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User:Crtew/Jenni Monet

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Jenni Monet
NationalityUnited States
OccupationJournalist
AwardsAward, (YEAR)

Jenni Monet, also known as ..., (MONTH DAY, YEAR – MONTH DAY, YEAR), a NATIONALITY OCCUPATION for the MEDIUM OUTLET in CITY, STATE, United States ... SUMMARY OF NOTABILITY (You will provide more detailed information about this journalist's nobility under the impact section below).

Instructions[edit]

Delete these instructions when you have filled in the journalist's infobox:

Do you see the box in the upper right with the name of your journalist and his or her country? That is the infobox. When you edit source in Wikipedia, you will enter data after the equal sign and once you do that and choose preview or save, you will see the new information displayed. You don't need to reference information in the infobox.

  • 1. Type in the name after the equal sign. Fill in any data below after the equal signs.
  • 2. The exact birth date is rarely known. If you can figure out the year of birth from a listed age, then write the year outside the comment tag with a ca. before the estimated year (ca. is the abbreviation for circa), but make sure you place a question mark after the year. If you know the exact year, month and day, then remove the comment tags and replace yyyy, mm, dd with known information.
  • 3. Birth place is sometimes known.
  • 4. The death date and death place is in most cases known. What also known in most cases is what the person died from.
  • 5. Sometimes education is known.
  • 6. The occupation is known (e.g., Journalist, Radio journalists, TV camera operator, etc.). Did the person have a title for their position (e.g., Director, Editor-in-Chief)?
  • 7. The media outlet is known.
  • 8. Usually nationality is known, but sometimes a person can have dual citizenship, in which cases you would list both. In most cases, only nationality will be listed.
  • 9. The person's residence is sometimes known.
  • 10. Sometimes you will know when the person started his or her career and this will help you identify the years in which they were active as a journalist.
  • 11. Family can be listed under the appropriate line.
  • 12. List any awards.

Delete these instructions when you have finished with the lead:

The lead is the first text that appears after the infobox and it gives a general overview of the person and tells why this person was important.

  • 1. Write the person's name between the three apostrophes.
  • 2. If the person has alternative spellings, then type everything between the quote marks including commas ", also known as altNAME".
  • 3. Type in the birth and death dates, replacing day with a number. If you don't know the birth date, the do you know how old the person is? From that you can guess the year(s). If you use an estimate, then type a question mark after the year.
  • 4. Write in the person's nationality (American, Malaysian, etc.)
  • 5. What was their job title? Use that in place of occupation.
  • 6. Which medium or media did the person work in? Newspaper? Radio? Television? Online?
  • 7. For which company?
  • 8. Where did the person work (City, Country)?
  • 9. What is this person known for?
  • 10. Write the lead:

Personal[edit]

Delete these instructions after filling in personal details about the journalist. What do you know about this person's life outside of career and death? In most cases, you don't need a great amount of detail. You might know where the person was born or where the person lives and about his or her family. You might have learned about their education. What did the person do before he or she became a journalist. Sometimes you know where and when the memorial service was held and where the person is buried. Don't go into any details about how the person died here.

Career[edit]

Delete these instructions when you have completed the section about the person's career: Provide any career details and dates. Give background and any examples of important work. Don't go into any death details here.

Notable works of journalism[edit]

Crtew/Jenni Monet is located in the United States
Washington D.C.
Washington D.C.
Washington D.C.
Washington D.C.
JOURNALISTNAME worked for the MEDIAOUTLET in CITY, STATE.

What are the important works of journalism by this person and for which this person is most known or awarded? Describe this person's role in this work, what it is about, and the outcome with citations.

Context[edit]

Delete these instructions after completion: What should the reader know about the country or the situation (e.g., dangerous assignment, embedded journalist, impunity) to better understand what has happened to this journalist and how it relates to journalism in this country or in the world? Citations to the CIA's The World Factbook are common in this section.

Impact[edit]

Delete these instructions after completion: Why is this person important? In the lead, you suggested why this person is important, but now you want to give a more complete explanation. It is important to back this up with sources that are not world press freedom organizations, like the CPJ or RSF.

Awards[edit]

Delete these instructions after completion: List all of the awards won, the year, and a citation for each. These are also listed briefly in the infobox.

  • Award (YEAR)[1]

See also[edit]

Temporary urls[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ https://journalism.columbia.edu/tobenkin#Past_Winners
  2. ^ Tolan, Sandy. "Journalist faces charges after arrest while covering Dakota Access pipeline protest". latimes.com.
  3. ^ "Drop excessive charges against journalist Jenni Monet".
  4. ^ "Covering Standing Rock".
  5. ^ "Dakota pipeline protesters torch tents as deadline to leave passes".
  6. ^ Smith, Mitch (23 February 2017). "Standing Rock Protest Camp, Once Home to Thousands, Is Razed" – via NYTimes.com.
  7. ^ Dunn, Tracy Loeffelholz. "In Defense of Standing Rock Reporter Jenni Monet—and All Journalists".
  8. ^ "For Native 'water protectors,' Standing Rock protest has become fight for religious freedom, human rights". PBS NewsHour.
  9. ^ "Journalist among 76 arrested for trespassing at Standing Rock". 2 February 2017.
  10. ^ Tribune, CAROLINE GRUESKIN Bismarck. "Journalist arrested at pipeline protest".
  11. ^ "Jenni Monet - EBL News". EBL News.
  12. ^ "Drop Excessive Charges Against Journalist Jenni Monet - Cascade Business News". 9 February 2017.
  13. ^ "Journalist Jenni Monet Gives Latest on Standing Rock After Her Arrest - APTN News". 17 November 2017.
  14. ^ Monet, Jenni. "What the Trump Victory Means for Standing Rock". Truthout.
  15. ^ "Jenni Monet — Special to CNN – In America - CNN.com Blogs". inamerica.blogs.cnn.com.
  16. ^ "Jenni Monet · NFCB". 18 April 2017.

External links[edit]

  • Category:YEAR births
  • Category:YEAR deaths OR Category:Living people
  • Category:American journalists
  • Category:American women journalists
  • Category:Journalists from New Mexico
  • Category:Laguna Pueblo
  • Category:Native American journalists
  • Category:Native American women journalists