Essence Moves Wilbekin, Seeks New M.E. for Website
Lester Holt Replacing Ann Curry on NBC’s “Dateline”
Ethnic Media Diverse in Terms for Those in U.S. Illegally
MSNBC Chief Says Sharpton Both Makes, Delivers News
Univision Debuts Documentary Unit With Look at FARC
NBC-Owned Stations Begin Newsroom Diversity Programs
Essence Moves Wilbekin, Seeks New M.E. for Website
Emil Wilbekin, a former editor of Vibe and Giant magazines and managing editor of essence.com for the last two years, “is transitioning to a new, expanded role at the company – working with ESSENCE magazine, as well as Essence’s signature live events such as the Essence Music Festival and Essence Black Women in Music,” Essence spokeswoman Dana Baxter said Monday.
“Essence is launching a search for a new Managing Editor for the website, and Emil will stay on board in a dual capacity until his replacement is named.”
Feeling pressure from other websites targeting black women, essence.com unveiled “a bold new design” in June.
According to the comScore, Inc., research firm, Essence.com went from 1,009,000 unique visitors in July 2010 to 1,097,000 in July 2011, a 9 percent increase.
But Madame Noire, which features such headlines as “My husband cheated: Reactions you shouldn’t have after uncovering infidelity,” recorded a 685 percent increase, from 92,000 unique visitors in July 2010 to 7,252,000 in July 2011.
Essence announced on June 1, 2009, that it had hired Wilbekin to be “responsible for the development of original, timely and compelling daily content and programming for the site’s multiple channels.
“As one of the first projects to emerge from the partnership between The Warner Bros. Television Group’s Telepictures Productions and Time Inc.’s Essence Communications Inc., the revamped Essence.com is the largest and fastest growing African-American magazine website,” an announcement said then.
Before his work with Giant, “Wilbekin was a consultant on behalf of Microsoft for popular digital ventures, such as the official Lebron James website and blog, as well as other MSN sites covering style and travel. In addition, Wilbekin was previously a reporter/writer for AOL Black Voices, a contributor to huffingtonpost.com and converse.com and the VP of Brand Development for Marc Ecko; responsible for promoting the Marc Ecko collection and contributing to the company’s magazine, Complex,” according to a 2009 announcement.
Lester Holt Replacing Ann Curry on NBC’s “Dateline”
“Lester Holt will replace Ann Curry as host of the newsmagazine ‘Dateline NBC’ when it begins its 20th season on Sept. 23,” David Bauder reported Monday for the Associated Press.
“The NBC News veteran will keep his job as co-anchor of the “Weekend Today” show. Curry, who is now co-anchor with Matt Lauer of the first half of the weekday ‘Today’ show, was judged too busy for both jobs.
“The announcement was made Monday.
“Holt has been a valued utility player at NBC News, doing multiple reporting and anchoring jobs at the network and sister station MSNBC, and he said people often come up to him wondering when he takes time off.
” ‘Sometimes, I’ll be flipping the channel at home and think, “Wow, there’s a lot of me on TV,” ‘ said Holt, who said his weekends are busy but he has a lot of schedule flexibility otherwise.
“He said he’ll report stories for “Dateline” as well as anchor, and his hour-long show about the economy was well-received this summer. He’s used to reporting quick pieces for NBC’s ”Nightly News’ and ‘Today,’ and the longer-form journalism will give him the chance to do something new, he said.”
Credit: Creative Commons/Chrissam42
Ethnic Media Diverse in Terms for Those in U.S. Illegally
“Before publishing a story on immigration, every editor faces a question: What term should be used to describe an immigrant who is in the United States illegally?” Elena Shore wrote Monday for New America Media,
“The AP Stylebook states that the preferred term is ‘illegal immigrant’ — but that ‘illegal’ should not be used as a noun. The National Association of Hispanic Journalists advocates the use of the term ‘undocumented immigrant’ or ‘undocumented worker.’ A campaign headed by the Applied Research Center and its news site ColorLines — called ‘Drop the “i” Word’ — considers ‘illegal’ a slur and is calling on media outlets across the country to take a pledge to stop using the term.
“But for editors of U.S. ethnic media — whose news outlets serve the nation’s ethnic and immigrant communities, in multiple languages — the choice may not be as clear. Undocumented immigrants may be described as anything from ‘living in hiding’ in Punjabi to ‘illegal overstayers’ in Korean.
“Some ethnic media sectors have taken a stand on the issue: Spanish-language media, for example, generally use the term “undocumented.” But for many, the question of what term to use remains the individual choice of each writer and editor.”
- Monica Novoa, ColorLines: Journalists Unite to Drop the I-Word
MSNBC Chief Says Sharpton Both Makes, Delivers News
Al Sharpton’s “ascension to MSNBC’s 6 p.m. anchor slot signifies yet another episode in the long-running, much-debated drama called ‘The Transformation of Al Sharpton from the street-level firebrand who made his name supporting Tawana Brawley in 1988 to a political candidate (twice for Senate, once each for president and mayor of New York) to the Twitter posting, Facebooking, radio-show-hosting modern media figure,” Alan Feuer wrote Sunday for the New York Times.
“His recent venture into television has attracted the expected condemnations — all of which have missed how unusual MSNBC’s decision really was.
Many polarizing former office holders — Sarah Palin, Eliot L. Spitzer — have been given TV platforms, but Mr. Sharpton is not a former anything. He remains an activist: he is planning to march on Washington next month to call for jobs (an event he expects to cover on his show) and has already done segments on another project, winning the release from death row of a Georgia laborer, Troy Davis, convicted — wrongfully, Mr. Sharpton says — of killing a policeman.
“As construed by MSNBC, Mr. Sharpton will be a hybrid TV personality, a journalist-participant of sorts, both a maker and a deliverer of the news. “We are breaking the mold,” said Phil Griffin, the network’s president. “Anything he does on the streets, he can talk about on air — we won’t hide anything.”
“Though this arrangement may be journalistic, said Dan Kennedy, an assistant professor of media at Northeastern University, it is probably not journalism. Its proper name, Professor Kennedy said, is talk-show hosting.”
“Infiltrados is narrated by Univision News co-anchors Maria Elena Salinas (in English) and Jorge Ramos (in Spanish), Credit: Univision
Univision Debuts Documentary Unit With Look at FARC
“Univision announced today the upcoming U.S. premiere of ‘Infiltrados’ (Infiltrated), a documentary produced by Documentales Univision, Univision News’ new documentary unit,” the network said Monday.
” ‘Infiltrados” takes an in-depth look at the FARC — one of the world’s deadliest terrorist organizations, which is accountable for 60 percent of the cocaine that comes into the United States. The documentary debuting on the Univision Network on Wednesday, Sept. 21 at 9:57pm ET/PT (8:57pm CT) will broadcast with English and Spanish subtitles via closed captions.”
NBC-Owned Stations Begin Newsroom Diversity Programs
NBC’s News Associates program welcomed 10 recent college graduates to its 10 stations; the group started orientation last week and each trainee is paired with a senior level mentor,” Michael Malone wrote Monday in Broadcasting & Cable.
“The Reporter Training program will tap four young journalists for NBC Owned Stations newsrooms in Dallas-Fort Worth, Washington, Miami and San Diego. The program starts in January and is designed “to attract television or digital journalists early in their careers or experienced print journalists interested in transitioning to television as on-air reporters,” said NBC in a statement.”
Short Takes
- “In last Friday’s column I pointed out that most Americans who are executed are so punished for killing white people,” Jarvis deBerry wrote Friday in the New Orleans Times-Picayune. “NOLA.com lit up that morning with accusations that the sentence betrayed my racism, that by writing it, I had proved that I hate white people. The response didn’t surprise me. It was depressingly predictable. . . . Attempting to shout down those citing the facts of racial disparities makes it that much more difficult to put them in our past.”
- Author John A. Williams is to receive a lifetime achievement award from the American Book Awards on Oct. 16. Williams, 85, has twice before been the recipient of the ABA/Before Columbus Foundation “Best Book” award: in 1998 for “Safari West” and in 1983 for “!Click Song.” Among Williams’ achievements are European correspondent, Ebony and Jet magazines, 1958-59; announcer, WOV Radio, New York, 1959; and Africa correspondent, Newsweek, New York, 1964-65.
- “Representing advertising, promotion, programming, production, distribution, marketing, research, investment and technology disciplines, over 400 industry leaders from the U.S., Latin America and Spain will convene at the ninth annual Hispanic Television Summit in New York on Tuesday,” according to Multichannel News. The event, presented by B&C and Multichannel News at the Marriott Marquis New York on Sept. 20, will focus on the burgeoning Latino community and how pay TV, broadcast, production companies, ad agencies, advertisers, technology, audience measurement and financial services are intersecting with it to drive myriad business opportunities.
- “Of all the markets, Africa is perhaps talked about least in a digital media context. Now Umuntu Media, which operates the iNamibia and iZambia portals, is taking on funding to replicate them in nine more countries,” according to Paidcontent.org. “The group says the $1 million first round, from Netherlands’ eVentures Africa Fund, ‘will also be partly used to build a mobile communications platform that caters for Africa’s needs’.
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