Then there was to be a panel of journalists on the topic "From Broadsheet to Broadband: Community Media in the Digital Age." They each spoke for five minutes about how technology is re-defining how we connect to media and the concept of community.
I got a good seat and eaves-dropped on the group I assumed would make up the panel.
I recognized Andrew Lam from the time I took my City College class to see him on the Ocean Campus. But there was another man whose face I knew, but I didn't know from where.
Finally it dawned on me that he was Juan Gonzales, the chair of the CCSF Journalism Department as well as the founder of El Tecolote, a bilingual newspaper now 47-years old.
The man on Juan's right in the photos here is Rob Waters, a former editor of The Tenderloin Times. The man you see on the far right was the moderator, Brad Paul, housing advocate and former Cadillac Hotel tenant.
Below you can see them when Rob Waters was speaking and the others were seated for the panel.
Sara Colm, former editor; Andrew Lam, author; Carrie Sisto, Tenderloin Editor of Hoodline; Juan Gonzales, founder of El Tecolote and Chair of CCSF's Journalism Department.
David Talbot, co-founder of Salon, 48 Hills op-ed writer, former SF Examiner editor, former SF Chronicle columnist, and author, was a special speaker.
Here's Randy Shaw, director of the non-profit that runs the museum, The Tenderloin Housing Clinic, and the author of The Tenderloin: Sex, Crime and Resitance in the Heart of San Francisco.
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