories. Up to you.)
The good folks at the Chestnut Boutique Hotel in downtown Morgantown have generously given us a special rate of $79 a room for Thursday or Friday night.
To secure that rate, call them at 304.777.4100, or email info@chestnuthotel.com and mention that you'd like the special rate for New Story attendees.
Intrepid local Eric Lee started the thing in his garage, literally, and now Highland Outdoors, a print and online magazine celebrating outdoor recreation in Appalachia, has 80,000 readers in West Virginia and the surrounding states.
At the same time, a new crop of insanely creative and brave filmmakers, writers and photographers in West Virginia are forming a loose but formidable clique of Adventure Tourism Media Producers.
We’ll screen some of their spectacular work, and stare at the daredevil makers like the glorious freaks they are.
Over a period of more than 10 years, Rebecca Drobis has been documenting the lives of children on the remote Blackfeet Reservation in northwest Montana.
This body of work- Grown Up West- highlights stories of young people’s beauty, hope and strength in spite of the challenges of reservation life.
We’ll talk to Rebecca and examine her remarkable work.
When nationally-renowned filmmaker Joel Wolpert agreed to produce an annual report in print for the Tucker Community Foundation Foundation in 2015, nobody had any idea he would set a new high-water mark for what community development storytelling could look like.
But he did.
At New Story, we’ll ask Joel how he did it, and get a sneak peek at some new storytelling projects The Wolpertinger is working on in that neck of the woods.
Across America, hyper-local, independent news websites are reinventing what the 21st century newsroom or community news site can look like.
Not only that, but the good ones make money, too.
At New Story, the experts at L.I.O.N. (Local Independent Online News) Publishers will help us explore the future of strong local independent journalism online, and strategies for how online media entrepreneurs can generate revenue, pay contributors and grow audience.
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In West Virginia, women make up 51% of the population, but only 13% of the state legislature.
If you’re not sure why that’s a problem, you might want to just sit this one out…
For everyone else, at this session you’ll get to speak with our diverse panel of West Virginian women who have run for elected office at different levels, and hear their thoughts on why addressing the gender imbalance in decision-making matters more today than ever.
Vlogging, or video logging, is a creative and effective way for media producers or engaged citizens of any kind to connect with new audiences and tell unique and compelling stories about what's happening in your day to day life and your region.
In this hand-on session, Mountain Tech Media's Chief Technology Office Izzy Broomfield shows you how it's done.
The launch of the Underground Cinema in Charleston in 2017 demonstrated the power of crowdfunding and local organizing to create great new things in your community.
It was also the second micro-cinema to open in West Virginia, after the trailblazing Lascaux Theater Micro-Theater in Buckhannon.
But how did they do it?
At New Story, we’ll hear from the do-ers, and beg, borrow and steal their ideas and inspirations.
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Long synonymous with abandonment, crime and urban decline, Charleston’s West Side is a neighborhood that has seen better days.
But, thanks in part to the recent arrival of a small cluster of bright and courageous creative businesses, and a visionary developer, the West Side is now undergoing a very promising reimagining.
We’ll explore how creative industries are remaking the new Elk City.
Part social enterprise, part private marketing firm, part training and community development org, Mountain Tech Media is at the heart of a growing local digital media economy in Whitesburg, Kentucky.
But what is its creation story? And with a stable of the region’s most talented and hardworking young media creators on board, what grand plans does MTM have now?
And what can West Virginia learn from this innovative model of a new media company?
We’ll ask ‘em.
ILaunched in 2015, WTSQ is a local and independent nonprofit radio station in downtown Charleston.
For some, local radio is an old school holdout in a rapidly changing media age. But when it comes to hyper-local broadcasting, radio - whether online or through the FM/AM airwaves - is more relevant today than ever.
At New Story, we’ll talk to the folks behind WTSQ about how they got it started, and their plans to expand beyond live radio across new multimedia platforms.
• The Poster Art of Huntington's Incomparable Jimbo Valentine
• Film screenings by West Virginia's most creative new filmmakers
• How-To session on Vlogging
• Wheeling's Bridge + Tunnel Collective
• Music by Joni Deutsch/Change of Tune
• Brilliant Stream - WV's craft beer news site
• Mountain Arts District
• Charleston's new Great Expectations Think Space
