San Francisco Peninsula Press Club

San Francisco Peninsula Press Club A professional journalism organization serving the greater Bay Area.

The San Francisco Peninsula Press Club was founded in 1974 to provide a forum for the interchange of idea and opinions between professionals in the various news and public relations media, to provide an organization in which to share fellowship, to promote professional competence and knowledge, to encourage students entering journalism by offering scholarships, and to increase public knowledge of

the media though workshops and other exchanges of information. Activities include a professional awards competition and banquet, social gatherings and workshops, fund-raising activities incorporating programs of interest to the membership, the annual picnic, and other events.

08/08/2017

The San Francisco Press Club (formerly the San Francisco-Peninsula Press Club) has rebranded! We invite you to enter the 2017 Greater Bay Area Journalism Awards and like our new page: https://www.facebook.com/SFPressClub/
Please tell your friends!

Founded in 1963, we aim to provide a forum for the interchange of ideas and opinions between news and PR professionals, to promote professional competence.

08/12/2016

Press Club's Greater Bay Area Journalism competition has been extended to Aug. 19. Click here for the rules and other detailshttp://files.constantcontact.com/7ee29083101/1d74e553-b57c-444e-b6d8-ba19978763e0.pdf

The contest is open to journalists and public relations professionals. Divisions in the contest include digital media, newspaper/trade press/newsletter, photography, public relations, newspaper, radio and television.

The contest will be judged by media professionals outside the Bay Area.

The deadline to enter is now Aug. 19, 2016.

The awards will be presented at a luncheon on Saturday, Oct. 1, 2016 at the Crowne Plaza Foster City.

05/01/2015

Attention high school journalism students and their advisers: The Press Club is now accepting entries for its annual high school journalism contest. Go here (http://www.price-news.com/HS-Call-2015.pdf) for contest entry information.

08/29/2014

ATTENTION: Bay Area high school journalism departments!

*** You are invited to attend the San Francisco Peninsula Press Club High School Journalism Boot Camp ***

Laura Dudnick, staff writer at The San Francisco Examiner, will be the keynote speaker. Laura primarily covers education and health, as well as general assignment and breaking news. She previously worked as a senior local editor for AOL's Patch.com, and as the San Mateo County bureau reporter for Bay City News Service.

DETAILS:
When: Friday, Sept. 26 from 12:30 - 5 p.m.
Where: College of San Mateo, Theatre
Contact: [email protected]

The Press Club's annual High School Journalism Boot Camp is just around the corner - Sept. 26. Visit sfppc.blogspot.com ...
08/14/2014

The Press Club's annual High School Journalism Boot Camp is just around the corner - Sept. 26. Visit sfppc.blogspot.com for more info or comment here with questions. We look forward to seeing all the future journalists!

04/16/2014

Apply online by May 2nd.

Student journalists at Carlmont High School in the Peninsula city of Belmont won a prestigious award over the weekend at...
04/16/2014

Student journalists at Carlmont High School in the Peninsula city of Belmont won a prestigious award over the weekend at the National High School Journalism Convention in San Diego. Carlmont’s www.scotscoop.com was honored with a Pacemaker Award by the National Scholastic Press Association. Read more at http://sfppc.blogspot.com/2014/04/high-school-journalists-on-peninsula.html

They got the runs, but they couldn’t manage the win. Varsity baseball took a hard loss against the Menlo Knights on Wednesday afternoon. Designated hitter Alex Pennes started off the game during the second inning with a run batted in (RBI) to bring in first baseman Joe Pratt. The inning ended shortl...

01/16/2014

It's that time of year to submit entries for the San Francisco Peninsula Press Club's annual Greater Bay Area Journalism Awards. Here's a link to download the form that gives the rules and entry information (http://www.price-news.com/PPCEntries2014.pdf) (http://www.price-news.com/PPCEntries2014.doc). The deadline to enter is Friday, Feb. 28, 2014.

The entry fees are $15 members, $55 non-members, $30 same company with 25 or more, per entry.

However, your first entry is FREE with a 2014 Paid Membership. Each additional entry only $15. Here's the link for a membership form (http://www.price-news.com/mem-app.doc).

Entries can be uploaded, so contestants don't have to submit paper entries. As in previous years, the entries will be judged by press clubs in other cities. No members of the San Francisco Peninsula Press Club will participate in the judging.

Awards will be presented at a banquet in June.

KTVU fell for a hoax today when it broadcast on its noon news the purported names of the pilots of Asiana Airlines Fligh...
07/12/2013

KTVU fell for a hoax today when it broadcast on its noon news the purported names of the pilots of Asiana Airlines Flight 214 that crashed at San Francisco International Airport on Saturday.

The names, which were read by anchor Tori Campbell and shown on a Chyron, were obviously fake: "Sum Ting Wong," "Wi Tu Lo," "Ho Lee F*k" and "Bang Ding Ow." Campbell read them without batting an eye. Call it a Ron Burgandy moment. Later in the newscast, she apologized. (On the video, the names are at :43.)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iTCOUgVYG3o #

The apology read, "Earlier in the newscast we gave some names of pilots involved in the Asiana Airlines crash. These names were not accurate despite an NTSB official in Washington confirming them late this morning. We apologize for the error."

The blunder occurs at a time when KTVU is airing promos boasting that the station was first on the air with the crash Saturday. The Chronicle indicates that the station isn't commenting beyond the apology.

Some obvious questions:

• How did this fake info get into the newsroom?

• Who confirmed it at the NTSB?

• Didn't the producer and anchor know that the real names of the pilots came out earlier in the week, and that announcing them now was old news?

• Why didn't anybody realize the names were fake before they went on the air with them?

A local Fox affiliate, the San Francisco powerhouse station KTVU, is dealing with the fallout of a major error on Friday. During their noon broadcast, a repo...

Bay Area print and online journalists, photographers, radio and television personnel and public relations professionals ...
06/02/2013

Bay Area print and online journalists, photographers, radio and television personnel and public relations professionals were presented with 211 awards of excellence in nine divisions and 41 categories at the San Francisco Peninsula Press Club's 36th Annual Greater Bay Area Journalism Awards dinner tonight (June 1). http://sfppc.blogspot.com/2013/06/36th-annual-greater-bay-area-journalism.html

05/29/2013

A proposal to impose a $10 fee for every court file requested by the public has been approved by a state Senate panel, the Palo Alto Daily Post reported today (May 29).

Proposed by the Judicial Council, the $10 fee is one of 17 items attached to a proposed state budget, called a “trailer bill.” The bills are heard concurrently when the Legislature takes up the state budget.

The Senate budget subcommittee heard the proposal on Thursday and proposed an amendment that would exempt the press from the fees. The subcommittee adopted it.

The Assembly’s budget subcommittee, however, rejected the idea of the fee altogether.

Now, the proposed fee goes to a conference budget committee where the differences between the Senate and Assembly versions are worked out.

Jim Ewert, general counsel for the California Newspaper Publishers Association, opposes the fee, even with the amendment that would exempt the press. Ewert has been lobbying at the Capitol against the fee.

Ewert said that although he has not yet seen the language of the amendment, it would still affect the general public and some people such freelance journalists or members of syndicated news services.

Even with the exception, he said, the general public would be at a great disadvantage.

He said fees would hurt press coverage of the court system as some reporters need to pull files on a daily basis. He said a court reporter who requests nine court cases would be charged $90.

“Pretty soon, there would be less written about the courts and the public is going to be even more in the dark about one of the mysterious branches of government,” he said.

Judicial Council spokesman Peter Allen said that Gov. Jerry Brown decided to pursue 11 of the 17 proposals by council, including the $10 fee. The fee would generate about $6 million a year.

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