Maynard Institute archives

Journalism 6/08/11

Photo Editor Hillery Smith Shay Laid Off at St. Paul Paper

Raleigh Paper Moving 25 Production Jobs to Charlotte

Bob Herbert to Write Columns From Think Tank

Discussing “The End of Anger” in a New Black Generation

L’Opinion Awarded for Series on Mexicans in U.S. Prisons

Report Details Sexual Violence Against Journalists

Chicagoans Debate Naming Race of Crime Suspects

Short Takes

Photo Editor Hillery Smith Shay Laid Off at St. Paul Paper

Hillery Smith Shay, senior editor, photography at the St. Paul (Minn.) Pioneer Press, was laid off on Monday for “economic” reasons, Editor Mike Burbach told Journal-isms. Shay, seeing the handwriting on the wall, was already pursuing a masters of business administration at nearby Bethel University.

Hillery Smith Shay“Predicting the curve is one of my strengths. It’s a really unfortunate time for the business, Shaw, 38, said. “I don’t hold it against anybody.” In fact, Shay said, she had had to lay off two people in her department, which once numbered 20, herself.

Since she majored in fine arts as an undergraduate, a master’s degree in business would give her a more practical foundation were she to work for a large corporation, she said.

Shaw came to the Pioneer Press a little over six years ago from the Associated Press in Miami. From 2005 to 2007, she chaired the Visual Task Force of the National Association of Black Journalists.

 

Raleigh Paper Moving 25 Production Jobs to Charlotte

The News & Observer in Raleigh, N.C., is transferring newsroom production work to a new center at the Charlotte (N.C.) Observer, moving “about 25 N&O positions” there, the Raleigh paper announced on Monday.

Millicent Fauntleroy“Beginning in August, the new center will perform copy editing and page design for The N&O and its community newspapers, as well as The Charlotte Observer and The Herald of Rock Hill, S.C., which also are owned by The McClatchy Co.”

In Raleigh, the move would affect two black women — a desk manager and a copy editor — and a black man who is classified as a copy editor/designer in the group, Linda Williams, senior editor at the paper, told Journal-isms.

Millicent Fauntleroy, assistant news editor and slot who is African American, said she would not move to Charlotte. “I plan to retire while accepting my severance payment, unless my interview with our human resources department on Thursday shows me that there is an error in my thinking,” she told Journal-isms. Fauntleroy, 61, has been at The N&O nearly 25 years, and has been employed full time as a journalist for 41 years.

 

Bob Herbert to Write Columns From Think Tank

Bob Herbert, the former New York Times columnist who wrote his farewell column for that paper in March, is joining DemBob Herbertos, a New York-based “national policy center” as a distinguished senior fellow, the organization announced Tuesday night.

“At Demos, Mr. Herbert will continue his work on behalf of low – and middle-income Americans, providing expertise and writing on economic, social and policy issues,” the organization said. “At Demos, Mr. Herbert will continue working on a new book, ‘Wounded Colossus,’ while writing for Demos’ new blog, Policyshop.net. Among other activities, he will also contribute to The American Prospect ? a publishing partner of Demos.

Joel Dreyfuss, managing editor of theRoot.com, left, leads a discussion of “The End of Anger” with, from left, its author, Ellis Cose; Eugene Robinson of the Washington Post; Cheryl Contee, a co-founder of Jack and Jill Politics; Erica L. Williams, a senior strategist at Citizen Engagement Lab; and Jamal Simmons, a communications strategist and television commentator. The talk took place Monday at the Washington Post. (Credit: Kea Taylor/Imagine Photography)

Discussing “The End of Anger” in a New Black Generation

Ellis Cose, the Newsweek columnist and veteran journalist, wrote in 1993’s “The Rage of a Privileged Class” that middle-class blacks were angry. He revisits the subject in his new “The End of Anger: A New Generation’s Take on Race and Rage,” and found, he said, significant changes.

On Monday, he presented his findings at a forum sponsored by theRoot.com at the home of the Root’s parent company, the Washington Post.com. “Based on a survey of African Americans covering three generations, the youngest group is far more optimistic about its opportunities and more confident about overcoming racism than its elders,” according to a summary distributed for discussion.

A panel responded. The Post’s Eugene Robinson, author of “Disintegration: The Splintering of Black America,” said “I absolutely agree with the premise about the generational difference that you see. Harvard MBAs and people going to fancy prep schools have a lot of reason to be optimistic. But Robinson said he worries about those he describes in his own book as “the Abandoned: No Way Out.” The groups are so far apart that “It’s difficult to lay out an agenda . . . for all African Americans of all ages and all economic classes,” Robinson said.

Erica L. Williams, speaking for Millennials, those born between 1980 and 2000, said, “What it means to be an African American culturally has changed. You find young African Americans sharing cultural traits with people of other races, such as skate culture. “Not that there is less anger, but anger is not necessarily a defining characteristic,” she said. But she was hesitant to give it a label. “I wouldn’t call it the end of anger, but the beginning of confusion. We don’t know what we’re seeing.”

Cheryl Contee, a partner at Fission Strategy and co-founder of the website Jack and Jill Politics, had two themes: technology and “the prison-industrial complex.” Contee said that when mobile devices are accounted for, there is no digital divide between black and white. She also said “we cannot sit idly by while so many of our black men” are in prison. She quoted author Michelle Alexander of “the New Jim Crow,” who said there were more black men in prison today than were slaves in 1850.

Jamal Simmons, a Democratic strategist, said “I think we can make the argument that there is the possibility for black people to do whatever they want as individuals, but when you make a mistake, there is the possibility that you can fall faster” than a white person would. He also urged, “make some friends with Latinos,” noting demographic changes. “African Americans have much more infrastructure than the Latino community does,” but “that’s not going to last.”

L’Opinion Awarded for Series on Mexicans in U.S. Prisons

If the Karpoor Chandra Kulish International Awards are any indication, the business of print journalism kudos moves at a slower pace in India than it does in the U.S.,” Richard Horgan wrote Wednesday for FishbowlLA

“Seven 2009 merit prizes were announced this week by Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh, and included a series from that year published in La Opinión. ‘Prisoners of Ignorance and Tradition,’ a three-part, three-month investigation by reporter Claudia Núñiez, was all about a disenfranchised segment of the American prison system:

“More than 20,000 indigenous Mexicans, most of whom do not speak Spanish or English, are serving out sentences in U.S. prisons and are lost in a system that they do not know or understand.

“It’s a great series, translated into English by Marvelia Alpízar.”

 

Report Details Sexual Violence Against Journalists

The Committee to Protect Journalists has released a report about what it calls ‘the silencing crime’: sexual assault against journalists,” the Huffington Post reported on Wednesday.

“The issue of sexual assault was relatively dormant until the assault on CBS reporter Lara Logan in Egypt in February. The attack, and Logan’s decision to discuss it openly, prompted an outpouring of commentary about the dangers that correspondents face around the world.

“In the report, author Lauren Wolfe talked to over four dozen journalists.

“. . . Speaking to CNN, Wolfe said media organizations need to give journalists space ‘to report these issues,’ and treat the possibility of sexual assault as seriously as they would other dangers when they send reporters into the field.

“Press freedom means being able to report freely in any kind of environment,” she said.

 

Chicagoans Debate Naming Race of Crime Suspects

The subject of racial identification of crime suspects is being debated again in Chicago after “A dozen or so teenage males went on the prowl near North Michigan Avenue in Chicago’s toniest shopping district. They attacked five people, ages 20 to 68. Their loot included a backpack, a wallet, a bike, an iPad, a BlackBerry and an iPod Touch. The cops quickly arrested five alleged assailants, at least three of them from the South Side, and vowed to find the rest,” as Mary Schmich wrote Wednesday in the Chicago Tribune.

The Associated Press stylebook has said identification by race is pertinent “when it provides the reader with a substantial insight into conflicting emotions known or likely to be involved in a demonstration or similar event.”

“I’m ambivalent about the omission of the attackers’ race in the news accounts, but I think I would have decided to leave it out too,” Schmich said.

“. . . Race alone doesn’t predict or explain behavior. Just because this mob was young and black hardly means that all young, black people in groups are a violent mob. Knowing the race of these attackers is no form of protection.

“And yet race is an aspect of what happened Saturday night.

“It’s a piece of the story simply because we notice.”

“. . . As my friend pointed out, recalling the words of the African-American writer Toni Morrison, ‘Once we know the race, what else do we know?’

“The answer? Not as much as any single word — black, white, other — may make us think we do.”

 

Short Takes

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