ASNE Diversity Survey Adds “Multiracial” Category
Al Jazeera English Wins First DuPont-Columbia Award
T.J. Holmes Sees Job as Pushing BET on News
Dutch Editor Resigns Use of N-Word to Describe Rihanna
N. Korean Leader Was “Great Teacher of Journalists”
Ethiopian Court Convicts Swedish Journalists of Terrorism
ASNE Diversity Survey Adds “Multiracial” Category
The American Society of News Editors is adding a multiracial category to its annual newsroom diversity survey, the society said on Wednesday. The move follows adoption of such a category by the U.S. Census Bureau in 2000 after lobbying by mixed-race groups but opposition from civil rights organizations such as the NAACP and La Raza, who feared it would make it more difficult to enforce the Voting Rights Act and similar laws.
The diversity survey began in 1978 as part of the ASNE’s effort “to try to achieve the minority percentage in newsrooms equal to the minority proportion of the total population before the year 2000,” as ASNE explains it. The goal was later pushed back to 2025.
While adding a multiracial category should not affect the overall percentage of people of color counted, it would decrease the percentage of people in individual racial groups.
“That’s one of the problems with making any changes in the census: It causes a break in categorization that makes it more difficult to track year-to-year changes,” Richard Karpel, ASNE executive director, told Journal-isms. “But the world changes, and the census needs to change as well to maintain relevance.”
The Census Bureau reported in March that “Nine million people reported more than one race in the 2010 Census and made up about 3 percent of the total population. Ninety-two percent of people who reported multiple races provided exactly two races in 2010; white and black was the largest multiple-race combination. An additional 8 percent of the two or more races population reported three races and less than 1 percent reported four or more races.”
Susan Saulny noted in the New York Times that “Among American children, the multiracial population has increased almost 50 percent, to 4.2 million, since 2000, making it the fastest growing youth group in the country.”
Initial reactions from journalists ranged from wait-and-see to enthusiastic approval.
“Journalists have a responsibility to report the complexity of the world around us,” said Lise Funderberg, a biracial Philadelphia writer and author who examined racial identify in her 1994 book, “Black, White, Other: Biracial Americans Talk About Race and Identity.” “Racial identify is nothing if not full of nuance.”
Gregory H. Lee Jr., president of the National Association of Black Journalists, said he would have to see “if there is a real impact” before commenting.
Julio Moran, executive director of CCNMA: Latino Journalists of California, said by email, “I think it is a good idea because it better reflects the changing demographics of our country.
“It still relies on self-identification, like Latinos, who can also identify as Black, white, Asian or Native American, since Latino is not a race.
“My experience is that multiracial people generally identify with one side or the other, so it will be interesting to see how many people prefer to identify as multiracial as opposed to a single race.”
Karpel said he had not determined how multiracial people who are white and another race would be counted. But Funderburg said those who wanted to be counted as white should simply ask to be placed in the “white” category. For many mixed-race people, she said what is important is “that their personal identity be acknowledged.”
ASNE previously announced that its next survey will be conducted by the Center for Advanced Social Research, an affiliate of the Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute at the Missouri School of Journalism.
On Wednesday, it added that “it will be conducted entirely online. So no more pencil, paper, stamps or faxes.”
Moreover, “we eliminated the distinction between print and online employees, and online-only employees, to reflect practices that have been adopted in the vast majority of our members’ newsrooms.”
Al Jazeera English won a duPont-Columbia University Award Wednesday for “Fault Lines: Haiti: Six Months On.” (Video)
Al Jazeera English Wins First DuPont-Columbia Award
“Three regular recipients of broadcast journalism awards, CBS, NBC and HBO, and two relatively new recipients, Al Jazeera English and The New York Times, were among those named winners of the annual Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Awards on Wednesday,” Brian Stelter reported for the New York Times.
“It is the first-ever duPont win for Al Jazeera English, an international news network that is trying to make inroads in the United States. The award recognized an Al Jazeera report about the sluggish pace of recovery and reconstruction in Haiti six months after a devastating earthquake.
“The duPonts are awards for excellence in broadcast and digital reporting from Columbia University’s graduate school of journalism, which also presents the Pulitzer Prizes for print and digital reporting. Separately, Columbia recognized Al Jazeera English earlier this year with its Columbia Journalism Award.
“The New York Times was awarded a duPont for two digital stories: ‘A Year at War,’ a multimedia series about a battalion of men and women in Afghanistan, and ‘Surviving the Earthquake: Children,’ a documentary about two children injured in the Haiti earthquake.”
T.J. Holmes Sees Job as Pushing BET on News
T.J. Holmes, the weekend CNN anchor who is leaving for Black Entertainment Television, says he sees his new role as pushing BET, whose middle initial, co-founder Bob Johnson often said, is “Entertainment,”in delivering more news.
From an interview with Thomas Umstead of Multichannel News:
“TU: What prompted you to make the move from CNN to BET?
“TJH: In all the conversations I was having with the folks at BET, one thing they said really struck me: ‘Where can black people go when they get home from work and turn on the TV to see people who look like them, talk like them and discuss things that are important to them?’ I opened my mouth to respond but nothing came out because there’s a void for the type of show that we get to an extent on morning radio with the Steve Harveys and Tom Joyners of the world where they’re discussing things and issues relevant to the black community. There’s no place to get that on TV anywhere at anytime. So for me the opportunity to speak to my community at this point in my career in this country’s history was too good to pass up.
“TU: BET has done several news specials recently, but do you foresee the network really pushing into the news genre now that you’re there?
“TJH: You said do I see BET pushing [into news]; I’m going to be pushing them. I think that’s a big part of why I’m on board. During the discussions we had before hand I wanted to get a good understanding of what BET was trying to do and what they hoped to do and what my role would be in it. Part of my role is to make those suggestions and say this is something we should be doing. BET already has a track record over the past few years for doing those types of specials — most recently the one with Michelle Obama [Michelle Obama On A Mission: Impact Africa,] the one just done with Herman Cain [The Curious Case Of Citizen Cain] and an interview with President Obama [The President Answers Black America] — and those types of events are absolutely relevant and the audience has responded. Now it’s time to take it to the next level of possibly giving that information to the audience more often on a day in and day out basis. There’s always something in the headlines that relevant to Black America that may not be getting the focus from other news outlets, so that’s something we hope to provide.”
Dutch Editor Resigns Use of N-Word to Describe Rihanna
“After issuing an apology for her magazine’s use of the N-word in describing Rihanna, Jackie editor-in-chief Eva Hoeke has resigned her post,” Kimberly Nordyke reported Wednesday for the Hollywood Reporter. .
“Hoeke, who had been with the Dutch fashion magazine for eight years, oversaw the most recent issue, which included a brief item about Rihanna’s style in which the singer was referred to as the “ultimate n—abitch.
“. . . After learning of the use of the racial slur, Rihanna took to Twitter to blast Hoeke and the publication.
“. . . On Tuesday, Jackie issued a press release saying that Hoeke had been “taunted and threatened in various ways” after she issued her apology.
” ‘Throughout the various social media, there has been an emotional response to this choice of words, as published in Jackie,” the press release read, as translated by Parlour magazine. “As a first reaction to this, editor-in-chief Eva Hoeke said via Twitter that the choice of words was meant as a joke and offered an apology to anyone who felt offended. This reaction cause further consternation, as Hoeke herself also referred to the term elsewhere in the magazine.”
“After two further apologies failed to placate readers, she consulted with publisher Yves Gijrath of GMG, and the duo came to the ‘joint conclusion’ the she should resign effective immediately.”
N. Korean Leader Was “Great Teacher of Journalists”
“A North Korean reporter figured he could write about a pepper bush plantation from the comfort of his office. But leader Kim Jong Il, the story goes, insisted on driving with him to a rugged ravine and crossing a flooded river to personally count the bushes,” Christopher Torchia wrote for the Associated Press.
The article was widely circulated Wednesday in light of the death of the “dear leader” on Sunday, but Editor & Publisher dated the piece 2002.
‘”Comrade journalist, you must see things on the spot before you write your articles. Otherwise you may talk big,”‘ Kim told the ashamed reporter from the state news agency.
“At the moment the journalist blushed. Across his mind flashed the bygones when he used to write his articles in his office only after his conversation with the officials.”
“Wise advice for any hack, even if the syntax and punctuation are imperfect. It’s in ‘The Great Teacher of Journalists,’ a 170-page, red hardback published in 1983 in English and Spanish by the state-run Foreign Languages Publishing House in Pyongyang.
“The book is a tiny component in the personality cult that touts Kim as a military tactician, a scientific innovator, a moral guide, and a father figure to 22-million North Koreans who live in virtual isolation. . . .”
Meanwhile, the Asian American Journalists Association posted the names and Twitter addresses of eight members who are reporting on Kim Jong Il and other news from the Korean peninsula.
They include Chi-Chi Zhang, a CNN producer and AAJA board rep; Jean H. Lee, Korea bureau chief for the Associated Press; Steve Herman, Voice of America bureau chief/correspondent, based in Seoul; Hannah Bae in Seoul, South Korea, vice president for AAJA Asia; the founding editor of Nanoomi.net, identified only as Cynthia; Elaine Ayo, a copy editor with YonhapNews; Tomoko A. Hosaka, in Japan for the Associated Press, and his new wife, Martyn Williams, a 2012 Knight Fellow at Stanford who said she runs NorthKoreaTech.org.
- Reporters Without Borders: A leading press freedom predator dies
- Eugene Robinson, Washington Post: Which candidate should answer that 3 a.m. phone call?
Ethiopian Court Convicts Swedish Journalists of Terrorism
“A court in Ethiopia convicted two Swedish journalists Wednesday of supporting terrorism after the pair illegally entered the country with an ethnic Somali rebel group,” the Associated Press reported.
“The pair, who now face up to 15 years in prison at their sentencing next week, have said they were gathering news at the time of their arrest.
“However, Judge Shemsu Sirgaga said that was ‘very unlikely,’ accusing the Ogaden National Liberation Front of organizing the Swedes’ journey starting in London via Kenya and Somalia into Ethiopia. Outlawed groups in many countries frequently facilitate the travels of reporters in order to have their version of events told.
“Ethiopian troops captured Johan Persson and Martin Schibbye six months ago during a clash with rebels in Ethiopia’s restive Somali region in the country’s east, a no-go area for reporters. Ethiopia considers the rebel group a terrorist organization, and it is very difficult for journalists to gain access to the region. Rights groups say that is so abuses there are not exposed.
“The chairman of the Swedish Union of Journalists, Jonas Nordling, deplored the conviction, saying it is clearly aimed at deterring reporters from investigating alleged human rights abuses in the Ogaden region.
“ ‘This is a political verdict,’ Nordling said. ‘There is no evidence to support that this is a terror crime.’ ”
- Committee to Protect Journalists: Ethiopia must free convicted Swedish journalists
- Reporters Without Borders: In disgraceful verdict, court convicts Swedish journalists of supporting terrorism
Columnist’s Brand New Bag
Barry Saunders, local columnist for the News & Observer in Raleigh, N.C., made good on a promise to dress as Santa Claus Wednesday in front of the N&O building if readers donated $25,000 to charity. Above, Natalia Kennedy stops to take a peak in Santa’s bag of gifts. “Your donations far surpass our $25,000 goal,” Burgetta Eplin Wheeler wrote Wednesday in the newspaper. “The $57,777 raised was a gift to humanity — a restorative elixir to what these days can sometimes seem a soul-sucking wasteland of strife and pain. . . . .At least 35 emails specifically mentioned the challenge prize: forcing columnist Barry Saunders to wear a Santa suit . . . ” (Credit: Chuck Liddy/News & Observer)
Short Takes
- “The number of jobs eliminated in the newspaper industry rose by nearly 30% in 2011 from the prior year, according to the blog that has been tracking the human toll on the industry for the last five years,” Alan D. Mutter wrote Monday in the blog Reflections of a Newsosaur. “Meanwhile, a separate analysis confirms what most of us already suspected: The proportion of cutbacks was higher in newsrooms than it was for the industry as a whole — twice as high . . .”
- “This is the time of year when you will read a lot of roundups of media news, but one thing that usually doesn’t make those lists is the high price of getting some of the toughest stories,” David Carr wrote Wednesday for the New York Times. “The Committee to Protect Journalists on Tuesday issued its annual report on journalists killed in the line of duty and the numbers were grim. At least 43 journalists were killed around the world in direct relation to their work in 2011, with the seven deaths in Pakistan marking the heaviest losses in a single nation.”
- “In May last year, police forces busted into the gang-controlled Tivoli Gardens neighborhood of Kingston, Jamaica,” according to the Public Radio International show “The World.” “The raid was highly unusual. For one thing, a US surveillance plane monitored the operation from the air. The target was Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke, a drug lord wanted for extradition to the US. . . . An investigation by the New Yorker magazine suggests there were multiple extra-judicial killings. And the DEA filmed it all. Anchor Marco Werman speaks with Mattathias Schwartz, who wrote about the case in the December 12 issue of the New Yorker magazine.”
- According to a report from Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington and Openthegovernment.org [PDF] on the Obama administration’s record on Freedom of Information requests, “. . . agencies are processing more requests — there was an 8 percent increase between 2008 and 2010 — although they have not kept up with the increase in the total number of requests, which has surged by 11 percent in the same time period,” the American Society of News Editors said Wednesday. “In addition, there has been a significant uptick in the number of FOIA denials, with 33 percent more exemptions invoked in 2010 than 2008.”
- “Scottie Pippen has sued several media outlets for ‘malicious libel’ in claiming the former Chicago Bulls player has gone bankrupt,” Crain’s Chicago Business reported last week. “The lawsuit, which names 10 defendants — including CBS Corp. and CNBC owners Comcast Corp. and General Electric Co. — was filed Tuesday in federal court in Chicago. The suit charges the defendants with negligence and defamation in running reports this year that claimed Mr. Pippen was bankrupt.”
- In New York, “One of the last remnants of the pre-Bill Carey regime, veteran newsman Peter Thorne is leaving Channel 11,” Jerry Barmash reported Tuesday for FishbowlNY. “The station released a terse two-sentence statement saying in part that Thorne is leaving effective December 31, to ‘pursue emerging opportunities in broadcast journalism, new media, and charitable works.’ Thorne spent ten years with WPIX as an anchor and reporter. . . . Carey, who joined the Tribune-owned station in November 2009 as news director, shifted weekend anchors Thorne and Jackie Hyland to weeknight reporting duties. Hyland left Channel 11 in March 2011.”
- “A news partnership announced in a Thursday morning ceremony has the potential to transform journalism across Middle Georgia and beyond, officials said,” Mike Stucka reported Friday for the Macon (Ga.) Telegraph. “The Center for Collaborative Journalism at Mercer University will bring together the university’s students and faculty with professionals from The Telegraph and Georgia Public Broadcasting. The effort is backed by a $3.74 million grant to Mercer, along with another $854,000 grant to Georgia Public Broadcasting, all from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.”
- In California, “Hanford planning commissioner Jim Morgenthal uttered an insensitive remark at a public meeting, which is why he is now an ex-planning commissioner. Morgenthal said he was just joking around, like he always does, and didn’t know anyone was offended until the mayor summoned him to a face-to-face meeting,” Lew Griswold wrote Saturday for the Fresno Bee. “. . . Covering the meeting was Hanford Sentinel reporter Eiji Yamashita, a native of Japan. ‘Merry Christmas,’ Morgenthal said, according to a Sentinel story filed last week by another reporter. ‘Tomorrow is Pearl Harbor Day. I’ve already informed Eiji he has to be on the lookout. I just wanted to give you some insights (chuckling) — I’ve been an insurance agent for 40 years and (chuckling again) — we don’t have any other minorities here, so he’s the one.”
- The New York Times published a four-way debate on the subject “Black Men for Black Women?” in Wednesday’s Opinion section. “Ralph Richard Banks, the author of “Is Marriage for White People? How the African American Marriage Decline Affects Everyone,” suggested this forum.”
- In California, advocates for “Noticias Univision Costa Central,” the Central Coast’s only Spanish-speaking television news program, scheduled to be taken off the air by Dec. 30, spoke out Monday, urging the Entravision Communications Corp. to take action, Lara Cooper reported for Noozhawk. “The show has been losing money for three years despite high ratings,” Cooper wrote, Ten days ago, David Cruz, CEO of Ventura-based BriteFlash Media, “said he reached out to the company with two options. He offered to take on the financial liability for the newscast immediately or have a second offer to bring in an injection of capital, perhaps through an advertiser, that would bridge the newscast into 2012 until it could become self-sustaining,” Cooper continued.
- Columnist Rochelle Riley of the Detroit Free Press reported from Dakar, Senegal, where “the National Conference of Black Mayors joined the National Association of Senegalese Mayors and the United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) to cosponsor this summit. The mayors group, which trains mayors of color around the country, plans to use the annual global summit as a way to raise their stature and connect mayors around the world. The sponsoring organizations want city leaders of color from the U.S. and 21 other countries represented here to connect with one another, to realize that some of their problems — increasing crime, declining revenues, AIDS — are the same.”
- Viviana Hurtado, e blogger and publisher behind the Wise Latina Club blog, has joined Fox News Latino as a weekly political columnist Media Moves reported. Hurtado is also a freelance reporter/producer.
- “The Committee to Protect Journalists has been monitoring with growing concern the difficulties that many foreign journalists have been experiencing in obtaining a visa to your country,” Joel Simon, the committee’s executive director, wrote to Abdurrahim al-Keib, new prime minister of Libya. “. . . Although we understand the challenges your government faces after the fall of the former regime, we believe the presence of international journalists in Libya is an asset essential to your nation’s successful transition.”
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