Difference between revisions of "The Eye"

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'''''The Eye''''' is the weekly arts and culture magazine of ''[[Spec]]' that comes out every Thursday. So-named for urbanologist Jane Jacobs' term "eyes on the street," as it supposedly ties together "Columbia and the City". Founded in [[2006]] by [[Tim Shenk]], [[Julia Israel]], and others, it published many controversially reported articles and highly criticized humor pieces in its first year.
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[[File:Drop.png|thumb|''The Eye'''s "drop" logo]]
  
The "About" section on The Eye website reads as such:
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'''''The Eye''''' is ''[[Columbia Daily Spectator|Spec]]'''s longform magazine. Back in the print days, it was released every Thursday. It was founded in [[2006]] by [[Tim Shenk]] who famously wrote in his first Editor's Note, "Columbia students are busy, but this is worth your time"<ref>[http://eye.columbiaspectator.com/sites/default/files/EYE_09-07-06.pdf#page=1 First editor's note]</ref>. The magazine was so-named for urbanologist Jane Jacobs' term "eyes on the street," as it supposedly ties together "Columbia and the City". It published many controversially reported articles and highly criticized humor pieces in its first year
  
Every Thursday, Spectator puts out a magazine called The Eye, an arts and culture publication that likes to dabble in politics, religion, and the philosophical implications of Nicki Minaj. The staff of The Eye is devoted to putting out content every week, in print and on our blog, that keeps you at one with the zeitgeist and one step ahead of your noise-pop-loving friends down at NYU.Some of our favorite stories last year covered pop-up restaurants, Girls, and gay hip-hop. Ultimately, the Eye’s about what’s important to us right now—whatever that may be. Each week we publish a lengthy lead story, several long-form features, an interview, and a personal essay or work of fiction. In addition, we write several bite-sized reflections on campus life and pop culture punningly called Eyesites and 20/20.
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==Mission==
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The Eye describes their mission as such<ref>[http://eye.columbiaspectator.com/Join Recruitment page]</ref>:
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<blockquote>Every Thursday, Spectator puts out a magazine called The Eye, an arts and culture publication that likes to dabble in politics, religion, and the philosophical implications of Nicki Minaj. The staff of The Eye is devoted to putting out content every week, in print and on our blog, that keeps you at one with the zeitgeist and one step ahead of your noise-pop-loving friends down at NYU. Some of our favorite stories last year covered pop-up restaurants, Girls, and gay hip-hop. Ultimately, the Eye’s about what’s important to us right now—whatever that may be. Each week we publish a lengthy lead story, several long-form features, an interview, and a personal essay or work of fiction. In addition, we write several bite-sized reflections on campus life and pop culture punningly called Eyesites and 20/20.</blockquote>
  
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==The Ear==
The Eye Staff
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In Spring 2017 The Eye launched its podcast, The Ear. In Spring 2018, it released a new mission statement as follows:
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<blockquote>Though we may not be able to see it, history is all around us.
  
Editor in Chief: Rikki Novetsky
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We at The Eye have always known that. Though primarily trained in the art of sight—Jane Jacobs, after all, instructed us to keep vigil over the streets—we also have our ears on alert. We’re always listening for formative stories of our institution that, for whatever reason, weren’t chosen to be memorialized in plain sight. The stories that didn’t make it out of the past.
  
Managing Editor for Optics: Laura Booth
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With The Ear, we’re creating a concentrated place to remember these stories. Each week, we’ll be bringing a story from Columbia’s history to life in sound with a podcast episode released on our website (as well as on Apple Podcasts: please subscribe!). By examining the history of Columbia in 20-minute audio stories, The Ear will aim to enrich and intellectualize what it means to be a student at Columbia today. The present, after all, is often best understood in relief from the past.</blockquote>
  
Managing Editor for Features: Alison Herman
 
  
Art Director: Suze Myers
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==Editorial Board==
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'''[[:Category:The Eye editors|Editor in Chief]]:''' [[Maya Perry]]
  
Head Copy Editor: Natan Belchikov
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'''Lead Story Editor:''' Juliana Kim
  
Senior Design Editor: Annie Wang
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'''Features Editor:''' Parth Chhabra, Lyric Bowditch
  
Deputy Lead Story Editor: Zoe Camp
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'''View From Here Editor:''' Gavrielle Jacobovitz
  
View From Here Editor: Adina Applebaum
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'''Features Associate Editors:''' Kendra Zhong, Candy Chan, Arminda Downey-Mavromatis, Julian Shen-Berro
  
Fiction Editor: Eric Wohlstatder
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'''Producer of The Ear:''' Kara Schechtman
  
Eyesites Editor: PJ Sauerteig
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==References==
 
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<references />
Features Associate Editors: Carolina Gerlach, Parul Guliani, Dunni Oduyemi, Kierstin Utter
 
 
 
20/20 Associate Editor: Rebecca Schwarz
 
 
 
Deputy for Multimedia: Morgan Wilcock
 
 
 
Online Associate Editor: Amy Zimmerman
 
 
 
Visuals Editor: Hannah Sotnick
 
  
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==External Links==
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*[http://eye.columbiaspectator.com The Eye]
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*[http://twitter.com/theeyemag/ The Eye on Twitter]
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*[http://eye.columbiaspectator.com/archives Archives]
  
 
[[Category:Student publications|Eye, The]]
 
[[Category:Student publications|Eye, The]]
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[[Category:Columbia Daily Spectator|Eye, The]]

Latest revision as of 16:16, 6 June 2018

The Eye's "drop" logo

The Eye is Spec's longform magazine. Back in the print days, it was released every Thursday. It was founded in 2006 by Tim Shenk who famously wrote in his first Editor's Note, "Columbia students are busy, but this is worth your time"[1]. The magazine was so-named for urbanologist Jane Jacobs' term "eyes on the street," as it supposedly ties together "Columbia and the City". It published many controversially reported articles and highly criticized humor pieces in its first year

Mission

The Eye describes their mission as such[2]:

Every Thursday, Spectator puts out a magazine called The Eye, an arts and culture publication that likes to dabble in politics, religion, and the philosophical implications of Nicki Minaj. The staff of The Eye is devoted to putting out content every week, in print and on our blog, that keeps you at one with the zeitgeist and one step ahead of your noise-pop-loving friends down at NYU. Some of our favorite stories last year covered pop-up restaurants, Girls, and gay hip-hop. Ultimately, the Eye’s about what’s important to us right now—whatever that may be. Each week we publish a lengthy lead story, several long-form features, an interview, and a personal essay or work of fiction. In addition, we write several bite-sized reflections on campus life and pop culture punningly called Eyesites and 20/20.

The Ear

In Spring 2017 The Eye launched its podcast, The Ear. In Spring 2018, it released a new mission statement as follows:

Though we may not be able to see it, history is all around us.

We at The Eye have always known that. Though primarily trained in the art of sight—Jane Jacobs, after all, instructed us to keep vigil over the streets—we also have our ears on alert. We’re always listening for formative stories of our institution that, for whatever reason, weren’t chosen to be memorialized in plain sight. The stories that didn’t make it out of the past.

With The Ear, we’re creating a concentrated place to remember these stories. Each week, we’ll be bringing a story from Columbia’s history to life in sound with a podcast episode released on our website (as well as on Apple Podcasts: please subscribe!). By examining the history of Columbia in 20-minute audio stories, The Ear will aim to enrich and intellectualize what it means to be a student at Columbia today. The present, after all, is often best understood in relief from the past.


Editorial Board

Editor in Chief: Maya Perry

Lead Story Editor: Juliana Kim

Features Editor: Parth Chhabra, Lyric Bowditch

View From Here Editor: Gavrielle Jacobovitz

Features Associate Editors: Kendra Zhong, Candy Chan, Arminda Downey-Mavromatis, Julian Shen-Berro

Producer of The Ear: Kara Schechtman

References

External Links