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NATIONAL MEDIA ARTS ORG GRANTS $75,000 TO HBCU: Funds to be Targeted Towards New Media Projects(September 20, 2006)
New York, NY - The National Black Programming Consortium (NBPC), with funding provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, and in partnership with Blackside, Inc., is granting up to 15 historically black colleges $5,000 each (for a total of $75,000) to create original media based projects that explore contemporary issues of civil rights, American history and local and national leadership. The "Eyes on the Prize Black College New Media Project" is part of a national outreach campaign to expand and enhance dialogue around issues of civil rights, as well as announce the rebroadcast of the landmark documentary series, Eyes on the Prize, to be aired this October. This is the first time the program has aired in its entirety since 1993. Professors teaching at historically black colleges and universities are eligible to apply. This web-based, multimedia initiative fosters the use of interactive technology, encourages historically black colleges to work with public television stations to learn to create and use media as a tool of civic engagement, and promotes a greater understanding of how the legacy of the Civil Rights Movement is still relevant today. The application for the "Eyes on the Prize Black College New Media Project" deadline is September 30, 2006. All projects will be judged by a curatorial team of professional media makers, and grants will be awarded by October 15, 2006. Award recipients' work will be due by November 15, 2006, and uploaded and available for viewing on the internet. The first six hours of the series, Eyes on the Prize: America's Civil Rights Movement, 1954 - 1985 is scheduled to air nationally on PBS' American Experience, October 2, 9, 16, 2006. The remaining eight hours of the series will be broadcast at a later date. "We are thrilled and honored to be a part of this national outreach campaign. We feel this project not only helps our young people learn more about the voices of the past, but also helps cultivate and encourage future media makers. Recognizing that many of today's major culture power brokers and media moguls, such as: Oprah Winfrey, Shawn 'P.Diddy' Combs, and Spike Lee attended historically black colleges, it is the desire of NBPC to foster civic engagement among our youth and help promote future generations of socially conscious filmmakers and media professionals," says Jacquie Jones, Executive Director for NBPC. Please visit www.nbpc.tv/hbcu for complete application guidelines and submission rules or contact: hbcueop2006@nbpc.tv for more information.
NBPC Blackside The re-release of Eyes on the Prize was made possible by grants from The Ford Foundation and The Gilder Foundation. The Corporation for Public Broadcasting is funding a national outreach campaign managed by Blackside that is a collaborative effort of three outreach partners: Outreach Extensions, Facing History and Ourselves, and the National Black Programming Consortium. # # #
Jacquie Jones
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