Site icon journal-isms.com

Cameraman Swears Off N-Word

Black Photog Gives Up Term in Light of Suspension

A Chicago news cameraman who faces five days’ suspension without pay for using the “N” word as he and another black photographer were vying for a shot says the word will never pass through his lips again.

 

 

But Ken Bedford of WLS-TV, the ABC owned-and-operated station in the nation’s No. 3 market, told Journal-isms on Friday that he wants it understood that his use of the word was not racial. He says it was an expression of “male bravado” in an extremely competitive situation and that black people use the word in “dual ways.”

However, Bedford said he understands the station’s position that “it is politically incorrect,” said he was “100 percent wrong” and that he has apologized to the other photographer, Alan Maniscalco of rival WBBM-TV, the CBS owned-and-operated station.

According to Bedford, the incident took place about Sept. 3 when a throng of photographers were vying for position in Daley Plaza, a public square in downtown Chicago. “In our business, it’s very competitive to get a shot,” Bedford said. “You can have 15 guys . . . all trying to jostle for position. He got too close. His camera hit me on my ear, on the side of the head. I asked him not to hit me again and he did. He cursed me and I called him a dash-dash N-word.

“He turned the camera around and his microphone picked up my last comment.” Maniscalco took the tape to his superiors, who in turn called WLS, Bedford said.

“We don’t care about your pushing and shoving, what we care about is the N-word,” Bedford said his station told him.

In 2004, the same station had slapped white reporter Sarah Schulte with a two-month suspension without pay after she was overheard on an open microphone complaining about the difficulty of firing incompetent employees who happen to be minorities.

Maniscalco did not respond to a request by Journal-isms for comment. WLS General Manager Emily Barr said, “This is a personnel matter” and would have no comment. Elizabeth Abrams, a spokeswoman for WBBM, said the same thing.

However, Robert Feder of the Chicago Sun-Times reported the five-day suspension, which Bedford said would be carried out at the end of this month, in a three-paragraph item in his Oct. 5 column. The same day, commentator Roland S. Martin discussed the incident on his WVON-AM talk show. He told Journal-isms he did “a 40-minute segment and asked the audience whether he should have been suspended, and should there be one standard for all employees, or was this different because it involved two African Americans. My position was one standard applies.” For the most part, the audience agreed, Martin said.

One reason Bedford said he is giving up the word is that he needs a good reputation in order to continue his annual breast-cancer awareness campaign, conducted in memory of his late wife, Anaia Bedford, a former model who became a video producer. He said the effort, now in its fourth year, raised $80,000 last month. Through a dance and a concert, this year featuring the Whispers singing group, Bedford said he uses the entertainment to persuade women to undergo free health checkups. He also has a float in the city’s famous Bud Billiken Day parade.

He said his is the only such campaign conducted in the nation by an African American.

Bedford, who started in the news business in 1968, says he can sense a change in tolerance for use of the N-word among blacks.

“I’m being punished by my station because they interpret it as a racial epithet,” he said. “It should not be used because in society it is now not accepted, whether you mean it in an endearing way or in any other way. I have to take that position and put this thing behind me.”

MESSAGE BOARDS: Feel free to post a comment on this subject and view those from others.

Detroit Buyouts to Cut 22 Newsroom Jobs

“The Detroit Media Partnership, which runs the business operations of the Detroit Free Press and Detroit News, announced today it will offer buyout packages as part of an effort to cut 110 positions, or about 5% of the overall staff,” Joe Guy Collier reported Friday in the Detroit Free Press.

“The buyouts are being offered to employees who are 50 or older with at least 10 years of credited service as of Oct. 12.

“Employees who receive the buyouts will be provided two weeks’ severance for every year of service for up to one year of pay. Health benefits will remain intact during the severance period.

“The need for staff cuts was driven by two major factors, said Susie Ellwood, executive vice president and general manager for the Detroit Media Partnership.

“The overall newspaper industry has suffered circulation and advertising declines, Ellwood said. The Michigan economy, hurt by large losses in manufacturing, also has lagged [behind] the rest of the United States.

“The targeted reductions for newsroom employees is 22 — 16 for the Free Press and six at the News, she said.

“The cuts should not affect news coverage, Ellwood said. ‘Something we’re not going to change is our commitment to providing the right amount of coverage,’ she said.”

MESSAGE BOARDS: Feel free to post a comment on this subject and view those from others.

Uproar Over L.A. Melee Could Benefit Reporters

In a scathing self-critique, the Los Angeles Police Department this week attributed a May 1 MacArthur Park melee involving officers, immigration protesters and journalists to a series of fateful decisions by police commanders that escalated hostilities and resulted in a widespread breakdown in discipline and behavior by officers, Richard Winton and Duke Helfand reported Wednesday in the Los Angeles Times.

 

 

 

Five to nine reporters were beaten, Rick Terrell, executive director of the Radio-Television News Association of Southern California, told Journal-isms.

As a result of the uproar, he said the incident may result in a freedom of information agreement with the LAPD and a memorandum of understanding “that will say what is expected of the police and of the media . . . at these large public events.”

Efforts on a freedom of information agreement had been stalled, but working groups were created after a July 18 meeting with Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and Police Chief William J. Bratton, Terrell said.

Tuesday’s findings, “contained in a long-awaited report by top police officials, come as Police Chief William J. Bratton announced that at least 26 officers participating in the incident are under internal investigation and could face discipline for using excessive force,” the Times story said.

“The report is the latest effort by Bratton and Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa to quell widespread outcry over the incident, in which TV news footage showed officers swinging batons and firing less-than-lethal rounds at journalists as well as immigration rights protesters gathered at the park for an afternoon rally.

“The melee left 246 journalists and protesters as well as 18 officers with injuries, and more than 250 legal claims have been filed against the city. Los Angeles County prosecutors and the FBI are continuing to investigate the case.”

MESSAGE BOARDS: Feel free to post a comment on this subject and view those from others.

Cosby, Poussaint on “Meet the Press” for Full Hour

NBC’s “Meet the Press” will devote its full hour on Sunday to entertainer and activist Bill Cosby and Harvard Medical School professor Alvin Poussaint as they discuss their new book, “Come On, People: On the Path from Victims to Victors,” the network announced.

“They will join us in studio to discuss the alarming statistics of ‘black on black’ violence and high school drop out rates, as well as the growing need for parental responsibility. Cosby and Poussaint have spent the last three years listening and talking about these issues in what they call ‘community call-outs’ across the nation.”

MESSAGE BOARDS: Feel free to post a comment on this subject and view those from others.

Bryan Monroe Explains 159-Pound Weight Loss

 

 

 

Bryan Monroe, editorial director of Ebony and Jet magazines and president of the National Association of Black Journalists from 2005 until August, explains in the November issue of Ebony how he went from 449 pounds to 282 pounds through gastric bypass surgery.

“As a dangerously overweight Black man hitting 40, I knew that my life expectancy was significantly shorter than if I was of normal weight and disease-free. One of my doctors mused, ‘Bryan, how many obese old people do you see?'” he wrote. “Not many. If I lived to see 60, he told me, it would be a surprise.”

Monroe, who was attending a conference of the American Society of Newspaper Editors in April 2004, found himself lying in an intensive-care suite at the Virginia Hospital Center in Arlington, being treated for diabetic ketoacidosis— “what I learned was triggered by extremely elevated blood-glucose levels, a sure sign of the onset of Type 2 diabetes.”

Two years after that, on July 17, 2006, he underwent Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery. “I was only in the hospital for a day and a half, and two weeks later, I was on an airplane ready to start my new job in Chicago.

“I wanted something that would stick,” Monroe, 42, wrote. “And, after about a year and a half and losing nearly 150 pounds so far, I think it is indeed sticking. By the way, I have not had to take any medicine for diabetes or other past ailments since I walked out the door of the hospital a year ago. They tell me that I am technically no longer a diabetic.

“I didn’t really get the impact the surgery had on my everyday life until a few months later. I was on a United Airlines flight from Chicago to Washington, D.C. Normally, I carried one of those airplane seat-belt extenders discreetly in my carry-on bag, since I had long since exceeded the limits of a standard, ‘normal’ seat belt.

“On this flight, I took my customary window seat and went to reach for my extender. Just for kicks, I decided to try to fasten the seat belt and, to my surprise, not only did it click, but I had some slack left over. As I exited that flight two hours later, it brought me joy to toss that extender in the first trash can I could find. I would never need it again!”

MESSAGE BOARDS: Feel free to post a comment on this subject and view those from others.

Short Takes

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Exit mobile version