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Application deadline has now passed. WMC's Progressive Women's Voices is the premier media and leadership training program for women in the country and is back in-person for the first time since 2019.
The Women’s Media Center (WMC) media training and leadership programs seek to elevate women’s voices through media training. By training women leaders and experts to be media-ready and promoting them to reporters and media outlets, we change the face of media.
Women in media are often viewed as ornaments, not instruments. Through the Women’s Media Center training programs, our experts are prepared for all media platforms to raise important issues, be role models, expand the talent pool of commentators, analysts, reporters, writers, and to be promoted through our WMC SheSource database of experts.
WMC programs provide customized message development and media training to help women understand the media landscape and leverage media opportunities, own their expertise, know the critical elements of an interview, effective writing and pitching of op-eds, persuasively shape their media messages, build sound bites, learn on-camera techniques and personal presentation skills.
The premier media and leadership training program in the country for women.
Our media training and leadership programs seek to elevate women’s voices through media training.
WMC is a progressive, nonpartisan nonprofit organization working to raise the visibility, viability and decision-making power of women and girls in media.
Last week's WMC Women's Media Awards honored media leaders who have paved the way for other women.
At the annual Women's Media Awards gala, more than 350 people gathered to honor trailblazers—and to look ahead to the next decade of making girls and women visible and powerful in media.
The Women's Media Center today congratulates the 20 women accepted into its WMC Progressive Women's Voices class of 2015.
The Women's Media Center today congratulates the 20 women accepted into its WMC Progressive Women's Voices class of 2015.
The campaign to put a woman’s face on the $20 bill has provoked both support and skepticism. Mary C. Curtis considers: is it a good idea?















