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NPR Fires a Top Black Manager

Native Journalists Join Court Brief Against “Redskins”

 

 

Black journalists went to National Public Radio on Thursday to hear Byron Pitts of CBS News. The next day, a top black manager was escorted out. (Credit: Drew Saunders)

Greg Peppers Supervised Network’s Newscasts

Less than 24 hours after hosting the National Association of Black Journalists at its headquarters in Washington, National Public Radio let go the black journalist in charge of its newscasts, Greg Peppers, one of two black men in newsroom management at the network.

Peppers, who has been with NPR since the 1980s, was escorted out of the building Friday, colleagues said. He was executive producer of NPR’s newscast unit.

“We don’t comment on [an] employee’s reasons for departure or any other personnel matters,” spokeswoman Anna Christopher told Journal-isms.

Peppers did not respond to messages left at his home.

An internal note from David Sweeney, managing editor of NPR News, gave no hint of the reasons for Pepper’s departure. It said:

“Greg Peppers has left his position as Executive Producer, Newscast.

“Our thanks to Greg for his many contributions to NPR over the years. We wish him the best in his future endeavors.

“Effective immediately, Dave Pignanelli will temporarily take over as manager of the unit. Dave will be closely working with Stu Seidel and me during this transition period. Over the coming weeks, Dick Meyer, Stu and I will begin the search for a new Newscast leader.”

Pepper’s NPR bio notes, “NPR’s newscasts are a twenty-four-hour, seven-day-a-week operation. NPR broadcasts thirty-eight newscasts a day that are heard on more than 700 member stations and overseas on armed forces radio.”

Peppers joined NPR from Providence, R.I., where he worked for an all-news radio station. “In the 1980s, Peppers joined the staff of NPR as a part-time news writer. He later worked as an assistant producer for NPR’s classical music program ‘Performance Today.’ Seventeen years later, he moved into his current role with NPR’s newscast unit,” the bio says.

Peppers’ departure leaves Keith W. Jenkins, supervising senior producer for multimedia, as the sole African American man in NPR newsroom management. Jenkins joined NPR last year after taking a buyout from the Washington Post, where he was multimedia director.

Last year, NPR dismissed Doug Mitchell, an NPR employee of more than 20 years who has trained scores of young journalists of color to enter broadcasting. A number of African American men on-air, ranging from former hosts Tavis Smiley and Ed Gordon and reaching back to Sunni Khalid, the former Cairo bureau chief who in 1997 filed a $2 million discrimination suit against the network, have had issues with NPR over the years. Khalid and NPR reached a settlement in 2003.

Vivian Schiller, NPR’s president and chief executive, told a National Press Club audience in Washington in March that NPR needs to do a better job reflecting “the full spectrum of . . . our potential listenership” in its most popular programs, “Morning Edition” and “All Things Considered.”

“And in those programs, both in the staffing of those programs, in the stories that we tell, in the guests that we interview, we need to make sure that we are constantly thinking about a diversity of audience. So rather than having a special program that is just for African Americans or a special program that is just for Latino listeners, we needed to be represented in the fabric of everything that we do,” she said.

. . . Before Ax Falls, NPR Hosts NABJ and Byron Pitts

National Public Radio hosted “An Evening with Byron Pitts,” a book reading and talk sponsored by the National Association of Black Journalists and its Washington chapter, on Thursday night.

A number of African American NPR employees, although not Greg Peppers, who was let go less than 24 hours later, were present.

The occasion was designed to boost membership in the black journalists’ organizations and celebrate the release of the CBS correspondent’s new memoir, “Step Out on Nothing: How Family and Faith Helped Me Conquer Life’s Challenges” (St. Martin’s Press).

In a second-floor auditorium at NPR’s Washington headquarters, Pitts told of his struggle as an East Baltimore youth who was bullied, didn’t learn to read until he was 12 and stuttered until he was 20, yet fulfilled a lifelong dream to become a journalist on CBS-TV’s “60 Minutes.”

“The book is meant to encourage all people. It’s about struggle and what’s required to get past the difficult moments,” Pitts earlier told Journal-isms.

“I talk very honestly about my faith and the importance it’s played and still plays in my life.”

Pitts told the audience that as a journalist, “I’m more interested in telling stories about the voiceless. I know what it’s like to be voiceless. I know what it’s like not to matter. I know what it means when people say, ‘not you.'”

He also said he saw no contradiction between his desire to be closer to God and his mission as a journalist to search for the truth.

Pitts, a longtime NABJ member and an NABJ honoree, pledged to take out a $3,000 lifetime membership in the association, which is striving to overcome a funding crisis.

NABJ gained three such memberships at the event, spokesman Abraham Mahshie told Journal-isms. In addition, Lee Ivory, president of the Washington Association of Black Journalists, said the local chapter signed up about 15 new members.

Telemundo Cuts Eliminate Job of N.Y. News Director

The NBC-owned Telemundo Spanish-language network has eliminated 40 full-time positions, including that of Hugo Balta, the news director of its New York operation, WNJU-TV, and has cut its morning news show on KVEA-TV in Los Angeles, Telemundo spokesman Alfredo Richard told Journal-isms on Friday.

In New York, Telemundo has “created a VP of Content position to oversee the News Dept., Creative Services and all digital platforms,” Richard said by e-mail.

“This way we have one person overseeing all content created locally regardless of who produces it at the station. This includes content for the News department, Acceso Total,” its entertainment magazine show, “the web and cell phone platforms. We are reviewing applications and will be announcing a VP of Content when the selection process is completed.”

Balta is vice president/broadcast of the National Association of Hispanic Journalists.

Overall, “These are very tough decisions as they have a direct impact [on] people’s lives,” he said. “These reductions are not related to the performance of these employees, but are necessary adjustments we have to do to navigate through these difficult times and secure the continued long-term viability of our station group.

“The reductions will impact approximately 40 full-time positions, which represent less than 3% of the Telemundo employee population. All impacted employees will receive the standard applicable company benefits.”

In Los Angeles, “We will, however, have news briefs and we will continue to have Acceso Total at 11:30 and support our network morning show ‘Levantate,'” he said.

According to Nielsen ratings figures released Sept. 29 for the first week of the fall season, Univision led among the Spanish-language networks, with 3.66 million viewers (1.9 rating, 3 share). Telemundo had 880,000 (0.5 rating, 1 share), and Azteca had 200,000 (0.1 rating, 0 share).

Joe Davidson, Wife in Chain Kidney-Donation Operation

Joe Davidson, the veteran journalist who writes the “Federal Diary” column for the Washington Post, is recuperating after he and his wife participated in a pioneering kidney-donation program designed to increase the number of kidneys available for those who need transplants.

“My wife (Dine Watson) and I had kidney transplant surgeries on Sept. 22 at Johns Hopkins University” in Baltimore, Davidson told Journal-isms on Friday.

“As you probably know, people with kidney disease can wait many years and even die on dialysis waiting for a transplant. Originally, I had planned to donate my kidney directly to Dine, but our blood and tissue types are not compatible. Dr. Montgomery’s program allowed me to donate my kidney to [a] stranger who is compatible with me and allowed Dine to receive a kidney from a stranger who is her blood and tissue type. Getting a kidney from a living, more compatible donor is better all the way around. Both Dine and I are recovering well. I plan to go back to work next week and she plans to return to work in November.”

Davidson’s reference is to Dr. Robert A. Montgomery, chief of transplantation at Johns Hopkins, and, as of September, bridegroom of mezzo-soprano Denyce Graves.

Montgomery told Shari Rudavsky of the Indianapolis Star last month that about 300 people had received transplants through the multiple-donation program he pioneered in 2007. The first operation involved 10 recipients.

“Although they are still rare, chain donations could help ease the crunch for kidneys. Currently 81,832 people in the United States . . . are awaiting a kidney donation,” the story said.

“This is going to be the future. It’s not going to solve the organ shortage crisis, but it’s going to be one of the things that will significantly increase the number of live donor transplants,” Montgomery told the Star.

“Paired donations and chains could allow doctors to transplant an additional 2,000 to 3,000 donations a year,” he said.

Davidson, 60, is a founder of the National Association of Black Journalists. He told Journal-isms, “I’d really like to urge your readers to consider being an organ donor. The lack of donors is a particular problem in the black community. I expect to have no lasting ill-effects as a result of my donation. I’d be happy to speak with anyone who is considering organ donation.”

Two Post reporters, Martha McNeil Hamilton and Warren Brown, wrote a book in 2002 about Hamilton’s donation of a kidney to Brown, “Black and White and Red All Over: The Story of a Friendship.”

Both are Southerners. Hamilton is white and Brown is black.

Who’s Asking White Players About Limbaugh?

“Over a week has gone by since the news broke that Rush Limbaugh is part of a bid to purchase the St. Louis Rams, and the reactions are in. NFL player Mathias Kiwanuka immediately condemned Limbaugh’s many statements as ‘flat out racist,'” sportswriter Charles Modiano wrote on the Counterpunch Web site. “A few other players joined in and The New York Daily News headline began with a race qualifier:

‚Äú’Black NFL players crush prospect of playing for a Rush Limbaugh-owned St. Louis Rams’

“The story, and the qualifier, were repeated in many more articles, TV spots, and blogs which soon morphed into a new debate:

“‘Will Black Players Refuse to Play for Limbaugh?’

“. . . So now that we have heard sentiments about ‘black people,’ columns from black journalists, and reactions from many current and retired ‘black NFL players,’ a serious question need to be asked:

“How did opposition to Rush Limbaugh ownership become exclusively ‘a black thing’?

“Where do ‘white people’ stand on this?

“Where are the direct denunciations from white sports writers? (Besides Dave Zirin!). And what do white NFL players think? Do we even know? . . . Have we even asked?”

Meanwhile, Limbaugh denied uttering a statement attributed to him by St. Louis Post-Dispatch columnist Bryan Burwell and repeated by CNN and other outlets.

The Post-Dispatch ran an editor’s note on Wednesday that said, “A quote in Bryan Burwell’s column Oct. 7 attributed to Rush Limbaugh about the merits of slavery in the United States came from the 2006 book ‘101 People Who Are Really Screwing America’ by John Huberman. The book does not provide specific details about the quote.

“Limbaugh, who is part of a group bidding to buy the St. Louis Rams, said Monday that he did not make that statement, which has been widely reported in recent days.

“The Post-Dispatch continues to research the origin of the quote.” On Thursday, the newspaper wrote, “Huberman said Wednesday that he had a source for the quote but declined to reveal it on advice of counsel.”

On CNN, Rick Sanchez apologized for using the quote. “We have been unable to independently confirm that quote. We should not have reported it and for that I apologize,” he said.

Some nonblack columnists have opposed the exclusion of Limbaugh. On National Public Radio’s “Tell Me More” with Michel Martin, Ruben Navarrette, a columnist for the San Diego Union-Tribune, said, “as someone who offends people on an hourly basis, okay, and is constantly being berated by right, left and center, and people call my boss any given day to say, ‘fire that guy, fire that guy’ ‚Äî I have to object to censorship and this ‚Äî the idea somehow that people, as Michel mentioned, are being punished for their views.”

Similarly, David Climer wrote of Limbaugh in the Nashville Tennessean, “I think it was self-serving foolishness for the owners of NFL teams to essentially black-ball him.”

Meanwhile, Limbaugh said on his radio show he was taking the high road.

In addition, “Limbaugh, an ardent enemy of the Democratic party and liberal groups, said the flap over his potential ownership of an NFL reflected his misgivings about the direction of the country under the presidency of Barack Obama,” Nathaniel Vinton reported in the New York Daily News.

“What is happening to the National Football League, what is about to happen to it, has already happened to Wall Street, has already happened to the automobile business,’ Limbaugh said, claiming he had been done in by the media’s ‘blind hatred.'”

Obama Image Gives Rolling Stone “Cover of the Year”

‘”The cover of the July 10-24, 2008, issue of Rolling Stone featuring Barack Obama was named ‘Cover of the Year’ in the American Society of Magazine Editors‚Äô (ASME) Best Cover Contest,” the ASME announced on Thursday. “The announcement was made today by David Willey, ASME President and Editor-in-Chief, Runner‚Äôs World, at the Magazine Innovation Summit currently underway in New York City.

“This is the first time in the Awards‚Äô four-year history that the ‘Cover of the Year’ was determined by consumers rather than by members of ASME. Ten category winners, chosen by visitors to Amazon.com during the first round of public voting, competed for the ‘Cover of the Year’ honor. The Rolling Stone cover, which won the ‘Best Obama’ category before it was chosen ‘Cover of the Year,’ depicts Barack Obama in Raleigh, North Carolina, just a few days after he nailed down the Democratic Party‚Äôs presidential nomination.”

The nine other Best Cover Contest category winners can be viewed here.


Native Journalists Join Court Brief Against “Redskins”

The Native American Journalists Association is one of several Native groups joining in a friend of the court brief calling on the Supreme Court to review a case contending that the name of the NFL’s Washington Redskins is so odious that it should be denied its trademark status.

“The organizations and Indian tribes stand together to express with one voice their collective opinion on the fundamental fact underlying this case: the ‘Redskins’ trademark is disparaging to Native Americans and perpetuates a centuries-old stereotype of Native Americans as ‘blood-thirsty savages,’ ‘noble warriors’ and an ethnic group ‘frozen in history,'” says the filing in Suzan S. Harjo, et al., v. Pro-Football, Inc.

The brief quotes Native American columnist Tim Giago: “As far as I can determine, there is only one species of human beings . . . that have sports teams named after the color of their skin ‚Äì the American Indian.”

A Sept. 23 column by Courtland Milloy in the Washington Post, “If the Redskins Care About Honor . . .” is cited in a footnote.

“At least five newspapers have adopted policies forbidding the use of ‘Redskins’ to identify sports teams: the Oregonian (Portland, Ore.); the Portland (Maine) Press Herald; The St. Cloud (Minn.) Times; the Kansas City (Mo.) Star, and the Lincoln (Neb.) Journal Star.” the brief adds.

The Native groups in the filing are:

The National Congress of American Indians; Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma, Comanche Nation of Oklahoma, Oneida Indian Tribe of Wisconsin, and Seminole Nation of Oklahoma; National Indian Education Association; National Indian Youth Council; National Indian Child Welfare Association; American Indian Higher Education Consortium; American Indian College Fund; National Native American Law Student Association; Tulsa Indian Coalition Against Racism; Capitol Area Indian Resources; American Indian Studies – University of Illinois (Urbana Champaign); Native American House, a student services unit at the University of Illinois; Wisconsin Indian Education Association “Indian” Mascot and Logo Taskforce; Native Americans at Dartmouth; Native Americans at Brown; National Institute for Native Leadership in Higher Education; Society of American Indian Government Employees; Native American Journalists Association; Native American Finance Officers Association; Indigenous Democratic Network; Americans for Indian Opportunity; Alianza Ind??gena Sin Fronteras and the International Indian Treaty Council.

Tonya Mosley reports on a bear spotted three times in three days in Arlington, Wash.

“I’m Wearing a Short ‘Fro on Air and I Love It”

“I am a broadcast reporter for KING 5 News in Seattle, the NBC affiliate,” Tonya Mosley wrote to Journal-isms, reacting to the Oct. 7 column “Good Hair on the TV News Set.”

“I made the decision a few weeks ago to go natural ‚Äî I’m wearing a short ‘fro’ on air and I love it. Not only that, the response has been overwhelmingly positive from my news director and viewers. I just wanted to let you know that there is a movement (I believe) . . . a resurgence of some kind, and I’m hopeful!”

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