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futurejournalismproject:

One Man to Walk Mankind’s Original 22,000 Mile Trek Across the Globe
Well, more or less. Pulitzer winning journalist Paul Salopek is setting out on a seven-year odyssey to report on human culture along the route anthropologists believe humans originally took on their way to populate the earth, from Ethiopia to Patagonia. He’s calling the project Out of Eden.
From Nieman Lab:


No matter what the road may bring, it’ll be important to have the right gear. Salopek will be a solo traveler for most of the journey, so he’ll need to pull off the one-man band routine many journalists are now familiar with. But given the breadth of his journey, Salopek told me he wanted to have a kit that would open up new kinds of storytelling possibilities. “I’m looking at the walk as a journalist’s laboratory,” he told me.
In his backpack, Salopek will carry a MacBook Air, a satellite phone, a Sony HXR-NX7OU for video and stills, a GoPro camera, an audio recorder, and a personal GPS tracking device. The GPS will obviously play a role in keeping him on track, but Salopek said he’s also interested in trying to geocode stories along his path. Location-based information could play a role in the online component of the project, allowing Salopek and his media partners to give a deeper sense of place. A story about climate change, for instance, could be enhanced with temperature and geological data. Another idea would be to pull in tweets or updates from other social networks to sample the online conversation in a particular region, Salopek said. “The reason why it excites me is that this project by definition is a global project,” he said. “It goes across borders and languages and cultures. I want people to be able to follow along.”


Hike vicariously (we know you want to) with Paul on the project site.
Image: Nieman Lab.
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futurejournalismproject:

One Man to Walk Mankind’s Original 22,000 Mile Trek Across the Globe

Well, more or less. Pulitzer winning journalist Paul Salopek is setting out on a seven-year odyssey to report on human culture along the route anthropologists believe humans originally took on their way to populate the earth, from Ethiopia to Patagonia. He’s calling the project Out of Eden.

From Nieman Lab:

No matter what the road may bring, it’ll be important to have the right gear. Salopek will be a solo traveler for most of the journey, so he’ll need to pull off the one-man band routine many journalists are now familiar with. But given the breadth of his journey, Salopek told me he wanted to have a kit that would open up new kinds of storytelling possibilities. “I’m looking at the walk as a journalist’s laboratory,” he told me.

In his backpack, Salopek will carry a MacBook Air, a satellite phone, a Sony HXR-NX7OU for video and stills, a GoPro camera, an audio recorder, and a personal GPS tracking device. The GPS will obviously play a role in keeping him on track, but Salopek said he’s also interested in trying to geocode stories along his path. Location-based information could play a role in the online component of the project, allowing Salopek and his media partners to give a deeper sense of place. A story about climate change, for instance, could be enhanced with temperature and geological data. Another idea would be to pull in tweets or updates from other social networks to sample the online conversation in a particular region, Salopek said. “The reason why it excites me is that this project by definition is a global project,” he said. “It goes across borders and languages and cultures. I want people to be able to follow along.”

Hike vicariously (we know you want to) with Paul on the project site.

Image: Nieman Lab.

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  1. pulitzercenter likes this
  2. johngushue reblogged this from futurejournalismproject
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  9. petits-mains reblogged this from theamericanscholar and added:
    Neat!
  10. crowtendr likes this
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  21. theamericanscholar reblogged this from futurejournalismproject
  22. exquisitelyspacey reblogged this from futurejournalismproject and added:
    This is amazing!!! Can’t wait to follow his journey and see the results of it.
  23. exquisitelyspacey likes this
  24. jenncork reblogged this from futurejournalismproject and added:
    Technology enabling global engagement with a story, an idea, a man. Inspiring.
  25. yolkmusic likes this
  26. fordamento likes this
  27. fordamento reblogged this from llaurasim
  28. chudovperiah reblogged this from futurejournalismproject and added:
    This is exciting!
  29. chudovperiah likes this
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  32. we8cheese reblogged this from futurejournalismproject
  33. seraangel reblogged this from futurejournalismproject and added:
    Huh. This should be interesting.
  34. zipporah reblogged this from futurejournalismproject and added:
    this guy is spending seven years walking across the earth. wtf.
  35. meetaki reblogged this from futurejournalismproject and added:
    Mother of all Treks.
  36. itscompletlywantitlookslike likes this
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  48. tiyumbaetkatrin reblogged this from futurejournalismproject and added:
    Now THIS is a trip.
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The American Scholar is the venerable and lively quarterly magazine of public affairs, literature, science, history, and culture published by the Phi Beta Kappa Society since 1932. In recent years the magazine has won four National Magazine Awards, the industry’s highest honor, and many of its essays and articles have been selected for the yearly Best American anthologies.

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