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Justice Holds News Media in Contempt

Thomas Writes, “Even for a Journalist, That Was Low”

It’s hardly news that Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas is no friend of the news media.

But the devil is in the details, and what might be revelatory to readers of his new memoir, released Monday, is that there are journalists whom Thomas admires.

Also, that at St. Benedict the Moor School in Savannah, Ga., “I joined the school paper during my sophomore year, and later I attended a journalism seminar at Savannah State College. I was so impressed by the school that for a time I imagined I might go there and become a newspaperman.”

 

 

Alas, it was not to happen. And in promoting “My Grandfather’s Son,” Thomas is making rare media appearances, in which, among other things, he bashes the media.

“One of the vows I made when I got here was that I would never do this job as poorly as journalists do theirs,” the nation’s second black Supreme Court justice says in an interview scheduled for Monday on ABC-TV’s “Nightline.”

That’s consistent with what Thomas writes in a memoir that goes from his childhood through his 1991 confirmation hearings, which were rocked by charges that Thomas had sexually harassed Anita Hill when both worked at the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, which Thomas chaired.

Here’s who’s up and who’s down in the media in Thomas’ mind, according to the book:

In 2002, after Thomas raised this story in an interview with Kevin Merida and Michael A. Fletcher of the Washington Post, Holsendolph gave a different recollection to Journal-isms: “I was struck by the irony, that a bright but poor brother should rise to the heights with public and private help and then be so adamant in his opposition to affirmative action policies across the board,” Holsendolph said. “And so I expressed that point. Also I quote expert critics to respond to his arguments against an activist EEOC. I am not sure which of these two aspects of the story irritated most, but we can guess.” He added on Monday, “Of course there was no rewrite. And for the record, the EEOC was my beat even before Thomas showed up, so I wrote from my experience covering the commission activities and did not have to hunt critics of Thomas’s policies.”

During the confirmation hearings, Thomas writes, “the only bright moment came when Senator [Orrin] Hatch mentioned an op-ed column by Juan Williams that had appeared in that morning’s Washington Post. As the senator read it into the record, my heart spilled over with gratitude. I knew that Juan had put his career on the line in order to say what he thought.” Thomas’ book then quotes from the column.

Left unsaid is that the column did alter Williams’ career. Post Ombudsman Richard Harwood wrote then:

“On Oct. 1, a woman in the newsroom lodged a formal complaint against Mr. Williams for using ‘offensive’ language. It was the first newsroom case of its kind. In other departments of the paper, such cases ordinarily are disposed of in a day or two. But the Juan Williams affair came to involve multiple charges and, thus, took on a convoluted life of its own. He did not learn of the first accusations against him until Oct. 8 and then in only the most general way. His piece in defense of Clarence Thomas appeared on the 10th and brought a series of invitations for television appearances. New charges against Mr. Williams followed, along with a high level of outrage by women in the newsroom. They identified themselves, one assumes, with Clarence Thomas’s chief accuser, Anita Hill, and found Mr. Williams’s defense of Judge Thomas both self-serving and wrong.”

Williams was disciplined and apologized in an open letter to the Post newsroom for what he called “wrong” and “inappropriate” verbal conduct toward women staffers.

In an anecdote that became widely discussed, Williams reported in the Washington Post on Dec. 16, 1980, that Thomas “has a sister on welfare back in his home state of Georgia, but he feels that he must be opposed to welfare because of the dependency it can breed in a person. ‘She [his sister] gets mad when the mailman is late with her welfare check,’ he says. ‘That is how dependent she is. What’s worse is that now her kids feel entitled to the check too. They have no motivation for doing better or getting out of that situation.'”

Thomas wrote in the book, “Our personal lives were of interest only to the extent that they could be used to smear me. I’d succeeded in escaping the disadvantages of my childhood in Pinpoint, but some of my relatives hadn’t been so fortunate, thus proving that I’d turned my back on them in my ruthless climb to the top of the heap.

“Even for a journalist, that was low.”

Thomas conceded that, “on occasion, I even read news stories that contained encouraging words from half-forgotten people who had passed through my life long ago.”

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“Nightline,” Tavis Smiley Plan Shows on Thomas

“Tonight on ‘Nightline,’ Jan Crawford Greenburg reports on her candid and poignant interviews with Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas,” ABC News announced on Monday. “The wide-ranging on-camera interviews lasted nearly seven hours over the course of four days at the Court, at Thomas’ home and at a University of Nebraska football game. Justice Thomas talks frankly about race and growing up in the segregated South, Anita Hill, the media, his confirmation hearings, his personal struggles, and what it is like to be Associate Justice Clarence Thomas.”

Meanwhile, “Tonight on PBS’ ‘Tavis Smiley,’ Tavis convenes a panel to discuss the new book by Justice Clarence Thomas and the ’60 Minutes’ profile that coincided with the release of the book. Guests are Marc Morial, President and CEO of The National Urban League, Princeton professor Cornel West, and Columbia University professor Farah Jasmine Griffin,” PBS said.

The panelists were critical of the “60 Minutes” piece on Thomas on Sunday night. “It was as if Justice Thomas’ public relations people edited the piece,” Morial said. West said that instead of representing opponents of Thomas’ ideas with critical thinkers, the program showed demonstrators. It was a “one-sided history,” Griffin said.

The same point was made Tuesday on the e-mail list of the National Association of Black Journalists. “I’ve now watched the 60 Minutes interview and the Nightline interview. It was like watching the Home Shopping Network,” one said. “You mean to tell me that there was not a single critical commentator on Clarence Thomas’ record? These things could have been on Larry King and no one would have blinked. I’m rarely disgusted, but this was pure journalistic drivel.”

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Gannett Reaches 20.4% Managers of Color

“The 2007 All-American Review, which measures the number of people of color and the outreach efforts made by Gannett Information Centers,” formerly newspapers, “shows that the total percentage of minority journalists — 19.5 percent — was flat compared to 2006, which was a record,” Ann Clark, Gannett Co. news executive, reported to Gannett properties.

“The review shows strong progress in two critical areas — the percentage of minority managers and the percentage of minority promotions. For the first time in the 29-year history of the review, the number of people of color in management positions surpassed 20 percent. It hit an all-time high of 20.4 percent, compared to 19.1 percent in 2006.

“The number of people of color who were promoted also showed progress, with 31.2 percent. That compared to 27.8 percent in 2006.

“The number of people of color hired to fill Information Center positions dropped slightly from 28.5 percent in 2006 to 28 percent in 2007. The total number of interns dropped, but a higher percentage of interns (49.3 percent) were people of color, compared to 46.7 percent in 2006.

“For comparison, the 2007 Newsroom Census conducted by the American Society of Newspaper Editors shows that 13.62 percent of journalists at daily U.S. newspapers were people of color.

“ASNE’s annual census shows that 10.9 percent of all managers in U.S. newsrooms and 27 percent of interns were people of color.

“People of color — Hispanic Americans, African Americans, Asian Americans and Native Americans — comprise about 33 percent of the U.S. population.”

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Tight Handcuffs Part of “Reporting While Black”

 

“Last month, while talking to a group of young black men standing on a sidewalk in Salisbury, N.C., about harsh antigang law enforcement tactics some states are using, I had discovered the main challenge to such measures: the police have great difficulty determining who is, and who is not, a gangster,” Solomon Moore, who joined the New York Times from the Los Angeles Times in June, wrote on Sunday.

“My reporting, however, was going well. I had gone to Salisbury to find someone who had firsthand experience with North Carolina’s tough antigang stance, and I had found that someone: me.

“. . . A tall white police officer got out of his car and ordered me toward him. Two other police officers, a white woman and a black man, stood outside of their cars nearby. I complied. Without so much as a question, the officer shoved my face down on the sheet metal and cuffed me so tightly that my fingertips tingled.

“‘They’re on too tight!’ I protested.

“‘They’re not meant for comfort,’ he replied.

“While it is true that I, like many of today’s gang members, shave my head bald, in my case it’s less about urban style and more about letting nature take its course. Apart from my complexion, the only thing I had in common with the young men watching me smooch the hood of the black-and-white was that they too had been in that position – some of them, they would tell me later, with just as little provocation.”

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Reader Rep on O’Reilly: Let’s Go to the Tape

“I don’t blame the Plain Dealer editor who selected the wire story that ran Thursday, but I wish the AP reporter who wrote the story had been a bit more skeptical of the information he got from a Web site that has a clear anti-conservative agenda,” Ted Diadiun, reader representative at the Cleveland Plain Dealer, told readers on Sunday.

He was discussing the statement by Fox News Channel host Bill O’Reilly, first reported by the group Media Matters for America, that “I couldn’t get over the fact that there was no difference between Sylvia’s restaurant and any other restaurant in New York City. It was exactly the same, even though it’s run by blacks [and has a] primarily black patronship. There wasn’t one person in Sylvia’s who was screaming, ‘M-Fer, I want more iced tea!'”

Diadiun said, “the reporter, AP television writer David Bauder, said he listened to about 10 minutes of the audio clip provided by Media Matters. I listened to the entire 35-minute segment of the broadcast, and I wish he had done the same. Reasonable people can interpret the context differently, but I don’t know how anyone listening to the whole thing could believe that O’Reilly was surprised by the scene at Sylvia’s.

“But you don’t have to take my word for it, or even that of Juan Williams, who was on the show. You can listen to the entire segment and judge for yourself here.”

Williams, meanwhile, wrote an essay for Time magazine on Friday, “What Bill O’Reilly Really Told Me,” challenging an effort to take what O’Reilly “said totally out of context in an attempt to brand him a racist by a liberal group that disagrees with much of his politics. . . .The out-of-context attacks on O’Reilly picked up speed and ended up on CNN, where one commentator branded me a ‘Happy Negro’ for allowing O’Reilly to get by with making racist comments without objection.

“This is so far from the truth of the conversation on the radio that it is beyond a matter of words being taken out of context. This is a pathetic cowardly, personal attack against me intended to damage my credibility and invalidate any support I offer to O’Reilly against the charges that he is a racist,” Williams said.

In another development, “In a phone interview on 3WT radio Friday morning, Washington Post media reporter Paul Farhi claimed that Bill O’Reilly ‘secretly taped me’ and played his phone interview with the Fox News commentator on Thursday’s ‘The O’Reilly Factor’ without Farhi’s consent,” according to Dave Hughes‘ Web site on Washington area broadcasting, dcrtv. “Farhi was heard telling O’Reilly: ‘Please don’t repeat this… You’re getting so dragged into something you don’t deserve,’ regarding O’Reilly’s latest racial controversy, which Farhi reported about in Wednesday’s Post. Farhi revealed to 3WT morning man David Burd that, in retrospect, he shouldn’t have divulged his personal opinions on the O’Reilly controversy in his phone interview with O’Reilly. On Thursday afternoon, via 3WT’s airwaves, O’Reilly said he was mounting a charge against ‘corrupt media coverage’ and singled out Farhi.”

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James Campbell Leaving Houston Chronicle for P.R.

James T. Campbell, reader representative at the Houston Chronicle since 2002 and a staffer at the newspaper since 1985, is leaving to become senior vice president in the Houston office of the Fleishman Hilliard public relations agency, he told Journal-isms. He wrote a final column on Monday.

 

“It was a great opportunity that I couldn’t pass up,” Campbell told Journal-isms. “As you know, after you’ve been in this business for a while you get to a point where you wonder what you’re going to do for the rest of your life (career). I hope this is it. I confess that I’m a little scared because I’m leaving my cocoon of more than 20 years. But I’m looking forward to the challenge.”

He told readers, “I’ve spent the better and best part of my career at the Chronicle, doing various assignments: day police reporter, general assignments, City Hall, editorial writer/columnist, assistant Outlook editor and finally Readers’ Representative (the assignment I enjoyed most because I learned what readers really think about what we do as a newspaper and as journalists).” He also is a former board member of the National Association of Black Journalists.

On diversity at the paper, “We’ve lost three black staffers in last three week, Zharmer Hardimon (left without a job), Kristen Mack (left to join the Washington Post to cover politics in its Manassas, Virginia, bureau), and me. We recently hired Leslie Casimir from the Daily News to cover a diversity beat. But we still do not have a regular Metro front or editorial page columnist who is black or Hispanic in a city that is majority-minority,” Campbell told Journal-isms.

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Juan Williams Reaffirms “Integrity” of NPR Managers

 

Last week, Juan Williams said he was “stunned” by National Public Radio’s decision to forgo an interview with President Bush because the White House, not NPR, had chosen the interviewer, Howard Kurtz reported in the Washington Post. “It makes no sense to me. President Bush has never given an interview in which he focused on race. . . . I was stunned by the decision to turn their backs on him and to turn their backs on me,” Kurtz quoted Williams, senior correspondent for NPR, as saying. Williams went on to do the interview for Fox News, where he is a commentator.

On Monday, Ellen Weiss, vice president of NPR News, returning from a public broadcasting convention, wrote a note to staffers explaining NPR’s policy and saying, “Juan and I have spoken at length about this situation and he offered me the following to share:

“‘I respect NPR and as a member of the NPR news staff I know first-hand my colleagues’ commitment to world-class journalism. I respect NPR’s management. They have the right to refuse any interview opportunity. The integrity of NPR management is without question and the process for making decisions reflects their principled stand on journalistic independence. While I strongly disagree with NPR’s decision on this matter, I understand their need to make such decisions. Further, if my comments left the impression that NPR, as a news organization, disrespects this President —or any President —that was not my intent.'”

Weiss also reminded staffers, “any media requests that come to you for interviews about NPR, our activities or decisions must be forwarded to the Communications division to handle.” Williams’ speaking to the news media was a violation of the policy, she said.

On National Public Radio’s “On the Media,” Williams was criticized for asking Bush what host Bob Garfield considered “softball” questions. “If anyone in the White House Press Office fretted about exposing the President to the leftist rantings of Radio Moscow, they needn’t have been concerned,” he said.

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GOP Front-Runners? What Front-Runners?

“The Republican presidential debate at Morgan State University ended around 10:30ish Thursday night when I rose from my seat in the Carl Murphy Auditorium and announced to no one in particular, ‘Boy! That certainly was more fun than skydiving!'” Gregory Kane wrote Saturday in his Baltimore Sun column.

“I trust you will forgive me for that bit of hyperbole. But the debate among the six Republican candidates considered to have little or no chance at the presidential nomination did have moments both entertaining and informative, so much so I’m inclined to hand out some awards.

“Really,” Kane said of the four front-runners who didn’t show, “did anybody actually miss any of these guys?”

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Short Takes

 

 

 

 

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