Colleagues Mourn the Passing of a Catholic Journalism and PR Virtuoso

In November 2012, Sister Mary Ann Walsh introduced as part of her U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops media relations duties a blog post format that amounted to a tip sheet of five relevant news items and tidbits.

This week, in the wake of Walsh’s passing at age 68 from recurring cancer, her former USCCB colleagues (she left the fold last fall) are using that same “Five Things” format to pay tribute to her life as a journalist and PR person:

1. Mary Ann Walsh was born and raised in Albany, New York. She joined the Sisters of Mercy at the age of 17 and celebrated her jubilee year last October. The word “mercy” brought an easy smile to her face. She believed in her mission.

In the days following Pope Francis’ election, she picked up on his emphasis then on mercy. Her last piece for America magazine, where she had been working since last September, was on the pope’s call for the Jubilee Year of Mercy. She wrote March 25, “Pope Francis has made mercy a key theme of his pontificate and has spoken of an ‘age of mercy.’ People listen to him. There is a huge need for mercy in today’s society where hurt abounds in many areas. People seem open to mercy, which emphasizes forgiveness over judgment, as never before. We need this.”

When Walsh joined the USCCB in 1993, she was the first woman to hold the position of director of media relations. After seguing to America magazine last fall as U.S. church correspondent, she continued to write for them as she battled the cancer. Warm memories are also being shared by the Catholic News Service, where she was once Vatican correspondent and media editor:

Phil Pullella, senior correspondent in Italy and the Vatican for Reuters, told of his friendship with Sister Mary Ann that began when she was a reporter in Rome for Catholic News Service.

“I always called her ‘Mother Mary’ and she always called me ‘my son,’” he said in a note to CNS. “Mary Ann was an exceptionally generous woman… When she moved to America magazine, she wrote some of the clearest insightful, informed and entertaining columns about the U.S. church that I have ever read.”

In March, Walsh received the St. Francis de Sales Award, which honors lifetime achievements, from the Catholic Press Association. The America magazine obituary is here. RIP.

Charles Duhigg to Lead NY Times Events Business

The New York Times has named Pulitzer Prize winner Charles Duhigg senior editor of the Times events business.

Duhigg has been with the Time since 2006. Prior to joining the Times, he was a staff writer for the Los Angeles Times.

“Charles will work with colleagues throughout the company to expand the conferences The Times already runs, like Cities for Tomorrow, the Luxury Conference, the magazine’s events, DealBook, Schools for Tomorrow, Food forTomorrow and the INYT conferences, and he will provide support to TimesTalks and our other successful live journalism events,” read a memo from executive editor Dean Baquet and editorial page editor Andrew Rosenthal. “He will also work with the newsroom, the Editorial Department and our business-side colleagues to find other ideas that allow newsmakers and our journalists to take the stage together to discuss the biggest issues of the day.”

GigaOM Journo Plugs Into Variety

JankoRoettgersPicJanko Roettgers (pictured), a senior writer with the recently dissolved GigaOM, is going to be able to keep right on going in the Bay Area. The married father of two, who lives in Oakland, has been hired as Variety’s first-ever senior Silicon Valley correspondent.

From today’s announcement:

“Janko has the expertise and experience to make a valuable contribution to our team,” said Variety co-editor-in-chief Andrew Wallenstein. “Variety has moved aggressively in recent years to cover Silicon Valley’s impact on Hollywood, which makes having a respected journalist like Janko on the ground in the technology capital of the world a natural next step for us.”

Roettgers will start May 18 and report to Wallenstein. He will also work closely with New York digital editor Todd Spangler. And per a recent piece in our sister publication The Hollywood Reporter comparing the cultures of Tinseltown and Tech town, Variety’s man-in-the-tech-trenches should continue to benefit from this:

One of the biggest contrasts is communication style: Hollywood never likes to say no, while “in tech, you are expected to give direct, even critical feedback and be brutally honest,” says Sibyl Goldman, Facebook’s head of entertainment partnerships. “That’s how products are improved and features evolve to become awesome.”

 
Previously on FishbowlNY:
Fortune Adds Six Former GigaOM Staffers

ListenUp: Chaka Khan: Through the Fire

Chaka Khan: Through the Fire


Today’s #TBT comes from R&B and soul powerhouse Chaka Khan, who’s been belting out hits for over four decades—and although “Through the Fire” released in 1984, it still inspires spontaneous public sing-alongs to this day. There’ll be a whole lot of……

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Milan Design Week 2015: Transforming Historical Spaces: Site-specific installations in neoclassical palazzos wowed at the annual design fair

Milan Design Week 2015: Transforming Historical Spaces

When you walk in the streets of Milan, you immediately realize that its classic architecture can somehow be cold and austere. But behind many façades, there are gardens—beautiful and carefully hidden. Some of the installations at the latest Milan……

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Petite Porsche SUV

Almost the same size as a Porsche Cayman, the Nassau concept would be the smallest SUV in the brand’s lineup but would also have the capability of carrying not 2 but 4 passengers both on and off road. Under the hood, it’s the same plug-in hybrid powertrain featured in the Porsche 918. To contrast its diminutive size, the exterior design language is purposefully menacing and angry. One might say it’s the leaner, meaner Porsche SUV.

Designer: Gery Ancira


Yanko Design
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(Petite Porsche SUV was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Camouflage and Metamorphosis Body Painting

Le projet Metamorphoses a été initié par les photographes allemands Laila Pregizer et Uwe Schmida avec l’aide des body painters allemands Léonie Gené, basée à Hambourg, et Joerg Duesterwald. Dans cette série de photographies, les corps se fondent à merveille dans le décor, si bien que l’observateur se surprend à parfois les chercher.

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Long Story Short – Alex Strohl

Voici un nouvel épisode de la série Long Story Short produite par Live Orange TV (la web TV du groupe Orange). Ce mini-documentaire porte, cette fois-ci, sur l’aventurier et photographe Alex Strohl qui été suivi lors d’un voyage dans le nord-ouest Pacifique, en Amérique du Nord, où il a capturé les paysages les plus brumeux et puissants.

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Illuminated Glass Staircase

Le designer français Frédéric Hamerlak a créé un escalier au design malin et audacieux. Grâce à des LEDs interchangeables, les marches, semblables à des plaques transparentes disposées en zig-zag, ainsi que la rampe, sont illuminées comme des néons pour un résultat du plus bel effet. À découvrir en images.

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Dezeen Mail #251

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Marc Newson’s record-breaking Lockheed LoungeRenzo Piano’s Whitney museum in New York and Kengo Kuma’s latest project in Tokyo (pictured) feature in this week’s Dezeen Mail. Click through for our pick of the best news, jobs and reader comments from Dezeen.

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