International Scoop and Journalism Festival

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International Scoop and Journalism Festival was a French festival held every year in Angers, in the Maine-et-Loire département. Its last edition in Angers took place in November 2010. The following year, the festival moved to Lille, and after this edition, the organizers announced that they would not be holding the event again.

Presentation[edit]

Each year, the Angevin scoop festival tackled a social theme: "Women at the heart of a reflection on journalism and history", "Journalism and history", "Environment and information: ... the role of the media...".

For over a week, debates and symposia bring together more than a thousand journalists, as well as historians and other privileged witnesses of the 20th century. They address cross-disciplinary themes, scientific, geopolitical and social issues. Trophies are also awarded for the best reports of the year. The festival welcomes leading names from the French and foreign press.[1][2]

Exhibitions and workshops are held around these exchanges and meetings. In addition to its professional vocation, the festival offers educational activities for the general public and for young people (middle and high schools), enabling them to gain a better understanding of the world of news and journalism. As a partner of the festival, Clemi (Centre de liaison de l'enseignement et des moyens d'information) organizes a two-day training course on the festival site, enabling teachers to meet the journalists present. It is also involved in organizing the half-days reserved for schoolchildren.[3]

The "Festival du scoop et du journalisme" relocates a number of events in its program. Some days and evenings are organized in Cholet or Château-Gontier.

History[edit]

In 1985, under the presidency of Edward Behr, the Festival du scoop et du journalisme was created in Angers.[4]

In 2007, the Angers festival boasted since its inception:[5]

  • 1,200 journalists ;
  • 150,000 spectators for some sixty debates, meetings and workshops;
  • half a million visitors to the thirty or so exhibitions presented annually;
  • 10 television programs, including France 3's Des Racines et des Ailes for three years running;
  • 18 prizes, including the Grand Prix Jean-Louis Calderon.In March 2009, as part of a budget review, Angers mayor Jean-Claude Antonini decided to cancel the city's €142,000 contribution to the Festival du Scoop. As a result, the festival's very existence was threatened.[6]

2010 marks the 25th edition, with Patrick de Carolis as honorary president.[7] The organizers indicate that this is the last Angevine edition.[8]

The following year, in 2011, the festival moved to Lille, where it was renamed Scoop Grand Lille, the European Journalism Festival.[9][10][11]

In October 2012, the EVA-flash team announced that it would not be running the "Scoop Festival" again.[12]

Themes per year[edit]

Each year, the festival tackled a different theme:

In 1993, Journalism in wartime, Algeria, justice;

In 2004, Violence and Journalism;

In 2005, Journalism and History;

In 2006, Sport and the Media;

In 2007, Environment and information ... the role of the media ... ;

In 2008, La femme ... acteur du siècle ;[13]

In 2009, Peopolisation de l'information : où va le journalisme ;

In 2010, La presse et le pouvoir, le pouvoir et la presse.[14]

How it works[edit]

The Scoop and Journalism Festival was organized by the EVA-flash association. Alain Lebouc took over as director in November 2010.

The budget for the 2011 edition was around €300,000.

Angers festival partners: City of Angers (until 2008), Maine-et-Loire General Council, Pays de la Loire Regional Council, ADEME, Ministries of Culture and Sports, CNRS, Alliance française, Reporters sans frontières, Médecins sans frontières, France terre d'asile, Angers business schools (ESA, ESAIP, Agro-campus ouest (INH), ESSCA, ESEO, ENSAM), worldwide press agencies.[15]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Les scoops d'Angers". L'Express (in French). 25 November 1993..
  2. ^ "France 2 récompensée au Festival du scoop d'Angers". Le Monde (in French). 26 November 2007..
  3. ^ "Les pièges du langage". Le Monde (in French). 30 November 2004..
  4. ^ "Le ministère de la Culture et de la Communication présente le «Best Of » du Festival International du Scoop et du Journalisme du 2 novembre au 16 décembre 2011". Ministère de la Culture (in French). 9 November 2011..
  5. ^ 22ème édition du lundi 12 au samedi 24 novembre 2007 at the Wayback Machine (archived 2008-02-24), Festival du Scoop (EVA-flash), consulté le 17 juin 2007.
  6. ^ Ouest-France (Angers Maville), Pourquoi le Festival du Scoop est menacé, article du 5 mars 2009.
  7. ^ CERIMES - Centre de ressources et d'information sur les multimédias pour l'enseignement supérieur, Festival international du scoop et du journalisme, consulté le 8 février 2014.
  8. ^ "25e festival du Scoop et dernier à Angers du 15 au 28 novembre". Saumur Kiosque (Ignis Communication) (in French). 14 November 2010..
  9. ^ 22ème édition du lundi 12 au samedi 24 novembre 2007 at the Wayback Machine (archived 2008-02-24), Festival du Scoop (EVA-flash), consulté le 17 juin 2007.
  10. ^ L'Express, Le festival du journalisme Scoop déménage à Lille, se penche sur l'impact du numérique, article du 23 novembre 2011.
  11. ^ La Voix du Nord, Scoop Grand Lille, le festival européen du journalisme, article du 11 novembre 2011.
  12. ^ Festival du Scoop (EVA-flash), communiqué d'octobre 2012.
  13. ^ Le Huffington Post, [1] 23e édition du Scoop d'Angers, post du 21 novembre 2008.
  14. ^ "25e festival du Scoop et dernier à Angers du 15 au 28 novembre". Saumur Kiosque (Ignis Communication) (in French). 14 November 2010..
  15. ^ Conseil Régional des Pays de la Loire, Aide aux associations : subventions, document du 11 octobre 2010, p. 16.