Jean-Francois Vogel passed away this Sunday. renowned French journalist, media adviser and essayist who has served as board member, president of the governing board and lecturer at the Gabo Foundation, an institution founded by Nobel Literature Prize winner Gabriel García Márquez to promote quality journalism in Latin America.
Foundation CEO Jaime Abello Banfi, along with Jean-Francois’ colleagues on the Governing Board and Board of Directors, and members of the organization’s team based in Cartagena, Colombia, express their solidarity with family and relatives. master Vogel, considered one of the pioneers of digital journalism in the world.
Jean-Francois Victor Vogel was born on March 3, 1947 in Gargenville. In 2002, at the invitation of his friend Gabriel García Márquez, he entered the list of teachers of the then Foundation for the New Ibero-American Journalism. In his more than two decades with the Gabo Foundation, he has not only stood out as a seminar teacher, but is also strongly committed to the institution’s sustainability and vision for the future.
Vogel left an important legacy in the education of journalists and the transformation of journalism in the digital age. In his seminars, he shared his experience of revitalizing media companies, especially Le Monde, which he helped rescue from one of the worst crises in its history in the mid-1990s, with the breakthrough implementation of a web-based media portal. .
“We publish to be read (…). In the midst of multiple content offerings and time use cases, if that isn’t achieved, it just gets lost or fails,” he said at a workshop he hosted for media editors in 2019. For this reason, he insisted on a maxim in every one of his seminars: you must do indispensable journalism.
By participating in workshops and talks, he shared his thoughts on journalistic ethics and disinformation, many of which are included in the book. Journalism in the face of disinformation. “Objectivity is unattainable, especially in a world of conflicting versions. Honesty can be achieved,” he said.
His work as a prominent member of the Board of Governors and his role as a mentor to the Gabo Foundation team is proof of his commitment to promoting quality journalism in Latin America.
Media Explorer and Visionary
Trained in economics at the Paris Institute of Political Studies (Sciences Po), Vogel worked for various French media including Agence France-Presse, Le Point, Magazine littéraire and the daily newspaper Libération, where he became editor-in-chief. .
Jean-Francois has had a prolific career as a consultant to media companies in Europe and America. He is widely recognized for his work in creating and developing in 1995, together with Bruno Patino, Lemonde.fr, the site of the daily newspaper Le Monde, which has become the leading news site in the French-speaking world. He later served as an adviser to the New York Times, led the website update of the Sud Ouest French group of newspapers, and was responsible for building a digital information platform for the France Télévisions group, one of the three most important in the world. France.
During his career he wrote several books, including the widely translated Press without Gutenberg (2007), essay on the rise of online journalism. He specialized in Latin American politics and history and published several books on the Cuban Revolution and the rise of the drug trade in Latin America, including End of the century in Havana1994) and Testament of Pablo Escobar (1995).
Passionate about literature, he compiled and wrote forewords for Federico García Lorca, Bruce Chatwin and Paul Moran, the latter being the subject of his book. Moran Expressfor which he was awarded the Brockett-Gonin Prize of the French Academy (1981).
Over the past decades, Vogel has dedicated himself to the education and training of journalists and media professionals. He has been the Director of the Executive Master of Media Management, Sciences Po and lecturer at the Gabo Foundation, where he has led dozens of workshops and participated in numerous workshops and talks on the management and sustainability of journalistic companies, journalistic ethics, disinformation and technological innovation in the media.
In an interview given in 1983 to the Colombian newspaper El Tiempo, Gabriel García Márquez said: “No one kills a writer. Not even death. From the same point of view, one can consider the figure of Jean-Francois Vogel, a man whose journalistic and essayistic activities will forever remain in the memory of his loved ones and in the ethical conscience of colleagues for future generations.
Here is how Abello Banfi said when he heard the news of death:
Source: Aristegui Noticias
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