Skip to main content

WEBINAR ANNOUNCEMENT: INDK Filmmakers Meeting to Discuss New Educational Tool

Posted by on Tuesday, November 7, 2023 in Inventors and Entrepreneurs, Self-Advocates and Civil Stakeholders.

The Frist Center team are so excited to announce our November Webinar. The team from “In A Different Key” the movie, will be joining us to discuss their new toolkit, designed to support understanding around autism. The In A Different Key movie is available on PBS for free, and the toolkit contains discussion booklets and accompanying documents. Moderator Jessica Schonhut-Stasik will be discussing the Toolkit with filmmakers Caren Zucker and John Donvan.

Time and Date:

Date: Wednesday 15th November

Time: 2pm PT / 4pm CT / 5pm ET

Speaker Bios:

Caren Zucker. Image Credit:
Lorenzo Bevilaqua/ABC Television

Caren Zucker is a journalist and Emmy Award winning producer who has reported on a broad range of subjects both domestically and internationally. As a producer for ABC’s World News and Nightline, working alongside Peter Jennings, Charlie Gibson, and Diane Sawyer, she covered economic summits, presidential campaigns, social trends and the Olympic Games.  She was honored for her role in ABC’s coverage of 9/11 with two of television’s most prestigious prizes, the Peabody and the Alfred L. DuPont awards.  Zucker was the producer and co-writer of PBS NewsHour series Autism Now. Her oldest son Mickey’s autism diagnosis inspired a new direction in her reporting: to bring a better understanding of autism’s realities. Zucker and her husband, NBC Sports Producer John McGuinness, have three children and reside in New Jersey.

John Donvan.

John Donvan is a veteran network correspondent for ABC, CNN and PBS, and Moderator-in-Chief for Open to Debate, a program, heard on public radio and by podcast. During his journalism career, in addition to anchoring such broadcasts as ABC’s Nightline, John served as chief White House correspondent, and held multiyear postings in London, Moscow, Jerusalem and Amman, Jordan. The winner of four Emmys and the Overseas Press Club Award, he became interested in autism’s impact on families upon meeting his wife, a physician and medical school professor Ranit Mishori, who grew up in Israel with an autistic brother. He has two children and lives in Washington, D.C.

Zucker and Donvan published the best selling book IN A DIFFERENT KEY: The Story of Autism; they were honored in 2017 as a Pulitzer Prize Finalist (Crown, January 2016). As two journalists with a personal connection to autism, they aim to inspire acceptance of and support for people on the spectrum by telling their stories with honesty and compassion.

As a team, Donvan and Zucker have been collaborating on stories about autism since 2000. At ABC, they created the pioneering series Echoes of Autism, the first regular feature segment in network news devoted to understanding the lives of individuals and families living with autism. Their 2010 article in The Atlantic,
“Autism’s First Child,” was shortlisted for the National Magazine Award and appeared in the paperback anthology Best Magazine Writing of 2011. The two most recently won an Emmy Award for their story “A Different Kindof Boyhood,” airing on ABC’s Nightline, a report on the lives of two autistic boys over 15 years as they grew into young men.

Register:

Register for the webinar here. Questions about this webinar, or our webinars generally, please reach out to Program and Communications Manager Jessica Schonhut-Stasik.

Tags: , , , , , ,

Leave a Response