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NABJ OK’s New Philly Chapter; Old One Objects

Existing Group Charges ‘Betrayal,’ Vows to Remain

 Homepage photo credit: Curtis Brown LLC

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NABJ President Ken Lemon, third from left, holds a T-shirt from the new NABJ-Philadelphia, while Melanie Burney holds the new group’s logo. (Credit: Curtis Brown LLC)

Existing Group Charges ‘Betrayal,’ Vows to Remain

The National Association of Black Journalists Friday approved a new chapter in Philadelphia, with 11 votes for and one abstention. The existing Philadelphia Association of Black Journalists left the national group a year ago and NABJ had suspended the local president for five years.

The vote came after Melanie Burney, a Philadelphia Inquirer reporter, brought a contingent from the new group to the national board meeting, held in downtown Philadelphia, and invoked the chapter’s illustrious past leaders, NABJ co-founders Acel Moore, Chuck Stone and Claude Lewis. The presentation included a letter of support from Don Camp, an early member who could not deliver it in person because, members said, he had a “medical emergency” in the hotel elevator and was taken to the hospital.  

“I’m pretty emotional after hearing all of that,” Eva Coleman, a board member from Dallas, said. “I get chills when I hear the proud tradition. NABJ is worth fighting for and that is what they are standing here to do.” Burney persuaded the board to move its vote on the certification from Saturday to Friday.

Security guards were posted outside the meeting room as PABJ expressed its displeasure.

On the PABJ website, PABJ President Ernest Owens (pictured) said the local group had sought a reconciliation with NABJ that did not come to pass, and told members, “PABJ will not be permitting current members to double-dip in forming a rival chapter to our organization simultaneously. We perceive NABJ’s desire to consider forming another local organization as retaliatory and in bad faith. Those who choose to partake in this collaboration with NABJ during our time of institutional friction will not be granted or renewed a membership within PABJ.”

After the vote, PABJ responded on the X social media platform,  “This ‘new’ NABJ-Philly is nothing more than a small group of bitter and disgruntled ex-members who capitalized off of a conflict between NABJ and PABJ during a time when Black journalists should be united,” and:

‘We knew the betrayal would happen, but it’s a shame that it did. To spite PABJ — the nation’s first association for any journalists of color — @NABJ decided to now approve a new chapter in Philly in an attempt to rival ours.”

However, Owens’ group was barely mentioned, if at all, during the board discussion.

Michael Days, second from left, and Angela Dodson, third from left, Assin Manso Slave Camp. “We are wearing white to honor the ancestors,” Days wrote. (Credit: Facebook).

The president of the newly recognized NABJ Philly is Michael Days, a former editor of the Philadelphia Daily News, former vice president of the Philadelphia Inquirer and news industry leader. Burney is vice president.

Days himself was not present, as he and his wife, fellow journalist Angela Dodson, were in Ghana. In a running commentary on Facebook, Days wrote, “More than a few people have told us that a trip to Ghana would be transformative. They’re right. I’m sure it will continue to be. Returning home looking forward to my next trip. But maybe more importantly resolved to use well whatever time I have left on this planet, making a difference.”

Tre’vell Anderson (pictured), an NABJ presidential candidate over the summer and the board member who abstained Friday, expressed sympathy with some of the concerns of PABJ, but told Journal-isms, “I didn’t want to stand in the way” of a new affiliate chapter in Philadelphia.

Those concerns included requirements that chapters be audited and that a certain number of members be bona fide journalists. The split of proceeds also became an issue.

“NABJ’s current chapter expectations are simply inequitable, unintelligent, and not sustainable for the growth of our organization that will turn 50 very soon,” the chapter said in a December 2022 statement. announcing it was leaving the national organization.

“This recently announced NABJ chapter split is an overreach, the updated chapter audit policy is provincial, and the NABJ board’s steadfast refusal to speak to our board collectively about these concerns after multiple requests over the past year is downright inexcusable and immature.” 

The dispute became personal. Owens said, “Until there is a more reputable National President that can represent our needs in good faith, alongside a board that can prioritize principle over personal politics, we have zero confidence in NABJ’s current leadership team. We will not be submitting a chapter audit at this time,” that PABJ statement said.

“We will reconsider our organization’s options of affiliation to their organization when a new NABJ President is elected that may best understand the concerns we have raised with them for over a year.”

The reference was to immediate past president Dorothy Tucker, whose two terms as president ended in August.

Conflict between Tucker and the Philadelphia chapter surfaced during Tucker’s 2021 re-election effort. She was challenged by Manuel McDonnell-Smith, PABJ president in 2019 and 2020, who maintained that NABJ needed to become closer to its members. Tucker won, 531 votes to 111. McDonnell-Smith tweeted his support for PABJ pulling out.

PABJ was founded in 1974. NABJ followed a year later on Dec. 12, 1975. Today it claims a membership of more than 4,000.

Owens’ letter to members was not kind to Tucker’s successor, Ken Lemon. “Over a month ago, I had sent this board a letter clarifying yet again PABJ’s interest in reaffiliation. Once again, our board received no formal explanation or letter from NABJ giving us an answer despite NABJ President Ken Lemon promising such and then cowardly rescinding,” he wrote.  

A similar dispute took place in Chicago in 2002, between the Chicago Association of Black Journalists and NABJ – Chicago. NABJ-Chicago prevailed.

The Philadelphia Association indicated it will fight the same fate. “We’re not going anywhere. We’re independent. We’ve got our own 501(c)3 and we’ll continue to serve our over 300 members respectfully. There’s only one PABJ. We are the first,” it said in its X posting.  

Also certified were new student chapters at Langston University, Morehouse College (the chapter includes its sister school Spelman College) and the University of Oregon.

Also at the meeting, Lemon said board members would visit media organizations to let them know “we are here to help” them pursue diversity, equity and inclusion in light of anti-diversity actions and the recent Supreme Court decision striking down affirmative action on college admissions.  

Extra! Extra! A Battle for the Moral High Ground

Oct.24, 2023

War Coverage Shifts Amid Bias Complaints
Should Inquirer Have Apologized for Cartoon?
FDA Considers Banning Some Hair Straighteners
‘I Had Employees Call Me the N-word to My Face’
Nonprofit Newsrooms More Diverse Than Others
Natives Weigh In on ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’
Harry Porterfield Dies, ’85 Demotion Led to Boycott

(more to come)

Homepage photo: CBS News’ Marwan Al-Ghoul reporting from the scene of an Israeli airstrike in Gaza on Oct. 17.

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Despite efforts to flee, many civilians are trapped in Gaza. CNN producer Ibrahim Dahman shares his story. (Credit: YouTube)

War Coverage Shifts Amid Bias Complaints

The developing status of this war illustrates just how quickly perceptions about who has the moral high ground can evolve in conflicts like this,” columnist Charles M. Blow wrote for The New York Times. It was but one of a few truisms capturing the moment in this stage of the Israeli-Hamas war.

Another: “Words matter. Timing matters. This war is as much about propaganda as it is about anything else,” wrote Leonard Greene in the Daily News of New York.

A third: “Our institutions are meeting this moment not with clarity, but with double standards.” That was from Karen Attiah of the Washington Post, writing in her newsletter.

Topic A in coverage of the coverage was the deadly explosion at al-Ahli Hospital in Gaza City on Oct. 18. Assignment of blame and acknowledgment of the humanitarian disaster helped shift perceptions of who held the moral high ground. At least 24 journalists had already been killed in this war as of Tuesday, most of them Palestinians, and now journalistic standards themselves were taking a hit.

[On Wednesday, “Al Jazeera said its bureau chief in Gaza, Wael Al Dahdouh, lost his wife, son, daughter, and grandson in what it said was an Israeli airstrike,” CNN reported. “The blast hit a house in the Nuseirat refugee camp in central Gaza where the family was taking shelter after being displaced, according to the news organization”].

Most news organizations seem eager to sweep last week’s negligent coverage of the Gaza hospital explosion under the rug, moving on from the low moment covering the Israel-Hamas war without admitting any mistakes,” Oliver Darcy wrote Monday night for CNN.

“While The New York Times and BBC — both of which faced enormous scrutiny for their coverage of the blast — have in recent days issued mea culpas, the rest of the press has remained mum, declining to explain to their audiences how they initially got an important story of such great magnitude so wrong.

“On Monday, I contacted the major news organizations that amplified Hamas’ claims, which immediately assigned blame to Israel for the blast that it said had left hundreds dead. Those organizations included CNN, the Associated Press, Reuters, Al Jazeera, and The Wall Street Journal. . . . if there was even a morsel of contrition from news organizations that breathed considerable life into Hamas’ very different version of events, it hasn’t been shown. . . . “

[“CNN has now added a correction to their online article about the hospital explosion, admitting they failed to attribute initial claims about it to Hamas,” Ken Meyer reported Wednesday for Mediaite.]

New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman said on the paper’s Matter of Opinion podcast Friday, “It immediately went around the world, headlines everywhere — Israel attacks hospital — including in a newspaper that we know very well. And by the time the truth had a chance to put its shoes on, this inflamed the entire Arab world.”

Charlotte Klein reported Tuesday for Vanity Fair, “A series of Slack messages obtained by Vanity Fair shows there was immediate concern inside The New York Times over the paper’s presentation of the Gaza hospital bombing story. But senior editors appear to have dismissed suggestions from an international editor, along with a junior reporter stationed in Israel who has been contributing to the paper’s coverage of the war, that the paper hedge in its framing of events. . . .”

Then there was the story about the beheading of children. “There have been verified reports that Hamas, which attacked Israel on Oct. 7, committed violence against children,” Sara Swann reported Tuesday for the Poynter Institute’s PolitiFact. ‘But one particularly disturbing claim — that the Palestinian militant group beheaded dozens of babies — gained prominence in the days after the massacre, amplified at the U.S. and Israeli governments’ highest levels. This report remains unverified.

“Since the attack, the claim has been widely repeated by politicians including President Joe Biden, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., and Rep. Elise Stefanik, R-N.Y.; news outlets, such as CNN, Fox News and the New York Post; Israeli officials, including the prime minister’s office; actor Noah Schnapp and other social media users with large followings. . . .”

On Monday, Steven Erlanger of The New York Times wrote that the war “has been a crushing blow to a host of assumptions that have defined the Israeli-Palestinian conflict for years.” He listed them: “Hamas could be contained and the conflict managed.” “Israel is invincible and maintains military superiority.” “The Arab world is moving on, despite the Palestinians.” and “America can ignore the Middle East.”

Language, too, has become part of the battle. “Were they ‘terrorists’? Anchors on CNN and Fox News said they were,” Paul Farhi wrote in The Washington Post.

“Or were they ‘militants’ (The Washington Post, BBC)?

“Or ‘gunmen’ (NPR)? Or ‘fighters’ (Al Jazeera English)?

“Were they the foot soldiers of a ‘terrorist organization’ (Business Insider) or of ‘the governing power in the Gaza Strip’ (the New York Times)?

“Words matter, particularly to news organizations that try to preserve accuracy and impartiality at moments of great passion and uncertainty. A badly chosen word in a media account — particularly during a bloody conflict involving Israelis and Palestinians — can elicit swift denunciations from readers, listeners and viewers.”

WBZ in Boston reports on Dave Chappelle’s remarks on the Israel-Hamas war.

One of the most dishonest examples of “spin” was Fox News’ account of comedian Dave Chappelle’s remarks in Boston.

A Fox News headline claimed, “Audience walks out on Dave Chappelle after he criticizes Israel during show in Boston: Report.”

But the actual “report,” in the last paragraph of a Wall Street Journal story, said, “Chappelle show attendees said the crowd appeared mostly supportive of his comments, and many shouted ‘Free Palestine.’ A small faction of attendees got up and left the show while a handful shouted, ‘What about Hamas?’ attendees said.”

Journalists lost jobs or quit them over news organizations’ word or story choices.

All 65 daily newspapers owned by investment firm Alden Global Capital — including the Chicago Tribune, Daily News in New York and the Baltimore Sun — ran an editorial Oct. 18 urging the news media to describe Hamas as a terrorist organization and its Oct. 7 attack as a terrorism.

Some outlets gave voice to second thoughts. The Philadelphia Inquirer apologized to readers on Oct. 18 for running a cartoon by Monte Wolverton of the Cagle Cartoons syndicate. “In hindsight, the cartoon depicting an oversized Israeli military boot stepping on Hamas terrorists hiding among civilians in response to the Oct. 7 attack should not have been published,” an editorial said. “Regardless of the interpretation, the illustration reinforces pernicious antisemitic tropes about Israeli aggression.”

Anti-Defamation League CEO Jonathan Greenblatt said he held private conversations with CNN and MSNBC about their coverage of Israel after scolding the networks on the air and urging news organizations around the world to do a better job covering the tragic Hamas terror attacks of Oct. 7,” Fox News reported. He is shown here on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe.”

Others want to play hardball. Shloma Karhi, Israel’s communications minister, is seeking a possible closure of Al Jazeera’s local bureau, and accused the Qatari news station of pro-Hamas incitement and of exposing Israeli soldiers to potential attack from Gaza. “Last week, those regulations started to take shape,” the Times of Israel reported.

Perhaps the biggest shifts in coverage have come in the insertion of missing context, the increasing willingness to distinguish between Hamas and the Palestinian people and in heeding pleas to cover the suffering of Palestinians with as much compassion as that given to Israelis.

In the Los Angeles Times, LZ Granderson wrote Oct. 18, “To a certain kind of educated younger audience, the modern state of Israel looks a lot like yet another byproduct of European imperialism. They aren’t all wrong about that. There was the British Mandate for Palestine in 1923, which set the stage for dueling Palestinian and Jewish nationalist movements. Before settling on land in the Middle East, one Zionist leader proposed territory in what’s now Kenya as a possible safe haven for Jews — as if the land in question were unoccupied and England’s to offer. . . .”

Many news outlets reported on pro-Israeli or pro-Palestinian rallies on college campuses, but Howard University’s The Hilltop wrote about the absence of them on its campus, surprising given the college’s history.

Michael Fischbach, a historian with a focus on Israel and Palestine, said the relationship between Howard student activists and Palestinians spans decades, beginning with Black revolutionaries in the late 60s and early 70s who embraced the Palestinian struggle for liberation,” Jasper Smith wrote.

“Since 1948, when the state of Israel was created, tens of thousands of Palestinian civilians have been killed, Fischbach said, leading Black civil rights organizers and student activists to advocate for the life and rights of Palestinians.

Kwame Ture, known as Stokely Carmichael when he was making headlines in the 1960s, was a supporter of Palestinians. In this undated clip, he explains his views on the difference between Judaism and Zionism. (Credit: YouTube)

“ ‘People like the Black Panther Party, Stokely Carmichael, SNCC embraced the Palestinian cause, not just out of abstract revolutionary solidarity, but because they saw themselves as a kindred people of color fighting a global system of oppression that was backed by the United States,’ Fischbach, author of ‘Black Power in Palestine,’ told The Hilltop . . . .

“According to researchers at Florida Atlantic University, private HBCUs like Howard and Hampton University became a refuge for Jewish professors and scholars seeking opportunities free of discrimination in the 1930s,” the story continued, referring to historically Black colleges and universities.

“ ‘While most of these pairings between Jewish refugees and Black colleges began as marriages of convenience, very often they blossomed into matches that lasted a lifetime,’ Linda Medvin, director of the Center for Holocaust and Human Rights Education at Florida Atlantic University, wrote. . . . “

News organizations don’t report in a vacuum. If the initial mainstream reporting was reflective of the “I Stand with Israel” pronouncements of President Biden and other American leaders, in recent days more of it reflected the “I Stand with Israel — but” of former president Barack Obama.

In dealing with what is an extraordinarily complex situation where so many people are in pain and passions are understandably running high, all of us need to do our best to put our best values, rather than our worst fears, on display,” Obama wrote on Medium on Monday.

“That means actively opposing anti-semitism in all its forms, everywhere. It means rejecting efforts to minimize the terrible tragedy that the Israeli people have just endured, as well as the morally-bankrupt suggestion that any cause can somehow justify the deliberate slaughter of innocent people.

“It means rejecting anti-Muslim, anti-Arab or anti-Palestinian sentiment. It means refusing to lump all Palestinians with Hamas or other terrorist groups. It means guarding against dehumanizing language towards the people of Gaza, or downplaying Palestinian suffering — whether in Gaza or the West Bank — as irrelevant or illegitimate.

“It means recognizing that Israel has every right to exist; that the Jewish people have claim to a secure homeland where they have ancient historical roots; and that there have been instances in which previous Israeli governments made meaningful efforts to resolve the dispute and provide a path for a two-state solution — efforts that were ultimately rebuffed by the other side. . . .”

Should Inquirer Have Apologized for Cartoon?

The Philadelphia Inquirer last week took the rare step of apologizing for publishing a cartoon. Monte Wolverton of the Cagle Cartoons syndicate depicted an oversized Israeli military boot stepping on Hamas terrorists hiding among civilians. The boot was at first labeled with the Star of David, which was changed to the word “Israel” because some might equate the Star of David with all Jews, not just Israelis or the Israeli government.

It is clear this cartoon was highly insensitive, particularly at the current moment when antisemitism is on the rise. We hear the outcry and apologize for the pain it caused,” the Inquirer declared Oct. 18.

“We are reviewing the totality of our processes — particularly those for the selection of illustrations and cartoons — to prevent failures like this one from occurring again. We welcome your feedback, and we look forward to continuing the conversation.”

When the editorial was posted on a listserve for opinion writers, the most complete reaction came from Jay Jochnowitz (pictured), retired editorial page editor of the Albany (N.Y.) Times Union, now editor-at-large:

“The whole discussion is fraught,” Jochnowitz wrote. “There’s the atrocity of Hamas’ acts of terrorism, there’s the dilemma of how [to] respond to an entrenched group that hides among the civilian population and, frankly, appears to want to provoke the response it has gotten in order to bring harm to its civilians and inflame the Middle East.

“The cartoon captured that. And it was poorly timed. And while there might never be a time when it wouldn’t be seen by some as anti-Semitic, or at least perpetuating anti-Semitic tropes, the timing of this was lousy. I would not have used it. The paper is quite right to have an internal discussion about this. And probably part of that discussion needs to be the challenge and sensitivity of using the Star of David to illustrate Israel – which after all features it on its flag – without appearing to be attacking Jews, for whom the symbol is religious. Oy.

“The same dilemma applies to written pieces. But I’ve read some very thoughtful criticisms that don’t in any way justify Hamas but do put this in the context of the long-running issue of the failures of policies and discussions, particularly under [Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu, and even blame his disdain for a two-state solution and his desire to marginalize Palestinian leaders as part of the reason Israel remains in danger. It’s not that we shouldn’t publish such things; it’s how they’re written, and the context in which they’re published.

“I think it underscores how, while we can’t be experts on everything, opinion editors need to be well-versed on hot topics, whether it’s the technicalities of gun terminology (magazines, not clips) or the nuances of Middle East politics. Errors in judgment can really hurt our credibility and harm the conversation we are trying to foster.”

This letters to the editor column reflected the two most common sentiments from readers.

Jenny Mitchell is the first woman to come forward claiming her cancer was caused by the use of L’Oréal hair straightening or relaxing products, WFLD-TV, known as FOX32, reported a year ago in Chicago. The case is still pending in that city. (Credit: YouTube)

FDA Considers Banning Some Hair Straighteners

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is considering a ban on certain hair-straightening chemicals that have been used by Black women for years and that research shows may increase the risk of uterine cancer,” Kenya Hunter reported Thursday for the Associated Press.

“But Black hair stylists say such products — specifically the ones being looked at by the FDA, which contain formaldehyde and formaldehyde-releasing chemicals — have fallen out of favor, especially among younger generations.

“ ‘Relaxers have taken an extreme decline … as we became more knowledgeable about the effects of the relaxer on your hair and what it can do to your hair,’ said Kayleigh Butler, a hair stylist in Atlanta who remembers getting relaxers when she was 5 years old. She added, ‘I think people just wanted to move away from that and live a healthier lifestyle.’

“The FDA is in the first steps of the process: The notice of a possible rule was recently added to its regulatory agenda. The agency aims to publish an advance notice of proposed rulemaking by April 2024, but items can stay on the agenda for years. . . .”

‘I Had Employees Call Me the N-word to My Face’

Jerry McCormick (pictured), founding president of the San Diego Association of Black Journalists, has one answer to “Why Is the News About Black People So Negative?,” the headline of a story Sunday transmitted nationally via Word in Black, a consortium of Black newspapers.

Now a government public information officer, an adjunct professor of journalism at San Diego State University and a “longtime journalist, he says poor pay and a lack of diversity are two main issues that plague American newsrooms today,” Anissa Durham wrote for Word in Black.

“While reflecting on his nearly 35-year career, he says it’s always been difficult to be one of the only Black journalists in a newsroom. One of the most toxic experiences he remembers was in Portland, Oregon, between 2014-2015, when he was promoted to a management position, but it quickly took its toll.

“ ‘I had employees call me the N-word to my face,’ McCormick says. ‘I still have PTSD. Whenever I think about that time, I physically get ill because I was so poorly mistreated.’ ”

McCormick was executive producer at KOIN-TV in Portland from 2014 to 2015.

He declined to elaborate on the experience Wednesday, messaging, “It’s a part of my past I would like to not dwell on.”

Durham continued, “Unethical treatment of Black reporters not only poisons the aspirations of journalists, it directly impacts the kind of coverage Black communities receive. . . .”

[Gary Weitman, executive vice president and chief communications officer of Nexstar Media Group, messaged Journal-isms Thursday, saying of McCormick, “I can tell you that what he says he experienced is extremely unfortunate and wrong. While I can’t speak to the specifics of what happened back then during his employment at the station, this type of conduct would be wrong no matter where it took place.

[“KOIN was owned by a different company those many years ago, and the management team was totally different from the team in place today. I can also assure you that Nexstar, which now owns KOIN, takes the issue of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion seriously; diversity and respect are core values at the company.”]

Nonprofit Newsrooms More Diverse Than Others

Nonprofit news organizations appear “to be more diverse than other parts of the industry,” the Institute for Nonprofit News reported Tuesday.

The “INN Index 2023: Report on Diversity, Equity and Inclusion in the Nonprofit News Sector” “identified a disconnect between goals and practice, with more than half of newsrooms setting goals for improving diversity but far fewer creating a plan of action for achieving DEI goals or allocating resources for evaluating progress.”

In addition, “the degree of diversity is stronger at the staff level than at the leadership level in nonprofit news organizations. More than two-thirds of nonprofit outlets surveyed are white-led, which we define as organizations in which more than 50% of all executives and managers are white. This is roughly four times the number of outlets led by Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC).”

The institute, a membership organization of more than 425 nonprofit newsrooms, recommended that funders pay greater attention to BIPOC-led newsrooms, saying, “For the effects of this much-needed investment to take root and offer more stability to these newsrooms, funders will need to match and continue their commitments to BIPOC-led and BIPOC-serving grantees beyond one-time grants, and support sustained multi-year, general operating funding.”

The Monday newscast of ICT, formerly Indian Country Today, visited the red carpet and Osage consultants who worked on the film “Killers of the Flower Moon.”

Natives Weigh In on ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’

Spellbinding, heartbreaking and exhaustingly researched, director Martin Scorsese’s long-gestating epic look into the mass murders of the Osage over oil rights in the 1920s opens . . . in wide release across the United States,” Sandra Hale Schulman wrote for ICT, formerly Indian Country Today, a day before the Friday opening.

“Even getting the story to the big screen was not without drama – requiring a rewrite of the entire script, a change in the lead role from hero to villain for one of the movie’s biggest stars, recreation of a 100-year-old town, the hiring of dozens of Osage extras, a pandemic shut down, and finally a premiere at the Cannes Film Festival in France to rave reviews and a nine-minute standing ovation,” Schulman wrote.

On Sunday, Rebecca Rubin reported for Variety that the film “impressed in its box office debut, collecting $23 million from 3,628 North American theaters over the weekend. The film also brought in $21 million from 63 international territories for a global total of $44 million.”

Rubin added, “Despite its second-place finish, it’s easily the best start for Scorsese since 2010’s ‘Shutter Island’ ($41 million debut) and the third-best of his career following 2006’s ‘The Departed’ ($26.9 million debut). And ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’ managed to make a splash even though its stars, Leonardo DiCaprio and Robert De Niro, haven’t been able to promote the film amid the ongoing actors strike. . . .”

At least three mainstream media outlets, the BBC, The Wrap and The Washington Post, ran critiques or commentary of the film by Indigenous writers.

The film is adapted from the book by the same name authored by New Yorker writer David Grann.

Harry Porterfield Dies, ’85 Demotion Led to Boycott

Beloved Chicago television news broadcaster Harry Porterfield, who for years shared the unique tales of hundreds of area residents through his signature ‘Someone You Should Know’ series, died Monday,” Mitch Dudek reported for the Chicago Sun-Times. “He was 95.”

Dudek also wrote, “His job change in 1985 was sparked by a demotion to make room for news anchor Bill Kurtis at WBBM. Mr. Porterfield’s departure from WBBM, which some saw as forced, prompted the Rev. Jesse L. Jackson to orchestrate a 10-month viewer boycott against the station that resulted in an agreement to increase minority hiring.

“Mr. Porterfield, who had been the station’s only African American weekday news anchor, was proud the end result was more job opportunities for minority journalists.”

Dudek wrote that Porterfield’s “first profile for the series aired on WBBM-TV Channel 2 in 1977 and featured a paralyzed woman who worked as a hospital receptionist and operated a switchboard using a device she clutched in her teeth, family said.

“Mr. Porterfield died Monday morning from natural causes while surrounded by his family in Munster, Indiana.

“The idea to showcase people in the community doing extraordinary things quickly resonated with viewers. . . .

“Mr. Porterfield stayed in touch with many of the people he profiled, said Dorothy Tucker, an investigative reporter with WBBM-Channel 2 and past president of the National Association of Black Journalists.

“ ‘Harry was for real. He was genuine. When I came to the station in 1984 I was a young reporter, and Harry always let me know he was there for support and to answer questions and for guidance and to listen and just be there,’ she said.

“ ‘We all looked up to Harry as the statesman in the newsroom. He never got rattled or angry. He was always calm and the voice of reason,’ Tucker said.

“Mr. Porterfield started his Chicago broadcast career at WBBM-Channel 2 in 1964 and spent 21 years at the station before moving to WLS-TV Channel 7 in 1985, where he worked for 24 years. He returned to WBBM in 2009 and retired in 2015 at age 87. . . .”

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Richard Prince’s Journal-isms originates from Washington. It began in print before most of us knew what the internet was, and it would like to be referred to as a “column.” Any views expressed in the column are those of the person or organization quoted and not those of any other entity. Send tips, comments and concerns to Richard Prince at journal-isms+owner@groups.io

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