Critical Broadcaster Is in U.S. Seeking Asylum
Radio Journalist Brenda Box Dies at 58
New Fox Sports Network Is Hiring, Will Challenge ESPN
Time Inc. Now Planned as Independent Company
Rick Hancock to Join Atlanta Paper’s Digital Team
AP’s Rochester to Be Deputy Managing Editor in Pittsburgh
Story Alleging Menendez Paid Prostitutes Begins to Unravel
Indian Country Sees Deep Impact From Budget Cuts
Why Some Groups Still Need Their Own Spaces
Interviewed by CNN en Español’s Patricia Janiot in 2010, Guillermo Zuloaga of Venezuela’s Globovisión said charges against him are another attempt to silence his 24-hour news channel.
Critical Broadcaster Is in U.S. Seeking Asylum
As the news media assess the tenure of Venezuela’s president Hugo Chávez, who died of cancer Tuesday at age 58, one fact is clear: Press-freedom organizations say Chávez was no friend of a free press.
“Venezuela’s private media wither under Chávez assault,” was the headline over an assessment last year from the Committee to Protect Journalists.
The most recent comprehensive report from Reporters Without Borders said in 2010, “The country’s broadcast media have been under great strain during years of conflict with Chávez since the short-lived coup against him in April 2002.”
Chávez’s pursuit of the press has been influential beyond Venezuela’s borders, according to the Wall Street Journal.
“Mr. Chávez’s moves against media in Venezuela have created a blueprint for other populists in the region, who have gone after powerful media groups and reduced freedom of the press, analysts say,” the Journal’s Ezequiel Minaya wrote last month.
” ‘It’s a model of governing that has spread among these Bolivarian countries,’ like Venezuela, Argentina and Ecuador, said José Miguel Vivanco, executive director of the Americas division at Human Rights Watch. ‘The president changes the law to control broadcast media and then uses the bully pulpit to go after any media that opposes them.’ “
In 2010, the head of Venezuela’s last openly critical television station, Globovisión President Guillermo Zuloaga, sought asylum in the United States.
Jim Wyss wrote then in the Miami Herald, “Chávez and Zuloaga have been feuding for years as Globovisión has fought off efforts to close it and refused to pull punches. The channel has been slapped with millions in fines and more than 40 court cases.”
Minaya wrote in the Wall Street Journal, “Mr. Chávez has repeatedly waved off criticism from international media watchdogs and human-right groups who accuse his government of restricting free speech, saying these organizations are attempting to undermine his government and are aligned with the U.S. and its allies.”
The CPJ report, by Monica Campbell, said, “To sidestep the potential fines or prison terms, many journalists and publications censor their own coverage.
“The administration has also blocked critical coverage, closed broadcasters, sued reporters for defamation, excluded those it deems unfriendly from official events, and harassed — with the help of government allies and state-run media — critical journalists. The result is that key issues — Chávez’s health, rising unemployment, overcrowded prisons, and the condition of Venezuela’s vital state-run energy sector — are not receiving in-depth, investigative coverage at a critical moment for the country, as Chávez grapples not only with cancer but with an unprecedented challenge for his office from Henrique Capriles Radonski, the governor of the state of Miranda.
“The gradual dismantling of Venezuela’s more critical and independent press and the building up of a vast state-run media empire is a remarkable reversal of the media landscape prior to Chávez’s rule. Then, major newspapers and television and radio stations were dominated by a private-sector, business-oriented elite determined to shield its audience from leftist and socialist views. When critics accuse Chávez of a media power grab, his loyalists counter that the government effectively democratized the press by wresting control from a powerful oligarchy with its own agenda.”
Chávez’s stance toward a free press has not figured prominently in the assessments of his rule. Most have focused on his energizing of poor people and his posture toward the United States, Cuba, rogue states around the world and other Latin American nations. Business-oriented publications such as Forbes noted that Venezuela “has arguably the biggest hoard of oil reserves in the world, at more than 500 billion barrels.”
In fact, Greg Grandin, writing in the Nation, argued that Chávez’s posture toward the press was beside the point.
“Chávez was a strongman. He packed the courts, hounded the corporate media, legislated by decree and pretty much did away with any effective system of institutional checks or balances,” Grandin wrote. “But I’ll be perverse and argue that the biggest problem Venezuela faced during his rule was not that Chávez was authoritarian but that he wasn’t authoritarian enough. . . .”
Columnist Juan Gonzalez wrote in the Daily News in New York, “On the day of his death, though, even his enemies had to concede that Chavez did what he set out to do — change Latin America like no one had before.”
In Miami-Dade County, Fla., where more than 47,000 Venezuelans live, according to the 2010 Census, Chávez’s death was bigger news than elsewhere in the United States.
Patricia Mazzei and Daniel Chang reported for the Miami Herald, “television and radio stations ramped up their news coverage, in what could be a preview of how Miami reacts to the eventual death of Fidel Castro.
The story added, “Shortly after Chávez’s death was announced, Spanish-language radio talk stations interrupted their regular programming and began non-stop coverage. Local TV stations in both English and Spanish devoted most of their evening broadcasts to the news, with some extending special coverage into the night.”
The New York Times offered website viewers a video essay on Chávez narrated by Simon Romero, the Times’ former Caracas bureau chief.
Some of the reporting was future-oriented. The Times’ William Neuman reported, “Mr. Chávez, 58, changed Venezuela in fundamental ways, empowering and energizing millions of poor people who had felt marginalized and excluded. But his rule also widened society’s divisions, and his death is sure to bring vast uncertainty as the nation tries to find its way without its central figure.”
- Jamila Aisha Brown, Ebony: Remembering Hugo Chavez: Jamila Aisha Brown says the late president’s legacy lies greatly with his efforts on behalf of Afro Venezuelans
- Committee to Protect Journalists: Venezuelan authorities must ensure safety of press
- Ralph De La Cruz, Dallas Morning News: Hugo Chavez dies: No need for tears, but for more embraces
- Editorial, Daily News, New York: Good riddance to dictator Hugo Chavez
- Editorial, Dallas Morning News: Death of Venezuela dictator Hugo Chávez
- Editorial, Globe and Mail, Toronto: Hugo Chavez leaves a mess behind
- Editorial, Miami Herald: Venezuela’s Hugo Chávez and his legacy of plunder
- Editorial, USA Today: Hugo Chavez, a man best ignored: Our view
- Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting: In Death as in Life, Chávez Target of Media Scorn
- Glen Ford, Black Agenda Report: Hugo Chavez: New World Rising
- Fox News Latino: Latino Politicians React to Hugo Chavez’s Death
- Joel Hirst, Fox News Latino: Hugo Chavez, The Passing of a Political Tsunami
- Larry King, Huffington Post: My Conversation With Hugo Chavez
- Jim Naureckas, Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting: AP: Chavez Wasted His Money on Healthcare When He Could Have Built Gigantic Skyscrapers
- Manny Navarro, Miami Herald: Moment of silence for Hugo Chavez denied in Miami Marlins’ win over Venezuela
- Andres Oppenheimer, Miami Herald: Chávez’s ‘revolution’ will lose steam abroad, but not at home
- Dan Rather, Huffington Post: What Hugo Chavez Left Behind
- Miguel Tinker Salas, Eva Golinger, Gregory Wilpert, Greg Grandin, Michael Shifter with Amy Goodman and Juan Gonzalez, “Democracy Now!”: Hugo Chávez Dead: Transformed Venezuela & Survived U.S.-Backed Coup, Now Leaves Uncertainty Behind
- W. Alex Sanchez, Council On Hemispheric Affairs: Venezuela’s Foreign Policy Without Chávez: The End of ALBA?
- David Sirota, Salon: Hugo Chavez’s economic miracle
Radio Journalist Brenda Box Dies at 58
Radio journalist Brenda Box Johnson died Thursday morning after a long battle with pancreatic cancer, according to her friend, Geri Coleman Tucker, an editor at USA Today. She was 58 and died at her home in Springfield, Va., surrounded by family and friends, Tucker said.
Brenda Box, as she was known, was as an editor and newscast producer at NPR, was a longtime member of the National Association of Black Journalists and was a founding member of its radio task force. She was on medical leave from NPR.
According to her LinkedIn bio, Box had been at NPR since 2004 and before that had been a bureau chief at West Virginia Public Broadcasting. From 1980 to 1986, she worked as a correspondent for the Gannett Co., and from 1986 to 1990, was an anchor and correspondent for United Press International.
Her mother, Lillie Vaden of Pensacola, Fla., told Journal-isms that she knew her daughter wanted to be a journalist since she was a seventh-grader in Denver and grilled Gov. John Arthur Love on a “Voice of Youth” television show. “She was letting him have it,” Vaden said, but after the show she and the governor were all smiles. Box went on to win her share of trophies and honors throughout middle and high school, Vaden said.
Box’s friend Jackie Jones, another veteran journalist, messaged Journal-isms, “The day she found out about the cancer, I called her and she said she was knocked back on her heels a bit, but had told our mutual friend Mireille Grangenois that she was going to take a little time to feel sorry for herself and then ‘get on with my life.’ She said Mireille asked her how long she was going [to] mourn and Brenda said she told her, ‘Oh, until about 8 o’clock when the (NBC show) “Community” marathon comes on. I’ve already sent Steve out for ice cream.’
“That was Brenda. She was a miraculous presence and I’m just so grateful she shared herself so willingly, even in these last months, when she could just have easily closed the door to all but immediate family.”
At NPR, Newscast Executive Producer Robert Garcia posted a tribute online under the headline, ” NPR’s Brenda Box, An Excellent Editor, Wicked Wit And True Friend, Dies.”
Box’s colleague Jonathan Blakley, a producer, messaged Journal-isms, “The Newscast Editor is the one on the receiving end of blame when copy is wrong, but seldom thanked when copy is corrected seconds before air. It takes a special person to manage the daily stress of that job, and it takes an even more special person to do that job with a smile and a wonderful sense of humor. Brenda embodied the perfect person to be a Newscast Editor. To many reporters working at NPR or any one of our 600+ member stations, Brenda was only known as a voice on the phone, but her voice was exactly what a nervous rookie reporter or stressed out veteran reporter on a breaking news assignment needed to hear.”
Services have not been set. In addition to her mother, Box leaves her husband, Steve Johnson, three children and two sisters. NPR said that the family requests that by way of remembrance, contributions in Box’s name may be made to the Pancreatic Cancer Action Network. [Added March 7]
March 8 update: Geri Coleman Tucker reports: “The Celebration of Life Service for Brenda Box will be from 7-9 p.m. Tuesday 3/12 at Demaine Funeral Home, 5308 Backlick Rd, Springfield, VA (703) 941-9428.”
New Fox Sports Network Is Hiring, Will Challenge ESPN
“Fox, in announcing Tuesday that it will launch the 24-hour Fox Sports 1 network on Aug. 17, is mounting what executives say will be a direct challenge to ESPN,” Michael Hiestand reported Tuesday for USA Today.
“Our hope is that we can be equally professional” with ESPN, says David Hill, who led Fox Sports when it launched 20 years ago and is overseeing the new channel. “It’s going to take us a while. We’re not expecting to knock ESPN off in the first week or two. It’s going to take two to three years. It will be a slog.”
“FS1 will debut in about 90 million TV households compared to about 99 million on ESPN and ESPN2. It will have a daily 11 p.m. ET Fox Sports Live show meant to directly challenge ESPN’s SportsCenter. Hill, noting that head-to-head competition said, ‘The quality of sports journalism on ESPN is world-class. It’s not going to be easy. But we’ll give it a shot.’
Hiestand also wrote, “FS1 will also take on ESPN, as well as HBO Sports, in sports documentaries. Its Being series begins in the fall with a film on Mike Tyson.”
Lou D’Ermilio, spokesman for the network, told Journal-isms, “I’m told we will have positions to fill. Interested parties should log on to www.foxcareers.com. No one has been hired yet for our news operation.”
- Eric Deggans, Tampa Bay (Fla.) Times: Can Fox Sports 1 take on ESPN the way Fox News Channel tackled CNN?
- Andy Fixmer and Alex Sherman, Bloomberg News: Murdoch’s Fox Sports on Path to Profit With Yankees Games
Time Inc. Now Planned as Independent Company
Time Warner “announced it would spin off its Time Inc. magazine unit into a separate, publicly traded company, a move that will allow the media conglomerate to focus entirely on its cable television and film businesses,” Amy Chozick reported Wednesday for the New York Times.
“The announcement came hours after Time Warner and Meredith Corporation ended negotiations on a proposal that would have joined in a separate company many Time Inc. titles with magazines published by Meredith.”
Chozick added, “The deal with Meredith fell apart in part because of Time Warner’s concern over the fate of four of Time Inc.’s famous but struggling magazines — Time, Sports Illustrated, Fortune and Money, according to three people with knowledge of the negotiations who could not publicly discuss private conversations.”
None of the statements or news stories referred to the two Time Inc. magazines that target people of color, Essence and People en Español, and a Time Inc. spokeswoman did not respond to an inquiry about them.
The Publishers Information Bureau reported in January that the number of advertising pages in Essence dropped by 10.3 percent during 2012, while those for People en Español increased by 18.6 percent. Industrywide, ad pages were down by 8.2 percent.
- Peter Kafka, AllThingsD: Why The Time Inc. Spinoff Could Work! (Spoiler: Requires Miracle.)
- Dan Primack, Fortune: 3 questions about the Time Inc. spinoff
Rick Hancock to Join Atlanta Paper’s Digital Team
Rick Hancock, digital platform manager at the Hartford (Conn.) Courant, is joining the Atlanta Journal-Constitution’s digital staff as “subscriber products editor,” Monica Richardson, AJC managing editor of the Digital and Beats departments, told Journal-isms on Wednesday.
“He will oversee the digital staff devoted to the production of our digital subscriber products. The AJC’s digital staff recently reorganized to provide more focus and better meet needs of its digital suite of free and subscriber products,” Richardson said in an emailed statement.
“In January, Cynthia DuBose was named AJC.COM Editor. Hancock will work closely with DuBose and other newsroom leaders on our digital platform.
“In December, the AJC released a new suite of digital news apps including ‘Today’s Paper,’ which offers subscribers total access to the day’s newspaper — all news stories and ads plus the comics, obituaries and more. Readers can page through each section, just like the printed paper, on tablets and smartphones.”
- Hartford Courant: CT1 Media Digital Chief Heading To Atlanta
AP’s Rochester to Be Deputy Managing Editor in Pittsburgh
Mark J. Rochester, assistant West Coast bureau chief of the Associated Press, is joining the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette as deputy managing editor, David M. Shribman, the paper’s executive editor and vice-president, told staff members.
“A former assistant managing editor and Sunday editor of The Denver Post, he has special expertise in digital platforms for journalism, computer-assisted reporting, and newspaper investigations,” Shribman’s announcement said. “He is currently responsible for AP business development and marketing services in California, Nevada and Hawaii. He’s been on the national board of directors of Investigative Reporters & Editors and is on the national advisory board of the Investigative Reporting Workshop at American University.”
Rochester told Journal-isms by email, “Pittsburgh is such a great news town, and one of the few competitive newspaper markets left. On top of that, The Post-Gazette position will allow me the unique opportunity to lead efforts on digital strategy as well as parts of the traditional print news operation. The publisher and executive editor are both committed to a robust print edition that provides high-impact watchdog journalism and breaking news, while continuing to grow its digital audience on multiple platforms. It’s going to be an exciting challenge.”
Nexis de los Santos Santana, a Dominican, was one of three women who claimed in a Skype interview with ABC News to have been paid for sex with Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J. Santana was later identified by a Dominican official as the woman who signed an affidavit saying she was actually paid to make up the story. (Credit: ABC News) (Video) |
Story Alleging Menendez Paid Prostitutes Begins to Unravel
“The Daily Caller, Tucker Carlson’s conservative version of Huffington Post, is at the center of a media controversy. And loving it,” Jeff Sonderman reported Wednesday for the Poynter Institute.
“In November, the Caller published a story based on two anonymous Dominican women claiming that New Jersey Sen. Robert Menendez had paid them for sex.
“ABC News says it received similar information at the same time, as Republican operatives organized interviews with those two women, plus a third woman the Caller did not talk to, all of whom said the senator paid them for sex. But ABC News didn’t run with the story, because ‘none of the women could produce identity cards with their names, and they all provided the same story almost word for word, as if they had been coached.’
“After the Caller’s story was published, things started to unravel. . . .”
Menendez, 59, one of two Latino senators, has been an advocate of media diversity and was recently honored by the Minority Media & Telecommunications Council. In 2010, he released a “Corporate Diversity Report” with the results of a survey of 537 companies that appeared in the Fortune 500 in 2009 and 2010. “At the five media/entertainment/marketing companies that responded, says the report, 13 of the 59 board seats are held by women and 11 by minorities. On those companies’ executive teams, 11 of 58 positions are held by women and three by minorities,” RadioInk reported at the time.
Meanwhile, Carlson told Michael Calderone of the Huffington Post in an interview that racial diversity is “by far, the shallowest and least interesting kind of diversity.” He prefers “cultural and ideological diversity.”
Carlson, the Daily Caller’s co-founder and editor-in-chief, said, “Maybe the unintended consequence of professionalizing journalism is that all journalists come from the same background and think the same things and have the same assumptions. There’s no diversity at all. And I’m not talking about racial diversity, which is, by far, the shallowest and least interesting kind of diversity. But I mean cultural and ideological diversity. And I don’t think you should hire right-wingers. I don’t care if they have some affirmative action program for right-wingers. That’s stupid. But just make sure every third person’s from North Dakota. That’ll fix it.”
- Chris Ariens, TVNewser: Univision Asks Sen. Menendez About ‘Daily Caller’ Reports of Sex Parties: ‘Those Are Lies Intended to Slander Me’ (Feb. 8)
- Mariah Blake, Columbia Journalism Review: Anatomy of a so-called scandal
- Dylan Byers, Politico: Menendez saga’s he said, she said
- Rhonda Schwartz, Brian Ross and Ned Berkowitz, ABC News: The Menendez Prostitution ‘Scandal’: How It Happened
Indian Country Sees Deep Impact From Budget Cuts
“Indian Country is an asterisk in the federal budget,” Mark Trahant wrote Monday for indianz.com. “Yet the impact of this austerity will impact our communities deeply and fairly soon. By my count, there will be at least $386 million in direct service budget cuts between now and the end of September.
“As the National Congress of American Indians said last week, ‘forced spending cuts will undermine the trust, treaty, and statutory obligations to tribal governments that are funded in the federal budget. Not only would it sacrifice the federal trust responsibility to tribes, but it would thwart tribes’ ability to promote economic growth or plan for the benefit of future generations.’ . . . “
- Joe Davidson, Washington Post: Sequester hits federal agencies. Now what for federal employees?
- Sophia Kerby, Center for American Progress: Top 10 Reasons Why People of Color Should Care About Sequestration (Feb. 22)
- Edward Wyckoff Williams, the Root: How the Sequester Crosses the Color Line
- David Zurawik, Baltimore Sun: Could TV have a done a poorer job of covering sequester?
Why Some Groups Still Need Their Own Spaces
“MyBrownBaby.com has grown by leaps and bounds since it launched. Why was it important to create an online space specifically for African-American mothers?” Janelle Harris asked Denene Millner, described as “an award-winning journalist and the author of 21 books and counting,” for MediaBistro.
“My last job inside of an office was working at Parenting. I loved what the magazine did, but I just found that the brand didn’t necessarily speak to black mothers,” Millner replied in a Q-and-A published Wednesday.
“When I moved to Atlanta, they gave me a column called ‘Reality Check,’ and every month I would give advice on parenting ethics and etiquette. But during the 2008 election, there was a conversation about Bristol Palin, and I just remember getting the impression from newspapers and websites that we weren’t supposed to talk about her decision to have a baby or her getting pregnant.
“I just felt like, you know what? This is not the conversation that my black mom friends and I are having. As a matter of fact, we’re all walking around saying if that was Sasha or Malia who wound up knocked up during the presidential election, they would’ve buried Obama under the bus, under the White House, and the whole discussion would’ve been about the irresponsibility of black women, teenagers, the high rate of single motherhood in our communities. It would’ve been about irresponsibility or our aversion to protection.
“So I said, ‘Since nobody else is going to say it, I’ll go on ahead and say it. I wrote something basically to that effect and emailed it to all of my friends and said, ‘I managed to set up a blog on Blogger. You need to read it and leave comments.’ It felt good to me. I got to write from a very specific black mom perspective in a way that you won’t find anywhere else. It was a huge hit right off of the bat, because nobody was talking about what it means to raise black children in America and what it means to constantly be thrown under the bus when we’re talking about black mothers but never being invited to the conversation. . . . “
Short Takes
- Ta-Nehisi Coates, blogger for the Atlantic, rejected an offer to become a regular columnist at the New York Times, Jordan Michael Smith wrote Tuesday in a profile of Coates for the New York Observer. “He would not comment on the matter, but recently wrote on his blog about the difficulties of writing a twice-a-week Times op-ed column. He suggested that he would be taxed writing so frequently at such length, and feared his writing would suffer.” Smith called Coates “the single best writer on the subject of race in the United States.”
- “Student journalists at Long Island University-Brooklyn are fuming after roughly 1,000 copies of the campus newspaper were recently dumped following a front-page story exposing serious health-code violations at the main campus cafeteria,” Rich Calder reported Wednesday for the New York Post. “Nearly all copies of Seawanhaka Press’ Feb. 22 edition mysteriously vanished from campus bins a day after being distributed, the newspapers’ editors told the Post.” The students’ cafeteria story remains online.
- “This week’s controversy over the Atlantic asking a freelancer for an unpaid contribution has reignited a debate among journalists — when, if ever, does it make sense to write for free?” Jeff Sonderman wrote Wednesday for the Poynter Institute. Additionally, Kira Goldenberg of Columbia Journalism Review listed “some of the pieces that have contributed to this still-unfolding, widespread discussion.” A crowd-sourced list of who pays writers has been started on Tumblr.
- In the third of a series resulting from a trip to China, George E. Curry, editor-in-chief of the National Newspaper Publishers Association News Service, wrote, “Acknowledged or not, racial discrimination is indeed a problem in China that manifests itself in strange and sometimes unique ways.” Curry wrote, “In both old and new China, whiteness — or proximity to it — is prized.”
- “NBC10 Philadelphia announced today that Jacqueline London will be joining the station as an anchor/reporter,” WCAU-TV announced Tuesday. “London joins NBC10 from CBS affiliate WKMG-TV in Orlando, Florida, where she spent 10 years as an anchor/reporter.” Anzio Williams, vice president of news for WCAU, has been changing personnel since he joined the NBC-owned station last year after five years as news director at KCRA-TV in Sacramento, Calif.
- After three years as president and CEO, Maxie C. Jackson III has left the National Federation Of Community Broadcasters, consisting of stations, producers and others involved in community radio, Jackson confirmed for Journal-isms Thursday. Board treasurer Janis Lane-Ewart will be acting president/CEO until a replacement is found, according to the Tom Taylor Now radio business newsletter. Jackson was previously senior director of program development at WNYC, New York Public Radio. [Added March 7]
- “Luis Cruz has left his news director job at KYMA-TV in Yuma,” Ariz., “to take on a new position as executive producer of afternoon news and programming at U-T TV. That’s U-T San Diego’s new TV station, which streams online and on cable,” Veronica Villafañe reported Tuesday for her Media Moves site.
- “Covering breaking news is more demanding than ever, driven by unrelenting micro-deadlines and financial pressures that have whittled staffs and forced a spot news makeover, crime reporters and editors say,” David J. Krajicek and Debora Wenger wrote Tuesday for the Poynter Institute. They quoted Andrew Smith, a court reporter with Newsday: “In the past 10 years, I think the appetite for breaking crime news has acquired more urgency — nothing changes a static news site like a ‘new’ crime story. At the same time, though, I think the tolerance for thinly sourced, incompletely reported stories has increased in order to accommodate that appetite for stories.”
- “An analysis of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) data [shows] that low-income households, including disproportionately large numbers of families of color, were hit hardest by Hurricane Sandy and continue to face the toughest challenges in recovering from the massive storm, according to studies by Enterprise Community Partners and NYU Furman Center for Real Estate and Urban Policy,” the groups announced on Wednesday.
- Michael Scott, a veteran anchor who has worked in Los Angeles, Denver, Dallas, Kansas City, Charlotte, N.C., Huntsville, Ala., and Omaha, Neb., took the stand in his own defense in Omaha on Tuesday. Scott is accused of misdemeanor domestic violence stemming from an altercation with an ex-girlfriend, Maggie O’Brien reported for the Omaha World-Herald. “The prosecution and defense rested Tuesday. The case won’t go to the jury until Monday to let a juror go on a planned vacation.”
- Attention, columnists who argue every year that black history should be taught every month, not just in February: the Chicago Public Schools will teach African American history classes year-round and system-wide beginning this fall, Adriana Cardona-Maguigad reported Tuesday for WBEZ-FM.
- “Burundian authorities today released Hassan Ruvakuki, a reporter who has been imprisoned for 16 months on charges related to his interview with a rebel leader,” the Committee to Protect Journalists said Tuesday. The circumstances of the release were not immediately clear, the committee said, calling on authorities to vacate Ruvakuki’s conviction and prison sentence.
- Jaime Guadalupe Gonzalez Dominguez, 38, a journalist who ran an online publication in northern Mexico, has been fatally shot, according to a posting Monday on the website, Agence France-Presse reported on Tuesday. The website said the body was riddled with at least 18 bullets. “The killing late Sunday has led to a decision to shut down the publication, which covered general news in Ojinga, a town in the state of Chihuahua, which shares a border with the US state of Texas.”
- “Many observers have watched Kenya’s presidential election with bated breath, largely out of fear that the country could again see the kind of violence that killed 1,000 people in 2007,” Caitlin Dewey wrote Monday for the Washington Post. “But on Twitter, at least, some Kenyans are sick of the attention — and want the media to know it. Two hashtags mocking foreign media went viral on Kenyan Twitter today, both directed at outlets that reported on the possibility of violence and disorganization at the polls.” The Associated Press reported, “Election observers from around the world said Wednesday that Kenya carried out a credible election on Monday, but the groups reserved final judgments until the counting process is completed. . . .”
Follow Richard Prince on Twitter @princeeditor
Facebook users: “Like” “Richard Prince’s Journal-isms” on Facebook.