CURRENT EVENTS

Amy Beidleman, The Aspen Daily Times Aspen, Pitkin County, Thursday Morning, October 1, 1885
Amy Beidleman, “The Aspen Daily Times Aspen, Pitkin County, Thursday Morning, October 1, 1885”

Aspen Chapel Gallery opens new art show “Tell It Like It Is” with partner Aspen Journalism

October 1, 4 to 7PM | Aspen Chapel Gallery

TELL IT LIKE IT IS, a mixed media show in partnership with ASPEN JOURNALISM opens at the Aspen Chapel Gallery on Wednesday, OCTOBER 1, from 4-7pm.  The curator is artist Amy Beidleman. Participating artists are Amy Beidleman, John Bozza, Jake Bozza, Tim Cooney, Judy Haas, Molly Haberman, Larkin Horn, Shelley Safiie Marolt, Greg McFadden, Gaard Moses, Will Oakley, Karen Teague and Andre Wille.

Read the story by Aspen Daily News to learn more about the exhibition and artists’ intentions.

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PAST EVENTS

Stephen Engelberg

The state of independent journalism with ProPublica Editor-in-Chief Stephen Engelberg

July 12, 2025 at 4:30PM | Albright Pavilion at Aspen Meadows

A community event presented by Aspen Journalism featuring Stephen Engelberg, Editor-in-Chief of ProPublica, in conversation with Curtis Wackerle, Editor and Executive Director of Aspen Journalism.

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Chautauqua In search of community event flier invitation

Chautauqua “In Search of Community”

December 12, 2024 | Morgridge Commons, Glenwood Springs

Community Builders and Aspen Journalism seek to engage the community in a conversation that expands on the idea of the interrelatedness of the Roaring Fork and Colorado River valleys. The extensive research of the Roaring Fork region in the Paul Andersen series for Aspen Journalism, “In Search of Community,” illustrates how much we share and gives a path forward for working together to solve local and regional challenges.

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Hanging in  the Balance: Competing Needs for Water in the West

Hanging in the Balance: Competing Needs for Water in the West

April 9, 2024 | The Arts Campus at Willits (TACAW)

Demand for water is increasing while availability is decreasing. How do we balance the needs of the environment, recreation, and agriculture? Presented by Aspen Journalism and Colorado Water Trust in partnership with The Arts Campus At Willits (TACAW) and Aspen Public Radio, the community is invited to this free event featuring an expert panel discussing the challenges and opportunities presented by our collective need to stretch a limited resource.
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WATCH VIDEO
HANGING IN THE BALANCE: COMPETING NEEDS FOR WATER IN THE WEST

YouTube video

A housing-oriented panel discussion

December 6, 2023 | Marble Distilling Co.

The discussion, moderated by Aspen Journalism Editor and Executive Director Curtis Wackerle, will feature panelists Hannah Klausman, the director of economic and community development for the city of Glenwood Springs, and April Long, program director for the West Mountain Regional Housing Coalition.
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High Country Film Screening

High Country Film Screening and Panel Discussion

An examination of Crested Butte, a neighboring ski town, High Country presents a microcosm of the great American debate on community; panel discussion to follow.

March 11, 2023 | Paepcke Auditorium in Aspen

Aspen Journalism partnered with filmmaker Conor Hagen and retired local journalist Paul Andersen, as well as other community partners, to present a free screening of Hagen’s film High Country, about Aspen’s closest neighboring ski town of Crested Butte and its legacy of fostering community amid challenges. 

This event is intended to bring the Roaring Fork Valley community together to learn more about how a peer community has evolved over time and how it has grappled with many of the same challenges we face. 

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From Whiteout to wind-blown: A tale of two counties across America’s great divide

Cheap Land Colorado author Ted Conover in conversation with Aspen Journalism

January 5, 2023 | Aspen Meadows, Albright Pavilion

READ EDITOR & EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR CURTIS WACKERLE’S WRITEUP ABOUT THE EVENT HERE

Ted Conover’s career in immersive journalism has taken him from a nuanced exploration of local culture for his 1991 title Whiteout: Lost in Aspen to a year-long stint as a prison guard resulting in Newjack: Guarding Sing Sing, which was a Pulitzer Prize finalist. For his latest critically-acclaimed book released this earlier month, Cheap Land Colorado: Off-Gridders at America’s Edge, Conover returned to his home state, living off and on for four years in the San Luis Valley in an effort to better understand the divisions that have increasingly riven the American social and political consciousness.

The conversation at the Albright Pavilion with Aspen Journalism Editor and Executive Director Curtis Wackerle will center on a tale of two counties — Pitkin and Costilla in the San Luis Valley — geographically close but at seemingly opposite ends of the great American divide. 

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Thomas L. Friedman
Thomas L. Friedman. CREDIT: Josh Haner/The New York Times Credit: Josh Haner/The New York Times

The intersection of climate, democracy, and geopolitics: A conversation with Thomas L. Friedman

July 22, 2022
READ EDITOR & EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR CURTIS WACKERLE’S WRITEUP ABOUT THE EVENT HERE

Aspen Journalism and Aspen Center for Environmental Studies (ACES) partnered to present a public conversation with Thomas L. Friedman. Together with Curtis Wackerle, Editor and Executive Director of Aspen Journalism and Chris Lane, CEO of ACES, Friedman discuss the intersection of climate, democracy and geopolitics.

Watch video of Thomas Friedman discussion