Spotkanie autorskie z Erickiem Weinerem oraz konkurs – czy Ameryka to szczęśliwe miejsce?

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Dla fanów podróży:
Rozmowa o Islandii, Mołdawii, Indiach, Butanu, Kataru, USA,

Dla fanów mediów:
wieloletni dziennikarz i korespondent odpowie na Wasze pytania

Dla fanów nowych mediów:
Przed kilkoma tygodniami National Public Radio jako pierwsze medium wydało jasny zbiór zasad postępowania w social media

Dla fanów filozofii, antro.., i myślenia ogólnie:
o szczęściu, ot tak, ale na różnych gruntach

Przypominam, że można wysyłać pytania do autora – może być komentarz do tego artykułu, na Blipie, w formie video poniżej! Szczegóły http://www.komoshow.com/ask

Zapraszam w czwartek do InfoQultura na Plac Konstytucji 4 w Warszawie albo do oglądania transmisji live tutaj.

Uwaga! Można wygrać książki. Zajrzyjcie tu – http://www.bliplog.pl/nagrody-od-kosmo-zadaj-pytanie-wygraj-ksiazke-oraz-fejm/469


Info o książce:
Co sprawia, że kraj jest uznawany za szczęśliwy? Jakie kryteria decydują o tym, że w danym miejscu ludziom dobrze się żyje? Czego zazdrościmy mieszkańcom innych państw? W poszukiwaniu odpowiedzi na te pytania autor, wieloletni korespondent National Public Radio w Stanach Zjednoczonych, odwiedza kraje zaliczane do 10 najszczęśliwszych miejsc świata: Holandię, Katar, Mołdawię, Tajlandię, Wielką Brytanię, Stany Zjednoczone, Indie, Bhutan, Szwajcarię i Islandię. W trakcie swojej światowej wyprawy w poszukiwaniu szczęścia Weiner czerpie z mądrości filozofów, pisarzy oraz innych podróżników – ich odkrycia i przenikliwość służą mu jako mapa drogowa na trasie. Reportaże z jego pobytu w poszczególnych krajach są napisane z niezwykłym poczuciem humoru, a ironia i łagodna zgryźliwość dominujące w opowieściach Weinera sprzyjają celnym obserwacjom i trafnym charakterystykom.

Info o autorze:
Eric Weiner przez 10 lat pracował w National Public Radio jako korespondent zagraniczny. Był delegowany między innymi do New Delhi, Jerozolimy i Tokio, przekazując w sumie relacje z ponad 30 krajów. Był wysłannikiem NPR także w Nowym Jorku, w Miami, a obecnie w Waszyngtonie. Swą dziennikarską karierę rozpoczął jako reporter w New York Times. Uzyskał tytuł Knight Journalism Fellow przyznawany przez Stanford University. Jego komentarze ukazywały się również na łamach takich gazet, jak Los Angeles Times, Slate oraz The New Repulic. Po okresie obfitującym w podróże osiedlił się, prawie szczęśliwy, w Waszyngtonie, gdzie dzieli swój czas między salon a kuchnię.

foto na licencji cc: throk

Eric Weiner on KosmoShow 1×07!

On Thursday December 10th Eric Weiner will join us on KosmoShow.


How to watch the show:

  • Attend live here: InfoQultura -  Plac Konstytucji 4, Warsaw, Poland
  • Livestream will be available here: http://kosmoshow.com/live

Check the video questions already asked:

About the book:

Eric Weiner’s The Geography of Bliss signals the arrival of the next great category of literary nonfiction: the philosophical self-help humorous travel memoir.

Weiner, a veteran foreign correspondent for National Public Radio, has covered a multitude of catastrophes and maladies from more than 30 countries over the past two decades. For The Geography of Bliss, however, he decided to tell the other side of the story by visiting some of the world’s most contented places.

Using the ancient philosophers and the much more recent “science of happiness” as his guide, Weiner travels the world in search of the happiest places. Many authors have attempted to describe what happiness is; fewer have shown us where it is, and what we can learn from the inhabitants of different cultures.

As Weiner makes his way from Iceland (one of the world’s happiest countries) to Bhutan (where the king has made Gross National Happiness a national priority) to Moldova (not a happy place), he calls upon the collective wisdom of “the self-help industrial complex” to help him navigate the path to contentment.

He travels to Switzerland, where he discovers the hidden virtues of boredom; to the tiny-and extremely wealthy-Persian Gulf nation of Qatar, where the relationship between money and happiness is laid bare; to India, where Westerners seek their bliss at the feet of gurus; to Thailand, where not thinking is a way of life; to a small town outside London where happiness experts attempt to “change the psychological climate.” He also travels within the U.S.-and discovers that paradise is always a step away.

Throughout his global quest, Weiner integrates the insights of classical thinkers on happiness, augmented by one-liners worthy of a stand-up comedian. This is travel writing that simultaneously journeys across the globe and through the author’s mind.

Weiner is no dispassionate observer. In his quest for the world’s happiest places, he eats rotten Icelandic shark, smokes Moroccan hashish and intervenes to save an insect in distress. Almost. Full of inspired moments and earned epiphanies, The Geography of Bliss sets out to accomplish a feat few books dare and even fewer achieve: to make you happier.

About the author:
FOR as long as he can remember Eric Weiner wanted to be a foreign correspondent. So he could hardly believe his good fortune when, one day in 1993, NPR dispatched him to India as the network’s first full-time correspondent in that country. Weiner spent two of the best years of his life based in New Delhi, covering everything from an outbreak of bubonic plague to India’s economic reforms, before moving on to other postings in Jerusalem and Tokyo.

Over the past decade, he’s reported from more than 30 countries, most of them profoundly unhappy. He traveled to Iraq several times during the reign of Saddam Hussein. He was in Afghanistan in 2001, when the Taliban regime fell.

He’s also served as a correspondent for NPR in New York, Miami and Washington, D.C. Weiner is a former reporter for The New York Times and was a Knight Journalism Fellow at Stanford University. He was part of a team of NPR reporters that won a 1994 Peabody award for a series of investigative reports about the U.S. tobacco industry.

His commentary has appeared in the Los Angeles Times, Slate and The New Republic, among other publications. After traveling the world, he has settled, quasi-happily, in the Washington area, where he divides his time between his living room and his kitchen. He lives with his wife and daughter and their chronically overweight cat. He (Eric, not the cat) is an unrepentant sushi lover. Tekka maki, in particular.

Trailer: 1×03 with Parvana Persiani

Watch the promo trailer of next KosmoShow with Parvana Persiani which will happen on Nov 10th, 18:00 GMT+2.

Invitation: 1×02 with Anne Nelson: (new) media at (new) war

Where does new media take us with war and conflict reporting? Does more info but less quality is good? Or do we still rely on quality reporting? How can we combine old school with new way. And benefit from it.

Live on Nov 2nd, 18:00 (GMT+2)

Title: (new) media at (new) war

Guest: Anne Nelson

Discussion topic: Where does new media take us with war and conflict reporting? Does more info but less quality is good? Or do we still rely on quality reporting? How can we combine old school with new way. And benefit from it.

Where: Warsaw Rising Museum, click for map

When: 18:00 (GMT+2), Nov 2nd

For whom: open meeting in Museum (free entrance) + live video broadcast at http://kosmoshow.com

More about Anne Nelson:

is an adjunct associate professor at the Columbia School of International and Public Affairs, where she teaches “New Media in Development Communications.”

Nelson specializes in the area of media development, democratization and human rights. She is the author of “The Media as a Non-State Actor in the Arena of Human Rights” (Columbia University Seminars/Columbia University Press), “The Demise of the War Correspondent?” (Columbia Journal of International Affairs), Murder Under Two Flags: the US, Puerto Rico, and the Cerro Maravilla Cover-Up (Houghton Mifflin), and Human Rights in Honduras After General Alvarez (Human Rights Watch). She co-authored and edited Twenty Years and Forty Days: Life in a Cuban Prison (Human Rights Watch). As Executive Director of the Committee to Protect Journalists (1988-1992) she was the author and editor of numerous publications on international press freedom, including the first Journalists’ Safety Guide to the Former Yugoslavia, the Attacks on the Press annual reports, and many regional media analyses. She was a war correspondent in Latin America, and also reported from Eastern Europe and Asia. Her journalism has appeared in the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, Harper’s, Mother Jones, Rolling Stone, Macleans, and many other periodicals, as well as the BBC, the CBC, NPR and PBS. Her writing has won six awards, including the Livingston Award for international reporting.

As playwright and screenwriter, she is the author of “The Guys,” a play about the post-9/11 experience, which has been produced throughout the United States and in ten foreign countries. It was published by Random House and Dramatists Play Service, and was made into a feature film in 2002. Her play “Savages,” based on the true story of a court martial for war crimes during the US occupation of the Philippines, was produced off-Broadway in 2006 and will be published by Dramatists Play Service.

Nelson was the recipient of a 2005 Guggenheim Fellowship and a John McCloy Fellowship for her forthcoming book on the culture of German resistance in Berlin (to be published in spring of 2009).

Research interests: Media technology and markets; news media and foreign policy; war correspondence; international press freedom.

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foto na licencji cc: wanderlinse