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Sunlight Journalism Through Code

Ike Sriskandarajah on Thursday, Mar. 7th

ProPublica is still the cool new kid in investigative journalism— less than five years in the game, and they’ve got the best toys, plenty of talent, and everyone wants to be their friend. And that doesn’t just apply to journalists. The investigative journalism outfit’s big data projects draw interest from programmers too. That’s why the Engineering and Computer Science departments at UC Berkeley asked Jeff Larson from ProPublica’s News Applications team, to talk about the new ways that coding is helping tell stories. (more…)

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Who Backs the Backers on Kickstarter?

Ike Sriskandarajah on Thursday, Feb. 7th

When it comes to raising money for the arts, Kickstarter has become the place to go. Since it launched in 2009, the crowd-funding site has successfully delivered over $400 million to creative projects, including three films currently up for Oscars. But for all of Kickstarter’s success, funding creative work is still risky business. A study out of Wharton counts 3.5% of funded projects drop the ball. Small, but significant enough to raise the question: what happens to that money?

From Kickstarter’s perspective, co-founder Yancey Strickler, defends their backer-beware system. From a historical perspective, MIT Technology Review Editor, Jason Pontin, shows there is a history of crowd-funding with more accountability. From an artistic perspective, Amanda Palmer, says whatever way you fund the arts, “there’s going to be a headache.

This story aired on PRI’s Studio 360.

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In Florida, Diverse Young Republicans Ignited By Ron Paul

Ike Sriskandarajah on Tuesday, Jan. 31st

Ron Paul’s libertarian ideas may be considered fringe in the Grand Old Party, but they are mainstream among the party’s younger voters. And whoever does become the Republican nominee could pay a price for neglecting this energetic base.

In the days leading up to the Florida primary, Newt Gingrich and Mitt Romney wrestle for last-minute votes across the state.  Meanwhile, on a quiet, shady street, the Florida College Republicans are having their own poll. Twenty-one young conservatives representing every major college and university in the state gather around a small conference table inside the George Bush Republican Center, a half mile from the state Capitol, to discuss the future of the party.

I wasn’t allowed inside the meeting, but Kayla Westbrook, the chairwoman of Tallahassee’s Florida State University College Republicans, met me outside.  Westbrook is dressed for television news – actually, she was on Fox Business earlier this week talking – says, “we’re just exchanging ideas and going over what we can do to turn Florida red.”

The state went Blue in 2008 despite the best efforts of this active youth group, which claims to have clocked 100,000 phone calls and 20,000 volunteer hours for candidate John McCain.  But in general, McCain couldn’t generate the passion his competitor, Barack Obama, did.  This year, the Republican candidates face the same challenge, especially when it comes to exciting young voters; that is, with one notable exception.  I asked Westbrook who she’s supporting this primary and she said, “Well, I can’t say I support any one candidate over another, being the leader of the College Republicans, but I do like Ron Paul.”

Ron Paul is the answer this primary for many young people in Florida’s capitol city. Among the party-oriented College Republicans, Paul came in second to Mitt Romney. But in the three Republican contests in other states, Ron Paul won among voters under 30, by considerable margins.

According to Peter Levine, the director of the Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement (CIRCLE) at Tufts University, “if anyone’s showing up, it’s people who are showing up for Ron Paul.  He’s getting half or so of all the Republican young votes.”

Levine reminds me that while those percentages are impressive, in overall numbers, Obama drew several times as many young voters in 2008.  The Paul base is few, but they are everywhere.  On the FSU Campus alone there are four student groups that favor Paul. The College Republicans meet on Tuesday, the College Libertarians are on Wednesdays, the Youth for Ron Paul is on Thursday – and that meeting ends just before the later-scheduled, Campaign for Liberty meetings start.  FSU Senior, Jeremy Uneberg, told me he sometimes spends six hours a week going to all of them. “That’s pretty much what I do. Some people are interested in watching the Kardashians on TV and I’m interested in politics.”

Uneberg’s six hours a week doesn’t even include the extra-extra-curricular Ron Paul “sign-bombs,” where he and a handful of enthusiastic supporters meet on a stretch of highway in front of a Tallahassee grocery.  The week before the primary they are out every rush hour, waving hand-painted signs with slogans like, “Honk if you are for Ron Paul and Limited Government.”  Another one takes advantage of the candidate’s internet popularity, simply urging, “Google Ron Paul.” There’s about a honk a minute and during red lights, the more daring supporters play frogger with the cars, handing out or even pasting bumper stickers on cars and trucks.

So why does the oldest candidate do so well with the youngest voters? According to Uneberg, there are two big reasons.  He says, “the anti war message is pretty popular,” adding, “I’m 21 years old so, we’ve been at war for over half my life.”  But for Uneberg the root of America’s problems, and the reason for his support of Paul, comes down to money. “The focus on the Federal Reserve and economic issues are the number one concern. Without the Federal Reserve’s bad practices in the first place, we wouldn’t have even been able to fund the wars in the first place,” he said.

Paul supporters echo this sentiment along highways and on FSU’s campus: they favor cutting the deficit a trillion dollars, dismantling the Fed, and unleashing the power of the free market. Fiscal conservatism gets top billing.

And their number one frustration is that this issue gets eclipsed by another issue.

One of Ron Paul’s most controversial plans is to end the war on drugs by lifting Federal restrictions on all controlled substances, leaving legislation up to the states. Young Paul supporters complain that people think they’re just in it for the drugs. Uneberg justifies his position by saying, “as a criminology major, as the son of a retired police officer, as someone who wants to go into law enforcement, I find the war on drugs to be very problematic. It disproportionately affects black communities, and I don’t think that you can say that you support civil rights then ignore the fact that there are these injustices that occur in our criminal justice system.”

Which brings up another thing that Paul supporters would like to address. Surveys show the base is mostly young, white men. Which is true of Uneberg. But it isn’t true for the older man I met that served during Desert Storm or the married couple in their mid 30s, or Zayida Baker, a 31 year old, black, female, Harvard educated, tea party advocate.  She recently picked up the cause and a picket sign for Ron Paul at one of the weekend’s “sign bombings.”

Baker is used to surprising people and is ready when I ask her about Paul’s scandal over some of his old campaign newsletters that used bigoted language. She tells me, “even if he doesn’t love black people, I think that he would make the presidency less powerful so the biases of an individual president would mean less under someone like him.”

Not many are able to separate their personal from their political identities. Which is one reason Baker is rare in the conservative world.  She’s also against government programs that many minorities depend on.  She sees welfare and benefits to single mothers as government programs that hasten the decay of black families, saying, “I think you have to explain the inequalities somehow at some point, you know, if black people aren’t making gains: Why? And I think it’s partly because some of the incentives for self-uplift have been taken away.”

The CIRCLE research shows young conservatives here look different than those in the last three states.  South Carolina’s primary was 98 percent white, while more than a fifth of young Republican voters here are expected to be people of color.

Alex Posada is the son of two Cuban immigrants, a member of the FSU College Republicans, and supports Ron Paul. He boasts about the diversity of the Paul camp, “that’s what’s so amazing about it- I may be Hispanic, and someone else may be African American, someone else may be white, that doesn’t really matter at the end of the day, is that we’re all together, we’re all united for the same cause and that is: fiscal sanity.”

It’s unlikely that Paul will advance this presidential season.  But as these young people carry their political passion into their adult lives, it’s likely these ideas won’t be considered fringe forever.

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Young Missionaries In New Hampshire Separate Church From State

Ike Sriskandarajah on Tuesday, Jan. 10th

This story originally aired on NPR’s All Things Considered, 1/10/12.

Exeter, New Hampshire — If campaigning for Republican Presidential candidates in New Hampshire sounds like hard work, try going door to door on primary weekend for Jesus.

That’s what Elder Taylor Bayles is doing in Exeter, New Hampshire. “Elder” is a religious title the Mormon Church gives this missionary even though he’s just 20 years old. His canvassing partner is Elder Kyle Hodson, who’s 21. The two blonde, conservatively dressed young men acknowledge that they tend to attract attention when they go door to door. “Generally, walking around New Hampshire in a suit and tie with a name tag makes you in the spotlight,” said Bayles.

They keep a rigorous schedule, sometimes from 10 in the morning to nine at night, talking to people about the Mormon faith. But in the days leading up to the New Hampshire primary, there’s something else people want to talk to them about: who they are voting for.

“It’s definitely a topic of conversation that comes up quite a bit,” said Hodson. “Two people within just a couple minutes of each other asked us the exact same question. They just yelled at us, ‘Huntsman or Romney?’”

It’s an obvious question to ask two Mormons, but the missionaries have no response. Despite the fact that presidential candidates Jon Huntsman and Mitt Romney are both active Mormons, the Church won’t endorse a candidate.

“The Church has a longstanding policy of neutrality as far as candidates and all that, so, as representatives, we mimic that neutrality,” said Bayles. “But we are people. We have opinions. We just choose not to voice them during these two years that we serve.”

But a blue bumper sticker pasted on the back of Hodson’s day planner seemed to say otherwise.

Hodson explained that the Mitt Romney sticker was only ornamental. “It’s really not much of a preference,” he said. “It’s just more for fun.”  Bayles agreed that it’s more an endorsement of stickers than the candidates they represent. “I’m looking for a Ron Paul sticker, a Newt Gingrich, Rick Perry… Whoever can give me a sticker, that’s what I’m looking for,” he laughed.

So a Romney sticker might just be decorative this year. But when Hodson does become politically active, he said he won’t necessarily vote his faith: “I wouldn’t consider myself smart if I chose to vote for a member of the church just because I’m a member.”

For now though, they’re in the political dark. During their mission, they won’t access newspapers or TV, and they keep their Internet to 30 minutes a week, and then only to one website: Mormon.org.

On a computer in the Exeter Public Library, Bayles opens the Church page and scrolls over a checkerboard of Mormon faces. “The guy we’re looking at now is an aboriginal guy from Australia and he works for a health campaign. There’s an opera singer, a mathematician, high school student, artist, cancer survivor.”

Mormon.org is the online host of the multi-million dollar “I’m a Mormon” campaign to show the diversity of the Church.  And Bayles knows the story behind each face, as he and Hodson spend 30 minutes each Saturday reading the profiles.

The faith had a different face a generation ago when Huntsman and Romney were just boys carrying out their own missionary rites of passage.


Jon Huntsman served his mission in Taiwan and Mitt Romney, in Paris, France.

Now those former missionaries are going door to door trying to persuade New Hampshire residents to believe in them as presidential candidates.  So who has the harder job?

Bayles took a moment to answer. “I’d say it’s probably harder for us to do our work than it would be for a campaigner.”

Hodson added, “When we go to talk to people about Jesus Christ we not only help them develop a faith in Christ but help them act on it. And that usually involves making some changes in their lives. And a lot of times those changes can be hard.”

Probably harder than picking a presidential candidate.

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Stop Whining About Glass

As you all undoubtedly already know, Google Glass is finally here.

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freeq

Hangout w/Jesse Vigil, Game Designer [Freeq]

Now streaming: the archive of our Google Hangout On-Air with Jesse Vigil of Psychic Bunny, one of the designers of the new audio adventure game FREEQ (iOS/Android).

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Watch This: To The Last, Dir. Matt Luck

We’ve featured dancer Matt Luck’s work before.

via: Sifteo

Sifteo Cubes: Blurring the Edges of Play

I first encountered Sifteo Cubes back at IndieCade last October, and spent some time playing around with the little blocks which I first mistook for iPod Nanos.

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Lighting Is An Underestimated Art

Over the weekend I was having a conversation about the new Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Museum that’s been announced.

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