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Big names to explore fake news and modern media at lecture series

The five-part lecture series runs every Wednesday from Feb. 27 to March 27; NewmarketToday's sister paper, OrilliaMatters' Nathan Taylor part of star-studded panel

NEWS RELEASE
LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY
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The Toronto Star’s Kevin Donovan, the CBC’s Litsa Sourtzis, and former executive producer Dan Dunsky are just a few of the speakers set to present during Third Age Learning Lakehead’s (TALL) second five-part lecture series, Uncovering the Truth: Investigative Journalism in the Age of 'Fake News.'

Participants will enjoy lectures that discuss how the impact of social media and technology has changed how we consume and what we consume, as ‘news,' including the proliferation of ‘fake’ news.

Dr. Michael Hoechsmann, associate professor in the Faculty of Education at Lakehead University, will kick off the series with “Remix, Rhetoric and ‘Reality’ in the Era of ‘Fake News’” on Feb. 27.

Hoechsmann will delve into how Web 2.0 and algorithmic Web 3.0 has changed how we produce, circulate and consume knowledge, information and ‘news,' and what has fueled the rise of fake news.

On March 6, creator and former Executive Producer of The Agenda with Steve Paikin, Dan Dunsky, will discuss how powerful digital technologies have profound implications for journalism and its role of providing the ‘first, rough draft of history’ in “Algorithms, Tribalism and Journalism."

Kevin Donovan, chief investigative reporter with the Toronto Star, will speak about the process of asking tough questions and listening to all sides in “Making a Difference: How Investigative Reporting Changes the World One Story at a Time” on March 13.

Drawing from his experience with such stories as ORNGE Air Ambulance, and the Rob Ford story, Donovan will explain how he and others like him seek the truth.

CBC Executive Producer, Litsa Sourtzis, will explore the role of television and documentaries in particular, but also the role of the producer in accessing and framing the ‘truth’ in Canada today in “The Role of the “Watchdog”: The (re)Production of News in Canada” on March 20.

Dr. Sandra Jeppesen, Lakehead University Research Chair in Transformative Media and Social Movements, and Nathan Taylor, reporter for OrilliaMatters, will close out the series on March 27 with a look at “Global and Local Intersections: Digital Movements in the Age of Fake News."

Jeppesen and Taylor will explore how global and local media can address some of the successes and challenges of transformative media and social movements in the era of fake news.

The TALL five-part lecture series runs every Wednesday from Feb. 27 to March 27 from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. at St. Paul’s Centre in Orillia. There is a registration fee of $59 (plus HST) per person. For more information, or to purchase tickets, click here.

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