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NBC
NBC's prominence in the entertainment industry is legendary. And now, through its partnership with Liberty Mutual and exclusive new “One Minute Films”, NBC is playing a prominent role in helping The Responsibility Project illuminate what it means to do the right thing.
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Slate
Slate is a daily online magazine that offers fresh angles on stories in the news and innovative entertainment coverage, all with its signature wit and irreverence. Pushing the boundaries of convention, Slate publishes provocative commentary on topics such as politics, culture, business, and technology. “My Goodness” is a weekly advice column where Slate answers readers’ questions about how to do good in the world — or, at least, how to try to do better.
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Beliefnet
Beliefnet is the leading creator and aggregator of inspirational, spiritual, and emotional wellness content, aiming to help people live their lives better by providing the information, tools and products that meet them at the point of their need. The Responsibility Project features selections from two of Beliefnet’s blogs — Movie Mom, a parent’s eye on media, culture, and values by Nell Minow, and Fresh Living, providing, tips, ideas, and inspiration about health and wholeness by two women who (usually) practice what they preach — along with a variety of useful resources.
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Discovery Education
Discovery Communication revolutionized television with Discovery Channel and is now transforming classrooms through Discovery Education. Powered by the number one nonfiction media company in the world, Discovery Education combines scientifically proven, standards-based digital media and a dynamic user community in order to empower teachers to improve student achievement. Already, more than half of all U.S. schools access Discovery Education digital services.
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Fast Company
Fast Company profiles progressive business leaders who use innovation, technology, design, and sustainability to make positive changes for the future. By focusing on true innovators who believe in the power of business to solve world problems, Fast Company attracts a nimble, open-minded, and future-focused audience of business leaders.
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The Christian Science Monitor
The Christian Science Monitor is an international news organization that delivers thoughtful coverage through its weekly magazine and at CSMonitor.com. The Monitor is global, in practice and in spirit, and engages the world in unbiased, solution-oriented ways. At the Responsibility Project, find the Monitor’s series “People Making a Difference,” dedicated to telling the stories of the countless unheralded individuals who are working to make the world a better place.
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The Atlantic
Since 1857, The Atlantic has shaped the national debate on politics, current affairs, and cultural trends. Dedicated to presenting independent, diverse, and highly reasoned perspectives, its writers, bloggers, and critics—including James Fallows, Andrew Sullivan, Corby Kummer, Jeffrey Goldberg, Megan McArdle, and Ta-Nehisi Coates—provide discerning readers with fresh insight that helps them navigate the world’s swirling currents.
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TED
TED is a small nonprofit devoted to Ideas Worth Spreading. It started out (in 1984) as a conference bringing together people from three worlds: Technology, Entertainment, Design. Since then its scope has become ever broader. Along with the annual TED Conference in Long Beach, California, and the TEDGlobal conference in Oxford, U.K., TED includes the award-winning TEDTalks video site, the Open Translation Program, the new TEDx community program, this year’s TEDIndia Conference and the annual TED Prize.
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BlogHer
BlogHer is a community and media company created in partnership with women in social media. The largest community of women who blog, BlogHer.com is a guide to the hottest news and trends among women in social media, and a place where women come to seek and share advice, opinions, and recommendations in an atmosphere of integrity and respect. At the annual BlogHer Conference—held in August 2010 in New York City—The Responsibility Project conducted surveys and hosted discussions among influential bloggers on a variety of important topics.
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Harvard Business Review
Harvard Business Review’s mission is to improve the practice of management. That doesn’t mean covering news items that are blips on the business radar. Or presenting lots of dense, ivory-tower theories. It means taking the best of new business thinking and research and delivering it in a practical, accessible form that executives and professionals can use on the job today.









