Maynard Institute archives

Journalisms-Wed, Aug 29

Disconnect Between GOP and Latino Journalists

“We Built It” Speaker Received $2 Million in SBA Loans

Syracuse, Harrisburg Papers to Cut Back Print Editions

Journalists Shift in the Way They Cover Colombia

Ethiopia Frees Editor Arrested After Premier’s Death

“Gentleman’s Agreement” Ends, NAHJ Forms L.A. Chapter

Short Takes

Disconnect Between GOP and Latino Journalists

The Republicans wanted to talk about the economy. The press wanted to talk about immigration,” Bryan Llenas wrote from Tampa Tuesday for Fox News Latino.

“In the first Republican National Convention daily briefing for Latino press, the RNC and campaign of presumptive presidential nominee Mitt Romney stressed the need to revitalize the economy.

“But members of the Spanish-language media pressed the issue of immigration, and tried to challenge Texas Rep. Francisco “Quico” Canseco and New Hampshire Gov. John Sununu — the two surrogates who appeared on behalf of the RNC — on the GOP’s push for strict enforcement.

“Canseco and Sununu spoke of the ‘American Dream,’ a ‘bankrupt economy,’ and the confidence that Romney can offer ‘laws,’ enduring solutions to the immigration system that would improve programs involving guest workers and visas.

“Their focus, to be sure, was unmistakably the economy.

“But members of the press wanted to focus on undocumented youth, what they characterized as the harsh immigration rhetoric by GOP candidates, and a Republican party platform that recently incorporated calls for tough enforcement of immigration laws.

“For critics, the bilingual press conference on a rainy Monday epitomized the ‘disconnect’ and divide between Romney and Latinos.”

 

“We Built It” Speaker Received $2 Million in SBA Loans

“The Republican National Convention opened by smacking President Obama with the theme ‘We Built it,'” Nicholas D. Kristof reported Tuesday in the New York Times.

“To pound that message, Republicans turned to a Delaware businesswoman, Sher Valenzuela, who is also a candidate for lieutenant governor. Valenzuela and her husband built an upholstery business that now employs dozens of workers.

“Valenzuela presumably was picked to speak so that she could thunder at Obama for disdaining capitalism.

“Oops. It turns out that Valenzuela relied not only on her entrepreneurial skills but also on — yes, government help. Media Matters for America, a liberal watchdog group, documented $2 million in loans from the Small Business Administration for Valenzuela’s company, plus $15 million in government contracts (mostly noncompetitive ones). . . “

Syracuse, Harrisburg Papers to Cut Back Print Editions

Newhouse Newspapers, which earlier this spring announced that it would stop printing a daily paper at The New Orleans Times-Picayune and its Alabama newspapers, said it would end the daily distribution of two more of its newspapers, The Post-Standard in Syracuse, and The Patriot-News in Harrisburg, Pa.,” Christine Haughney reported Tuesday for the New York Times.

“The papers will merge their content with local news Web sites and deliver the printed newspaper only three days a week.

“Starting in January, The Post-Standard will publish on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sundays. The Syracuse Media Group, the company formed to oversee The Post-Standard, is still considering whether to publish a newspaper that it would not deliver to homes and businesses on the other four days.”

“The news prompted more than 100 comments by readers on the Web site Syracuse.com who expressed their concerns about life without a daily newspaper.”

Journalists Shift in the Way They Cover Colombia

Here are two headlines from two decades apart: A headline 20 years ago in the Milwaukee Journal — Who’s in charge: Colombia or Escobar? A July 2012 headline in USA Today — Colombia gets its first W hotel,” Justin D. Martin reported Wednesday for Columbia Journalism Review.

“For many years Colombia was a byword for drugs and dysfunction. Today it signifies a country that has fought through terrorism and years of warfare, a country once known for merciless militias that is, while not [guerrilla]-free, a frequent topic of brighter discussions. ‘Global media have shifted significantly in the way they cover Colombia,’ Michael LaRosa and German Mejia wrote in a 2012 history of the country. ‘Stories focusing on tourism, restaurants, Colombian tennis stars, and positive reviews of literary works…suggest the US media’s perception of the Andean nation is evolving away from the myopic, one-dimensional view that marked earlier portrayals of the country.’

“And as for domestic journalists and their perceptions: It’s easier for reporters to focus on a country’s positives when they aren’t being murdered. For years, Colombia was a country in which a journalist would get dead every couple of months. Cesar Gaviria, the country’s president from 1990-1994, has seen acquaintances, as well as his sister, killed for political reasons. Before he won the Colombian presidency in 1990, three other candidates were murdered, one of which was his colleague. Yet he gives much credit to his nation’s journalists for reporting through the risks. In Colombia, Gaviria told me in his Bogota office in August, ‘Journalists take all the risks. Many have been killed, but this country has not been intimidated. . . .’ ”

Ethiopia Frees Editor Arrested After Premier’s Death

The International Press Institute (IPI) on Tuesday welcomed the news that charges against Ethiopian editor Temesgen Desalegn have been withdrawn, and called for Ethiopia to reform its stance toward the media and free all journalists who are currently in jail for their criticism of official policies, and cease its harassment of Feteh newspaper,” the press freedom organization reported on Tuesday.

“Prosecutors sent a letter to the 16th Criminal Bench of the Federal High Court saying that charges against Desalegn had been dropped to allow time to further investigate, the Ethiopian Reporter said. IPI was told that the journalist had been released from Kality Prison.

Temesgen Desalegn, editor of the critical weekly newspaper Feteh, was arrested last week just after the death of Prime Minister Meles Zenawi was officially announced, according to reports. He was charged with inciting the public to overthrow the constitutional order, defaming the state, and spreading false rumours to incite the public against the government, a legal expert in Ethiopia told IPI.

“. . . With the passing of strong-arm leader Meles Zenawi, who ruled Ethiopia for over twenty years, Ethiopia has an opportunity to review policies that crushed human rights and democratic principles as much as they promoted economic development.”

“Gentleman’s Agreement” Ends, NAHJ Forms L.A. Chapter

Pilar Marrero of La Opinion, Art Marroquin of the Daily Breeze, sports broadcaster and new KPCC host A Martinez, Edwin Tamara of Associated Press, Victoria Infante of Huffington Post, Agustin Duran of latinocalifornia.com, Kris Fortin of eastsidestreetsblog.org were among those who met last Thursday to form the first Los Angeles chapter of the National Association of Hispanic Journalists, Adolfo Guzman-Lopez reported Tuesday for Los Angeles public television station KCET.

Ruben Vives, whose stories helped the Los Angeles Times win this year’s Pulitzer Prize for public service, was the featured guest.

“The SAG-AFTRA union co-sponsored the mixer. Union representative Ray Bradford said . . . there was a gentleman’s agreement between the NAHJ and the older, California-based Latino journalist group. ‘Out of respect for the leadership, the long time leadership of the California Chicano News Media Association, which preceded the formation of NAHJ. And so while NAHJ prospered around the country building chapters across the country we as NAHJ needed to support CCNMA’s continued growth in Southern California,’ he said.”

“During the 2000s CCNMA’s activity in L.A. tapered off.

” ‘I think it would be wrong for us to depend on one organization, bring on two, bring on three, as long as we all have a unified mission of equality and respect, and quality journalism bring it on,” Bradford said.’ “

In reporting on the development, Kevin Roderick of LAObserved included this curious paragraph:

Now the two groups can contend to see which survives, if either. Or is the idea of ethnicity-based professional organizations fading, especially among younger and more digitally oriented journalists?”

Short Takes

  • Cynthia Gordy, a 2010 NAACP “40 Under 40” honoree who was named “Emerging Journalist of the Year” in 2009 by the National Association of Black Journalists,” has left journalism to become Senior Communications Associate at “next-generation civil rights organization Cynthia Gordy called Advancement Project, mostly working on multiple issues around voter protection,” Gordy told Journal-isms. Gordy joined theRoot.com as Washington reporter in 2011 and before that had been Washington correspondent for Essence Magazine and Essence.com. Writer and blogger Keli Goff has joined the Root as a political correspondent.
  • Allan Villafaña has been hired as morning anchor at WNJU-47, which is bringing back its early morning newscast in November, Veronica Villafane reported Wednesday for her Media Moves site. “The Telemundo O&O in New York had pulled the plug on its morning newscast in 2008.”
  • A Spanish magazine’s cover image of first lady Michelle Obama partially nude in slave attire, comes from a continent where “racism is blunt and unabashed,” Helena Andrews wrote Wednesday for theRoot.com “Since the Hottentot Venuses, African women whose “exotic” features were displayed like animals in zoos in 19th-century Europe, black women’s bodies have been fetishized. . . . the Portrait d’une négresse seemed to reach beyond that narrative, but it lay firmly in the era of battling ideologies over a black woman’s naked body, like public turf and not private property.”
  • Her new television network is struggling, but Oprah Winfrey’s bank account is doing just fine, according to financial website Forbes.com, which on Monday named the talk show queen as the highest paid celebrity for the fourth straight year,” Reuters reported on Monday.
  • “Let’s just say Jason Whitlock isn’t a member of the Joe Posnanski fan club,” Ed Sherman wrote Monday for the Sherman Report. “There have been plenty of harsh reviews about Posnanski’s book, Paterno. But few were more vicious than the one written by Whitlock. . . . Yet this review goes deeper than the book. Whitlock and Posnanski were long-time columnists at the same time for the Kansas City Star.”

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