Maynard Institute archives

Radio Ads Try Shaming Redskins on Name

Oneida Nation Buys Time in Cities Where Team Will Play

Ex-Captive Journo on Syria: Report About the Moderates

N.Y. Times Rejects Government Plea, Runs NSA Story

D.C. Anchor Leon Harris Recovers After Near-Fatal Attack

Ohio Prison Suicide Called “Escape Hatch From Justice”

Inquiring Minds Had Questions of Post’s New Owner

Women Invested in Success of Ifill-Woodruff Team

After First Week, Al Jazeera America Faces Serious Hurdles

Short Takes

 Zema Williams, better known as "Chief Zee," yells   for the Redskins faithful t

Oneida Nation Buys Time in Cities Where Team Will Play

Opponents of the Washington Redskins team name are opening a new front in their battle. The Oneida Indian Nation plans to run radio ads in the Washington market Sunday and Monday, and in the markets of the opposing team when the NFL franchise plays its eight road games, Erik Brady reported for USA Today.

The media offensive follows efforts to revoke the team’s trademark, supportive commentaries by newspaper columnists, irate statements from journalist of color groups, a bill in Congress, backing from D.C. government officials and refusal by some radio stations to say the name on the air.

“But you won’t hear the ads on the station owned by team owner Daniel Snyder,” Brady reported.

“WTEM, also known as ESPN 980, rejected the ad in one minute, according to an email stream that the Oneida Nation shared with USA TODAY Sports. Lewis Schreck, the radio station’s senior vice president, used two words and seven exclamation points: ‘No way!!!!!!!’ “

Brady also reported, “The advertisement, which is timed for the Washington team’s opening game against the Philadelphia Eagles on Monday night, closes with these words: ‘We do not deserve to be called “redskins,” we deserve to be treated as what we are — Americans.’ “

The story continued, “The ad that airs this weekend begins with the voice of a narrator, who says: ‘When a Philadelphia Eagles player used a racial slur to describe African-Americans, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell did the right thing. He said that racial language is, quote, “obviously wrong, insensitive and unacceptable.” ‘ “

Oneida Nation Representative Ray Halbritter “speaks next: ‘I applaud Mr. Goodell for his actions. He is absolutely right; this kind of bigotry has no place in America. Now, with the Philadelphia Eagles playing Washington in the NFL’s first Monday night football game, the commissioner has the opportunity to stand up to bigotry again.

” ‘He can denounce the racial slur in the team name of the Washington Redskins. That word, “redskins,” is not a harmless term. The commissioner can, and should, use the same words he used to describe the Eagles player, because the term “redskins” is obviously wrong, insensitive and unacceptable.’

“Goodell called the Washington team name ‘a unifying force that stands for strength, courage, pride and respect’ in a June letter to 10 members of Congress who’d urged him to reject the name. . . .”

The story continued, “The Oneida Indian Nation, based in Central New York, gave Cooperstown High School $10,000 earlier this year toward the purchase of new uniforms after the school changed its name from Redskins to Hawkeyes, a nod to Natty Bumppo, hero of James Fenimore Cooper‘s Leatherstocking Tales series.”

The issue of stereotyping can cut different ways in the controversy.

“In yesterday’s Washington Post, a story appeared about Chief Zee, the African-American Redskins fan who has been the team’s semi-official mascot for 35 years,” the Indian Country Today Media Network reported on Thursday, describing 72-year-old Zema Williams. “The profile was written by Mike Wise, a clear advocate of changing the Washington team’s name and a thorn in the side of the fans who are dead-set against the change.”

The piece suggested that “Wise’s story is rife with remarks that could be taken as playing on stereotypes of black Americans. On the ever-lively Washington Post comments section below the story, Zee’s defenders are calling the article a racially-charged hit piece on a ‘sick old man’ (Williams is undergoing cataract surgery) whose intention has always been to ‘make people smile.’ Zee’s critics counter that one ethnic minority parodying another (Zee freely uses the word Injun) is old-timey minstrelsy times two. . . . “

Polls have established that the general public gives Zee and the Redskins name a pass. In May, an Associated Press-GfK poll showed that nationally, nearly four in five Americans don’t think the team should change its name. Only 11 percent think it should be changed, while 8 percent weren’t sure and 2 percent didn’t answer.

Writing for Forbes, media writer Jeff Bercovici noted Wednesday that “Slate, the New Republic and Mother Jones are among those who say they’ll no longer print ‘Redskins,’ considering it an offensive racial slur. So is The MMQB, the Sports Illustrated spin-off site anchored by influential football writer Peter King.”

Bercovici added, “Realistically, there aren’t many news organizations whose shunning could put meaningful pressure on an NFL franchise, and none of them are left-wing political journals or upper-middle-brow websites.” The New York Times and the Associated Press said they would continue to use the name, and “Don’t expect the television networks, all of whom have to deal with the league as a corporate partner, to lead the charge, either.

Speaking on Syria, from left: David Rohde, Geraldo Rivera, Van Jones, Jesse L. Jackson.

Ex-Captive Journo on Syria: Report About the Moderates

David Rohde, a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner who was held captive by the Taliban for seven months while reporting for the New York Times, chronicling his daring escape in 2009 in a five-part series, was asked about Syria Wednesday and the unintended consequences of military intervention.

“Personally, David, does it almost jar you that you now see after all you’ve been through, that military intervention, a strike is kind of the way forward?” Marco Werman of Public Radio International asked Rohde, now a columnist for Reuters, on “The World.”

“I think the best solution is working with moderates in the Syrian opposition,” Rohde replied. “I think we should have started that earlier. There are moderates in Afghanistan that I escaped with an Afghan journalist who was kidnapped with me. There was a moderate Pakistani army captain who took us onto his base and saved our lives. And you know, we’re all a product of our personal experiences, so I saw Jihadists. I lived with them. They are a threat. I see another side in the region. I understand that many Americans don’t.

“I wish the US media reported more about moderates, so I don’t think the answer is American military force. I think it’s a much more patient, long term US policy of strengthening moderates in the region, and engage in non military ways – economic ways, you know, training, education. And I again, I know there’s huge cynicism about this, but I think we have to find new ways and simply declaring everything another Iraq, it’s not realistic. There’s more than we can do than massive ground invasions or nothing at all.”

Rohde was participating in the national debate President Obama said he hoped to spark when he asked for congressional authorization to undertake a military strike against the Syrian government in retaliation for a chemical weapons attack.

Van Jones, who was “green czar” early in Obama’s administration, responded to a question about Syria during a conference call with reporters promoting Monday’s debut of CNN’s revamped “Crossfire,” in which Jones is one of four hosts.

“For me, the best I can tell, the president was trying — he spent about two years trying to not talk about Syria,” Jones responded to a question from Lee Bailey of eurweb.com. “He had a few other things to deal with. I think he did a brilliant job with Libya. He’s contained Iran. He’s got two wars going down on the flight path there, but I don’t think he prepared the American people to understand Syria, and you can’t start a car in fourth gear, and that weird sound you hear in Washington, D.C., the president trying to start a car in fourth gear when it comes to Syria.”

On his radio show, Fox News host Geraldo Rivera declared that while he regrettably supported President George W. Bush on Iraq, he won’t be doing the same for Obama and Syria. “The rebels are just as bad, just as vicious, just as anti-American as the dictator Bashar Assad is,” Rivera said, according to Matt Wilstein, reporting for Mediaite. “They’re fanatical religious rats, they’re brutal, they hate the West, they hate democracy, they’re Al Qaeda creeps.”

The Rev. Jesse L. Jackson was sympathetic toward Obama’s predicament, according to columnist Mary Mitchell, writing in the Chicago Sun-Times.

“We are focused on losing the 1,300 [people estimated to be killed by the chemical attack], when we could lose a million more,” Jackson told Mitchell.

“What I would hope would happen in the interval while the president is putting pressure on the international community, is that an aggressive diplomatic effort gets under way that tries to avert this. No rock should be left unturned.”

The Arab American News, based in Dearborn, Mich., outside Detroit, noted in an editorial, “Anti-war Congressman Rick Nolan (D-Minnesota) said military intervention in Syria would cost $500 million to launch, and $1 billion per week to maintain.” It added, “We know all too well that Detroit, which just filed for bankruptcy, and whose residents are suffering every day, as a result of understaffing in the police and fire departments, in addition to lack of basic city services, could use that money. So, instead of using our resources to destroy Damascus, we ought to use them to save Detroit and get it out of bankruptcy. . . .”

Dean Baquet and Jill Abramson gave officials a 'respectful hearing.'

N.Y. Times Rejects Government Plea, Runs NSA Story

The New York Times has come under fire in the past for agreeing to government requests to hold back sensitive stories or information, but it bucked such requests in publishing a front-page article in Friday’s paper,” Margaret Sullivan, the paper’s public editor, told readers.

“The executive editor, Jill Abramson, told me that while she and the managing editor Dean Baquet went to Washington to meet with officials and gave them ‘a respectful hearing,’ the decision to publish was ‘not a particularly anguished one.’

“The article says that the National Security Agency has the ability — and uses it — to break the encryption used in a great deal of Internet communication. It’s an important part of a continuing set of stories on the N.S.A.’s surveillance and its implications for privacy, the early ones of which have been published largely in The Guardian and The Washington Post, as a result of a huge leak by Edward J. Snowden, the former N.S.A. contractor.

“Top editors at The Times listened to government officials’ concerns over national security but decided to publish despite their request, because it was in the public interest to do so.

” ‘Our default position is to inform the public,’ Ms. Abramson told me. ‘Publishing information in the public service is our mission in our democracy.’ The balance between national security and the public’s right to know must be considered, she said. In this case, the latter clearly prevailed. . . .”

Anchor Leon Harris greets fellow WJLA-TV staffers in the newsroom on Thursday. (Credit: Justin Karp/WJLA) (video)

D.C. Anchor Leon Harris Recovers After Near-Fatal Attack

August 1 began far from normal for WJLA anchor Leon Harris,” the Washington television station reported Thursday. “He woke up but couldn’t follow his normal routine of taking his dog for a walk, going to the gym and heading to work. He was feeling an acute pain in his stomach and even vomited several times.

“The pain became so bad that he could barely move. His wife Dawn found him curled into a fetal position in their Potomac, Md. house. After dressing him, Dawn rushed him to Suburban Hospital in Bethesda.

“The stomach ache Harris felt that August day was soon diagnosed as a life-threatening case of necrotizing pancreatitis, or a severe inflammation of the pancreas. The health crisis put Harris in the intensive care unit for almost two weeks, led to partial kidney failure and even caused his heart to stop beating on two separate occasions.

” ‘I feel like I got a second chance,’ says Harris, 52, who hasn’t appeared on-air in more than a month. He’s set to return to WJLA on Monday, Sept. 9. . . .”

Harris came to Washington in 2003 after 20 years at CNN’s Atlanta headquarters, where he co-anchored “CNN Live Today” and “Prime News,” and hosted “CNN Presents” and “American Stories.”

Allbritton Communications is selling WJLA, an ABC affiliate, and the cable station NewsChannel 8, Washington’s only 24-hour, local news channel, to Sinclair Broadcasting, which hopes to reposition NewsChannel 8 as a national franchise.

Ohio Prison Suicide Called “Escape Hatch From Justice”

The prison suicide of Ariel Castro, “who was sentenced for life plus 1,000 years for kidnapping, raping and holding Michelle Knight, Gina DeJesus and Amanda Berry captive for years in his ramshackle house in Cleveland,” amounts to “an escape hatch from justice,” the Plain Dealer editorialized on Thursday.

“The word monster should be used sparingly but Castro, who prattled on during his sentencing about the ‘harmony’ of his household of coercion and violence, surely fits the bill. Still, taxpayers should ask hard questions about just how Castro was able to hang himself Tuesday night with what the Franklin County Coroner said was a bed sheet at the Correctional Reception Center outside of Columbus.

“He’s not the only high-profile inmate to die recently by his own hand in an Ohio prison cell. . . .”

Jeff Bezos advised the newsroom staff to put readers, not advertisers, first dur

Inquiring Minds Had Questions of Post’s New Owner

Black journalists were among those who asked questions of Jeff Bezos, incoming owner of the Washington Post, when the Amazon CEO held a “town meeting” with newsroom employees on Wednesday.

“I said, ‘I’m Gene Robinson. I’m one of your columnists. What do you think about columnists, anyway?’ That got a laugh, and he said, ‘Don’t be boring,’ ” Robinson told Journal-isms by email. “Then I asked my real question, which was about his idea that the print newspaper is a ‘bundle’ of stories, pictures, ads, etc. that people gladly pay for, or used to; and that to succeed on the web we have to sell an analogous ‘bundle’ of our work, rather than just have people consume our journalism one story at a time through Drudge links.

“I said that Amazon originally was just a seller of books, then it became a seller [of] everything, and now it’s a place where not only Amazon sells stuff, but other people sell stuff as well. I asked whether he envisioned our bundle as including just our stuff, or whether it would be part of a larger bundle. He said it might indeed be part of a larger bundle; he didn’t know.”

Metro reporter Hamil Harris messaged Journal-isms, “I did ask a question that went like this: ‘One special thing about Donald Graham was that he worked hard to build relationships. He was even a beat police officer. I know that you said it’s about the readers. If you could walk across this city, it was [as] if you could walk across America. How important will building relationships be whether it is at the White House or across the Anacostia River?” Graham is chairman and CEO of the Washington Post Co.

“His response was sincere; ‘No Matter how hard I try, I couldn’t be Don. He knows everybody. I am Jeff.’ He did say that he wanted to build relationships, he wasn’t specific . . . he also talked about how he probably would only be [in] the DC area quarterly. He seemed very genuine and sincere.”

Jillian Jarrett, who covers suburban Prince George’s County, Md., messaged, “My question was about his views on local news and how he planned to grow readership locally in addition to nationally and internationally. He said that he thought the updates to our website and mobile/tablet would open up the market for all areas.”

Keith Alexander, metro reporter, echoed others’ approval. “His words were exciting and inspirational. A powerful charge for the newsroom, and quite frankly, for the industry,” he told Journal-isms.

Other journalists of color interacted with Bezos in smaller group meetings.

After First Week, Al Jazeera America Faces Serious Hurdles

Al Jazeera America’s ratings were unimpressive in its first full week after launch,” Toni Fitzgerald reported Thursday for MediaLifeMagazine.com.

“Though it takes months to establish a new cable network, it’s clear that AJAM has serious viewership, advertising and distribution hurdles to resolve.

“The network averaged 23,000 total viewers in primetime for the week ended Sept. 1, according to Nielsen, and 18,000 in total day.

“That was up from 18,000 in prime and 14,000 in total day during the previous week, when it launched on a Tuesday and did not get a full week’s worth of numbers in.

“But AJAM ranked 97th out of 100 networks in prime last week and 100th out of 102 in total day. Among adults 25-54, it managed only 10,000 in primetime.

“AJA took over for Current TV, the Millennial-targeted progressive network co-founded by Al Gore. Current averaged 33,000 total viewers in primetime last summer and 26,000 in total day. . . .”

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