Site icon journal-isms.com

Journal-isms 8/19

AAJA Plans Fundraisers to Forestall $237,000 Deficit

The Asian American Journalists Association is preparing to hold fundraising events around the country to eliminate a projected $237,000 deficit, Sharon Chan, the association’s national president, told Journal-isms on Wednesday.

"We have already identified several options: holding a wave of fundraising events across the country to culminate with AAJA’s 30th anniversary, kicking off an annual fund and membership drive, continued fundraising from individuals in our Power of One campaign, suspending the membership dues share split with the AAJA chapters and a potential chapter assessment," she said.

"We’re also very fortunate in that AAJA leaders before us built up a healthy national endowment to prepare for hard rains."

The organization becomes the second journalist-of-color association to face a projected deficit this year. Last month, the National Association of Hispanic Journalists foresaw a $300,000 budget shortfall and asked every member to raise at least $200.

The National Association of Black Journalists said this month it was in the black, projecting revenue of about $2.2 million and expenses of about $2 million for the fiscal year, as Adele Hampton reported for the NABJ student convention project.

Glenn Sugihara, accountant for the AAJA national office, attributed its projected shortage to factors that included a dropoff in membership dues, losses associated with a lower-than-expected convention turnout, sponsors who pulled or reduced their support and a buyout of the convention hotel contract, Audrey Kuo reported for the student convention newspaper, AAJA Voices.

AAJA convention registration reached 680, Maya Blackmun, interim executive director, told Journal-isms, although she said the figure was not final.

All of the journalism organizations saw lower attendance at their conventions this summer. Earlier in the year, the American Society of News Editors was among those that canceled their gatherings altogether. The journalist of color conventions all focused on retraining members in light of increased demand for multimedia skills.

"The convention was proof that AAJA is more important than ever to our members, and that this organization will and must endure," Chan said.

Judge Green-Lights Bias Suit Against Wall St. Journal

A federal judge ruled Monday that Phillips, the Journal’s first African American assistant managing editor, can proceed with claims that she was terminated by the newspaper based on her race, as the Associated Press reported. She sued the company in 2004. Batts tossed out Phillips’ claims of discrimination based on disability,

"I am thrilled at the prospect of having a jury decide this thing," Phillips told Journal-isms. She now work for Standard & Poor’s in Charlottesville, Va., as a database editor.

Dow Jones said, ""Dow Jones does not discriminate period. We are gratified the court dismissed the disability claim, and we expect to prevail on the other claim at trial."

However, the case might also be settled out of court.

Phillips worked at the Journal before Dow Jones was acquired by Rupert Murdoch‘s News Corp.

The New York Daily News reported when the suit was filed that Phillips, then 47, was suing the paper for $5 million, "alleging that her life became a nightmare after she became an editor.

"The suit says Phillips, of Afton, Va., became the editor in charge of recruitment in 1995, and almost immediately her position was marginalized. It says her job was marginalized further after Phillips became ill and took a six-month leave of absence.

"Phillips lost her job as assistant managing editor in November 2002. She sued the company in 2004."

"’She was a star performer at the Wall Street Journal then when she gets to upper management it is a whole different kettle of fish,’ said Phillips attorney Janet Neschis. ‘She never got a chance to perform.’"

 

WTKR-TV in Norfolk, Va., posted this video clip on its Web site.

Va. Station Says It’s Filing Charges After "Attack"

Barbara Ciara, managing editor and anchor at WTKR-TV in Norfolk, Va., and two photographers were attacked Wednesday while confronting the owners of a company accused of scamming the unemployed, the station reported.

"NewsChannel 3 has filed charges for what we see as assault and the destruction of property," the station said.

Ciara is the immediate past president of the National Association of Black Journalists.

"How do you describe a day where you are assaulted, your camera equipment broken, and it’s the lead story at 5, 5:30 and 6pm?" Ciara wrote on her Facebook page.

"They pushed me around and banged me on the head with a car door — but other than that Mrs. Lincoln how was the play?"

"The station has posted a video clip on its Web site showing Ciara and two cameramen, identified as Wayne Pellenberg and Brian Caldwell, confronting two unidentified men, at least one of whom is affiliated with Virginia Employment Services, a company that is currently being sued by the state attorney general’s office on fraud charges," the Daily Press of Newport News, Va., reported.

"The video shows Ciara pushing a microphone at the men, and one of them pushing the microphone out of the way. The two men continue to walk as Ciara and the two cameramen follow them and attempt to block their paths. The men climb into a waiting vehicle and Ciara blocks them from closing the door to the vehicle as she continues to ask questions. One of the men then stands between her and the vehicle so that the door can be closed, and the vehicle drives away."

3 Media Groups Protest Football Coverage Rules

Three national media organizations are protesting credentialing requirements  for journalists issued by the Southeastern Conference, whose college football season starts in earnest on Sept. 5, saying the rules infringe on free speech and could be illegal.

Marty Kaiser, president of the American Society of News Editors; David Bailey of the First Amendment Committee, Associated Press Managing Editors; and Garry D. Howard, president of the Associated Press Sports Editors, said the new credentials go beyond "adjustments"; "they are wholesale changes that restrain our members from covering your teams in ways that serve fans without harming league interests.

"ASNE has heard from far too many of its members that they must give up too many rights in order to cover major sporting events."

,p> For example, they said in a letter, "Our members, as editors of newspapers or online publications, appear to be prohibited from using any video or audio highlights from SEC games on their Web sites while televisions stations ‚Äî with certain limitations ‚Äî can do so. They are also time-limited on their use of pre and post-game audio and video on their websites. This is a major restriction that only serves to limit the fans’ access to all viewpoints and information."

They also objected to a requirement that "Bearer hereby grants the SEC and its member institutions a license at no additional charge to use the photographs for news coverage purposes and for display on their official Web sites and in their official publications."

"There is no reason that our members should be restricted in this way, but be forced to allow the SEC and its members to ‘free ride’ off our work," the groups said.

They continued, "It is our understanding that other college football conferences will be releasing their credentials in the near future. We expect they will be similar in nature."

 

3 Black Men "Taking Over the Weather Channel"

"When Scott Williams and Alex Wallace tossed to Al Roker for yesterday’s 5:40 a.m. tease to the Weather Channel’s ‘Wake Up With Al,’ Roker had an explosion of black pride," Mike James wrote on his News Blues site.

"’When was the last time you had three black guys on the Weather Channel at once?’ he asked¬†with a wide grin." A few minutes later, Roker said, "Takin’ over the Weather Channel," shoving his right fist into the air. "Yeaah."

Caption: Robin Washington joins hands with Anika Noni Rose, who portrays Tiana, Disney’s first African-American princess, at a prerelease screening Aug. 6 at the National Association of Black Journalists convention. (Credit: Ernie Suggs /Atlanta Journal-Constitution)

"Princess" Animated NABJ Convention, Readies Formal Debut

"Sure, she‚Äôs a few inches taller than me, but most of that is big hair. And yeah, I‚Äôm a commoner and she‚Äôs royalty, even if she did attain her rank by locking lips with an amphibian. But in the majesty that we Americans so pine for from our royalist roots, we make a handsome couple, she and I, as can say a few hundred other guys upon getting the opportunity to pose with …

"Well, a character actress who doesn’t have to wear a giant Goofy or Minnie head."

Robin Washington, news director at the Duluth (Minn.) News Tribune, was describing¬†Disney’s upcoming "The Princess and the Frog," previewed this month at the National Association of Black Journalists convention in Tampa, Fla. His piece, published Sunday,is among the film’s first reviews, which opens in its completed form on Dec. 11.

The buzz has already begun. It features the first African American princess in a Disney film. .

"There’s a toy line from consumer products debuting this fall along with other consumer products such as Carol’s Daughter hair care products for the film," publicist Jackie Bazan-Ross told Journal-isms.

"The Princess Tiana walkabout character makes her debut in the Disney Parks this Fall.

"It was not the only event. We had a fantastic event at NAACP’s conference for the Act-So Youth in partnership with the NAACP’s Hollywood Bureau. Each of these included a performance by Anika Noni Rose," who portrays the princess. "The NAACP we conducted a q&A with her and the kids.

"On a smaller scale, we also showed the exclusive footage at select film festivals. For these an animator (african American) from Disney and a producer conducted Q&A’s with the audience and the animator hosted an animation workshop for kids.

"We have a jazz program for kids being made available to educators and groups this Fall and lots more.

"At NABJ, we donated 2 limited edition Serigraphs from the film signed by Anika and numbered. . . . to raise funds for the NABJ scholarship fund. We also raffled one off at NAACP at no cost and the Roxbury Film Fest auctioned one."

Of the film itself, set in Jazz Age New Orleans, Washington wrote, "Though the red light, back-alley Big Easy allowed a peculiar form of race-mixing, the historical reality is that Jim Crow lived just fine in the rest of the city. That’s where Plessy challenged Ferguson for the right to ride a conveyance regardless of color, only to lose before the U.S. Supreme Court in a decision that would codify Southern segregation for the next 58 years.

"All right, it’s Disney, for Pete’s sake. Why am I going here? Well, why did they go there instead of setting the tale in the White House beers-for-everyone America of today? Or if indeed delving into historical material, doing so honestly?

"No matter. All of this is a far cry from animation‚Äôs heyday during less-enlightened times, when Disney released the nostalgic-for-slavery ‚ÄúSong of the South‚Äù (1946) and Warner Brothers responded to Snow White with ‘Coal Black and De Seben Dwarves’ (1943).

"Let’s welcome Princess Tiana into her post-racial court."

Short Takes

Exit mobile version