25 Webinars this week about AI, Journalism & the Media

Mon, June 15 – Covering the Climate

What: This webinar seeks to equip media professionals with practical legal awareness and connecting them with resources that safeguard their right to report.

When: 6 am, Eastern

Where: Facebook Live

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Global Neighbourhood For Media Innovation

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Mon, June 15 - How to Create a Social Media Plan

What: Learn how to build a social media plan that aligns with your agency’s CX goals. We’ll walk through practical steps to help you reach the right audiences, deliver meaningful content, and measure success.

Who: Ellen Kamilakis Assistant District Administrator, Communications, Virginia Department of Transportation.

When: 4 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: govloop

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Tue, June 16 - Ask Me Anything: 2026-2027 AI Accountability Network Fellowships

What: We will discuss the current call for proposals for the AI Accountability Fellowships from the Pulitzer Center as well as to answer questions about the Fellowship experience. 

Who: Joanna S. Kao, Pulitzer Center Staff; Maria Karienova; Pulitzer Center Staff; Si Err Yap AI Fellow.

When: 9 am, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Pulitzer Center

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Tue, June 16 - Reporting on public health in the current political environment

What: We will explore how journalists can gain audience trust and navigate misinformation and controversial statements from officials while producing accessible, fact-based journalism.

Who: KFF Health News journalists Julie Rovner and Amanda Seitz.

When: 11 am, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: National Press Club

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Tue, June 16 - Future-Proof Your Journalism Career by Mapping Your Career River

What: You'll learn: The strategies that helped a laid-off Philadelphia Inquirer editor turn around her grueling job hunt; How to visualize the progress you've made and skills you've developed over the course of your career to better adapt to shifts; Proven tools to help you assess where you want to go next and design your action plan to get there.

Who: Career River creator Bridget Thoreson.

When: 12 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Career River

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Tue, June 16 - Media Is More Than Just TV: The Beginner’s Guide to Author Visibility

What: We will take you behind the scenes and explain what media actually is, how you can use the media, email, podcasts, television and more to create realistic visibility. Plus how to build the kind of platform publishers want to see, even before you have a book deal.

Who: TV Producer Paula Rizzo.

When: 12 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Writer’s Digest University

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Tue, June 16 - Human Resilience in the Age of AI

What: In a new report from Elon's Imagining the Digital Future Center, experts call for radical change across institutions and social structures. The vast majority of expert respondents called for leaders to work together now to build a coordinated resilience infrastructure for the age of artificial intelligence to counterbalance the human and systemic challenges posed by widespread AI adoption.

Who: Lee Rainie, Director, Imagining the Digital Future Center, Elon University.

When: 2 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: USC  

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Tue, June 16 - Using AI Tools To Promote Meaningful Learning

What: We will consider the impact AI tools are having or stand to have on teaching and learning in your various fields of study; articulate your vision for AI’s role in your teaching; and explore ways you might integrate AI into meaningful learning activities. We’ll review some best practices and some suggestions for using AI as part of your learning environment that have resulted from the larger pedagogical conversation thus far.

When: 2 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: The University of Chicago

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Tue, June 16 - How content creators are earning audience attention and trust

Who: Mollie Muchna, Trusting News.

When: 4 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Center for Scholastic Journalism at Kent State University & and Trusting News

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Tue, June 16 - AI in Journal Publishing and Manuscript Writing

What: This webinar will explore the role of AI in manuscript development, including its benefits, limitations, and ethical considerations such as authorship and transparency. Through a moderated discussion, participants will gain insight into how AI is shaping the manuscript and publishing process. At the end of the webinar, there will be a Q&A session.

Who: Rhea Liang, General and Breast Surgeon MD Curriculum Lead, Bond University Gold Coast, Australia; Thomas K. Varghese Jr., Editor-in-Chief, Journal of the American College of Surgeons (JACS) Salt Lake City, Utah; Julian Smith, Editor-in-Chief, ANZ Journal of Surgery Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

When: 6:30 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: American College of Surgeons

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Wed, June 17 - Creating Workspace Agents for Higher Ed Faculty and Researchers

What: Learn how faculty, researchers, and university teams can create Workspace Agents that help with recurring academic and operational workflows. This session will show where agents are most valuable: when a task depends on trusted institutional knowledge, follows a repeatable process, or requires the same kind of judgment across many requests. 

Who: Lucas Salzman Customer Education Programs, Edu, OpenAi; Keelan Schule, Education Solutions Engineer, OpenAI.

When: 11 am, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: OpenAI Academy

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Wed, June 17 - Your Library Inside AI Chat Platforms

What: Find out how libraries can responsibly plug themselves into the AI chat environments their users are already in – and the strategic choices that come with doing so. We’ll explore practical approaches available today, from browser-level tools that follow users across AI platforms, to institutional connectors that integrate library systems directly into AI environments, drawing on early experience from academic library partners.

Who: Allen Jones, Senior Director of Digital Libraries & Technical Services, The New School Libraries & Archives; Annette Coates Readshaw, Head of Library Collection and Digital Services, Northumbria University; Christine Stohn Senior Director, Product Manager, Clarivate; Miri Botzer, Vice President, Product Innovation, Clarivate.

When: 12 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Clarivate

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Wed, June 17 - AI Impact Hour for Nonprofits

What: This is a practical, interactive conversation designed for executive directors, staff, board members, and volunteers who want to understand what AI can realistically do in a nonprofit setting. You’ll see simple demonstrations and real examples, and you'll have a chance to share your experiences, challenges, and insights with the group.

Who: Aretha Simons, Webinar Producer, Nonprofit & AI Consultant.

When: 1 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: TechSoup

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Wed, June 17 - Disability Narrative Workshop 3: Story Structure + Intersectionality 

What: This workshop examines how story structure can distort disability coverage when reporting falls into legitimacy-trial framing, burden logic, or agency failures. Using tools from Fix the Frame, participants will learn how to spot and correct these patterns while building stories that more accurately reflect lived experience and structural barriers. The session also treats intersectionality as a core reporting practice, showing how race, class, gender, geography, and disability shape what gets covered, how it gets framed, and what is often missed.

Who: Russell Midori, the board chair of Military Veterans in Journalism and a board member of both the Disabled Journalists Association and the Overseas Press Club Foundation.

When: 1 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Military Veterans in Journalism

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Wed, June 17 - How to run your business with Claude Code as your 2nd-brain-OS

What: How the speaker audited his process to define where AI make sense and where not, what is scheduled and what is sem-automated and why.

Who: Sabahudin Murtic, Sabahudin

When: 1:30 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: luma

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Wed, June 17 - Artful Intelligence: What the Rise of AI Can Teach Us about Great Writing

What: This webinar will allay your fears over AI taking over the world—or at least taking over the writing world—and putting all of us creative writers out of business. No prior technical knowledge is required—only a passion for reading, exploring how technology shapes storytelling, and uncovering how human stories shape technology.

Who: Professor & Chair of English & Creative Writing at University of Miami.

When: 3 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: $30

Sponsor: WritingCraft.com

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Wed, June 17 - Journalism & AI - Promise or Threat?

What: The upsides and the downsides of artificial intelligence for journalists and journalism. Learn about the acronyms, the platforms, the handful of ways journalists have used AI in the newsroom, and the many cases where journalists have investigated AI systems to uncover harms. Bring your questions about AI!

Who: New York University Professor Meredith Broussard

When: 7 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Journalism & Women Symposium

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Thu, June 18 - Rethinking Business Education in the Age of AI

What: The session will reveal how AI is reshaping classrooms, faculty roles, student expectations, and the future value proposition of management education. This keynote offers an insider’s perspective on what it means to lead a business school through one of the most significant educational disruptions in decades.

Who: Louis-David Benyayer, Associate Professor at ESCP Business School (Paris campus) and the AI Initiatives Coordinator for the school.

When: 4 am, Eastern

Where: RingCentral

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business

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Thu, June 18 - Combating Hate Speech in the Digital Age

What: This webinar explores the evolving challenges posed by digital platforms, artificial intelligence and generative technologies in amplifying harmful narratives and social polarization.

When: 7:30 am, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: UNESCO

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Thu, June 18 - From the Panama Papers to the Epstein Files: Investigating Leaks and Large-Scale Data in the Age of AI

What: Join leading experts in investigative journalism to share hands-on strategies for securely managing leaks and navigating this rapidly evolving landscape. Experts will walk through the full life cycle of an investigation built on large data, from initial assessment and secure data management to corroboration, collaboration, and what to do with the data after publication.

Who: Pierre Romera Zhang, chief technology officer at the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists; Alesya Marokhovska, editor-in-chief of iStories; Bastian Obermayer, co-founder of Paper Trail Media; Romina Mella, managing editor and investigative journalist at IDL-Reporteros in Peru.

When: 9 am, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Global Investigative Journalism Network

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Thu, June 18 - Introduction to Reporting on AI

What: This online training is designed for reporters interested in getting started on reporting on artificial intelligence, even with minimal or no knowledge of AI.  We will dissect what makes a good AI accountability story, from quick turnaround stories to more ambitious investigations.

Who: Khari Johnson, Grantee;  Sushmita AI Fellow.

When: 11 am, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Pulitzer Center

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Thu, June 18 - Stop overpaying for Digital Advertising Services

What: We will explain how hidden markups and outdated fulfillment and reporting models can quietly reduce profit margins, limit pricing flexibility and make it harder for local sales teams to compete for business.

Who: Zack Watson of Rambunctious Rhino.

When: 12 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Editor & Publisher

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Thu, June 18 - What Video Learners Really Want: Key Findings on Video Effectiveness

What: We'll break down key findings on video effectiveness, exploring how elements like pacing, visuals, and audio impact learner engagement. You'll gain actionable insights to create better learning videos—whether they stand alone or support broader instructional strategies. Through interactive discussions, real-world examples, and practical takeaways, you'll leave with a clear framework for making informed, research-backed decisions about video in your learning programs.

Who: Matt Pierce Camtasia, Learning and Video Ambassador.

When: 3 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Camtasia

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Thu, June 18 - How to Reach Hard-to-Find Audiences: Lessons from Healthcare Marketing

What: We will share how they identified and activated one of the hardest audiences to reach. Learn how stronger audience intelligence can improve targeting precision, activation, and campaign performance.

Who: Rob Sederman, CEO, AMBIT; Mike Julian, Definitive Healthcare 

When: 7 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Definitive Healthcare 

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Fri, June 19 - The Growth of You: Nurturing Your Personal Brand

What:  How to define your unique value, showcase your strengths, and create a brand that stands out in today's competitive communications landscape.   

Who: Lauren Debick, Brand Strategist at Creative Springs; President of Quotes, the AD/PR Club at UCF. Lauren Cordero.

When: 12 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Florida Public Relations Association

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21 Freelancing Articles

6 ways to find fresh story ideas — and where to sell them - Health Journalism

7 tools and tips for getting — and staying — organized as a freelancer - Health Journalism

14 Ways To Get Paid To Write As A Side Hustle - The College Invester

Chelsea’s Guide To Freelancing - Chelsea Cirruzzo, a reporter with U.S. News & World Report

Freelancing with ADHD: How to embrace your strengths and manage the challenges - Health Journalism

Here's what a bunch of publications pay freelancers - Freelancing with Tim

How AI is transforming freelance journalism - Harvards Nieman Lab

How to ask for more money — and actually get it - Freelancing with Tim

How to become a Freelance Writer (A Guide) - MSN

How to price your work as a freelancer - WePresent

How to Succeed as a Freelance Investigative Journalist - GIJIN

I've been a successful freelancer for 10 years. I still feel like I should always be chasing my next opportunity. - Business Insider

A Journalist’s guide to freelancing - Julie Patel blog

Learning how to thrive as a freelance journalist - Response Source

New market guides for pitching to Good Housekeeping, Big Think and New York Post - Health Journalism

A Quick guide to finding your freelance niche - Freelancers Union

Should freelance journalists get an LLC? - Health Journalism

This writer wants to prevent freelancers from floundering on story pitches - Poynter

Tips for pitching the New York Times, Wired and Consumer Reports - Health Journalism

What Freelancers Need to Know About Income, Deductions, and Taxes - Bloomberg

Why your timing matters when pitching to journalists - PA Media

Don’t Think of an Elephant!

In 1973, America watched as then President Richard Nixon vehemently declared on national television, “I am not a crook” in regards to the Watergate scandal.

Not many people believed him.

In fact, as soon as he uttered the word “crook,” most people immediately envisioned a crook.

The major mistake Nixon made was in his framing. By saying the word “crook,” he evoked an image, experience, or knowledge associated with crook in the minds of everyone watching. 

George Lakoff, a professor in cognitive science and linguistics at University of California, Berkeley, makes the point in his book Don’t Think of an Elephant! that when trying to get your point across, refrain from using the other side’s language. Doing so will activate and strengthen their frames and undermine your own views. Instead, successfully arguing a point requires you to establish your own frames and use language that evokes images and ideas that fit the worldview you want.

Think about it this way: Something that has a “95% effective rate” will sell better than something with a “5% failure rate.” It’s all in how you frame it.

Vivian Giange, writing in Fast Company    

Practicing Pitches to AI Avatars

Harvard Business School is using chat and video avatars of its professors in an online boot camp, called Foundry, that it launched in April. Students can pull the A.I. versions of H.B.S. professors into a group text chat to help advise them on their start-up ideas. They can also practice their pitch to customers or venture capitalists with A.I. video avatars that look like the professors. The avatars ask follow-up questions and dispense advice based on both their own expertise and a body of Harvard Business School research and frameworks. - New York Times

AI definitions: AI Translator

AI Translator (or trust director) – This is a title for a person who understands AI well enough to explain its mechanics to others, particularly to leaders and managers, so they can make effective decisions. These workers will not only explain what the AI output means (especially when it is technical) but also how trustworthy the information and conclusions are. This role may fall under that of a compliance officer, helping organizations understand contracts and reports written by AI.

More AI definitions

20 Articles about Cover Letters & Personal Statements

AI definitions: Causal Inference

Causal Inference - The scientific method for determining the cause-and-effect relationship between variables. Causal AI is the software application of that science. Getting to an exact cause can be difficult. A 2021 study found that even in reputable medical journals, a quarter of the published papers failed to identify the correct cause. This is one reason why an AI model can have a high degree of accuracy and still make poor recommendations. If a model is determined to be “accurate,” it means the AI is effective at identifying patterns. However, “accuracy” provides no information about whether those patterns will continue during intervention. In other words, is it possible for machine learning to make a good prediction, but not identify the cause accurately. Note: Most machine learning applications work fine without causal reasoning and do not need that added layer of engineering. It’s when the AI moves from pattern recognition to decision-making that causal reasoning can become essential.

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CEOs & Profs are Using A.I. Doubles

Consultants and executive coaches who don’t have the bandwidth to address every inquiry are referring some clients to their A.I. doubles. Harvard Business School professors have incorporated A.I. versions of themselves into courses and office hours. And executives are using their A.I. avatars to address employees in other countries in their own languages. - New York Times