Maynard Institute archives

Miami Herald Reporter Freed in Venezuela

U.S. of “Enormous Assistance” Despite Frosty Relations

Dolphins’ Jonathan Martin to Tell Story to NFL Investigator

Obama Said to Throw Defenders in Media Under the Bus

In TV Ads, Only McAuliffe Sought Hispanic Vote in Va.

Orange County Register Says It Won’t Use “Redskins”

Blackistone Decries “Star-Spangled Banner” at Games

This Much Whiteness Is “Not Healthy for the Field”

Africans, Asians, Latin Americans More Upbeat on Future

Short Takes 

U.S. of  “Enormous Assistance” Despite Frosty Relations

Venezuela released Miami Herald reporter Jim Wyss after nearly 48 hours in custody, the Miami Herald reported. World Editor John Yearwood, who went to Venezuela to help secure Wyss’ release, messaged Journal-isms from Caracas, “There’s no question that the release would not have happened this quickly without the help of many people, including some within the U.S. government.”

Aminda Marqués Gonzalez, the Herald’s executive editor, said she was looking forward to Wyss’ return home, the Herald reported.

Jim is safe and soon will be reunited with his loved ones,” she said. “We are grateful to everyone here and in Caracas who helped bring this matter to a close.”

Wyss tweeted soon after his release about 5 p.m. EST on Saturday, “A sincere thanks to everyone who helped win my speedy release and to the Venezuelan authorities who made it possible,” the Herald said.

“Wyss was detained near the Colombian border Thursday evening while reporting on Venezuela’s sputtering economy and upcoming municipal elections. Members of the National Guard in the Andean city of San Cristóbal, Táchira, apprehended Wyss after he solicited an interview with military officials,” Andrew Rosati reported for the Herald.

“Venezuelan authorities said Wyss was taken into custody because he did not have permission to report in the country. Wyss said he was flown Friday evening to the detention center in Caracas, where he was visited by a U.S. Embassy official.

“Wyss was in good spirits and quipped about tight living conditions in the room at the detention center he shared with eight other people.

” ‘It’s like living in a bar with bunk beds,’ he said. He also joked about a diet of ham sandwiches.”

World editor John Yearwood, right, with Executive Editor Aminda Marques GonzalezYearwood messaged Journal-isms Sunday morning, “U.S. government was of enormous assistance. Jim’s flight is about to take off now for Miami. He has been told that he’s free to return to report anytime he likes but will need a visa that allows him to work as a journalist.”

Yearwood said that he could not go into detail about the nature of the assistance provided by the U.S. government, but that aid is all the more noteworthy because “The United States and Venezuela have been without mutual ambassadors since 2010, and Caracas kicked out the US charge d’affaires in October, leading Washington to reciprocate,” as Agence France-Presse has reported.

The State Department press duty officer has not responded to inquiries initiated by Journal-isms on Friday.

Tom Dart added for Britain’s Guardian newspaper, “Nicolas Maduro was elected as Venezuela’s president in April, following the death of Hugo Chavez. He has repeatedly claimed that the US is trying to destabilise his regime and has expelled several American diplomats this year for alleged conspiracy. In September he claimed that he cancelled a trip to New York because former US government officials were plotting to kill him.”

Dart also wrote, “Wyss is not the first American journalist to be held in Venezuela this year. A US filmmaker, Timothy Tracy, was arrested at Caracas airport in April, as he was attempting to leave the country. He was accused of espionage and backing Maduro’s opponents. Tracy was released and expelled from Venezuela in June. . . . Press freedom advocacy groups have repeatedly accused Maduro’s regime of repressive and intimidatory tactics towards journalists.”

Friday, November 8, 2013

On ESPN, Adam Schefter reacts to the report that Dolphins GM Jeff Ireland said Jonathan Martin should have punched Richie Incognito before Martin left the team. (video)

Dolphins’ Jonathan Martin to Tell Story to NFL Investigator

Miami Dolphins lineman Jonathan Martin will tell his story to the NFL’s special investigator next week,” Jim Axelrod reported Friday for CBS News.

“Martin quit the Dolphins amid allegations that he was harassed by a teammate, Richie Incognito. However, the abuse may have been worse than previously thought. . . .”

The Dolphins story was the most talked-about from the sports world in the past week, incorporating such hot-button subjects as sports, manhood, bullying and race. Incognito allegedly extorted money from and texted racist insults to Martin, a younger teammate, along with death threats. 

In one animated commentary, Jason Whitlock wrote Friday for ESPN, “Mass incarceration has turned segments of Black America so upside down that a tatted-up, N-word-tossing white goon is more respected and accepted than a soft-spoken, highly intelligent black Stanford graduate

“According to a story in the Miami Herald, black Dolphins players granted Richie Incognito ‘honorary’ status as a black man while feeling little connection to Jonathan Martin,” Whitlock continued.

“Welcome to Incarceration Nation, where the mindset of the Miami Dolphins’ locker room mirrors the mentality of a maximum-security prison yard and where a wide swath of America believes the nonviolent intellectual needs to adopt the tactics of the barbarian.

“I don’t blame Jonathan Martin for walking away from the Dolphins and checking himself into a hospital seeking treatment for emotional distress. The cesspool of insanity that apparently is the Miami locker room would test the mental stability of any sane man. Martin, the offspring of Harvard grads, a 24-year-old trained at some of America’s finest academic institutions, is a first-time offender callously thrown into an Attica prison cell with Incognito and Aaron Hernandezs BFF Mike Pouncey. Dolphins warden Jeff Ireland and deputy warden Joe Philbin put zero sophisticated thought into what they were doing when they drafted Martin in the second round in 2012. . . .”

Mike Freeman, writing Wednesday for the Bleacher Report, offered a perspective from the locker room: “If it is true that Ritchie Incognito left a racist voicemail for Jonathan Martin, why would black Dolphins players support Incognito?

“The reason is because of the racial openness of the locker room. Whether you think the N-word should be used or not, it is. In NFL locker rooms, rap music containing the word are blasted on radios. Black players call each other that word in front of white teammates.” Freeman quoted veteran Arizona Cardinals kicker Jay Feely, who is white. “I’ve had more honest race conversations in an NFL locker room than anywhere else,” Feely said. “The best part about being in the NFL is getting to know people of other races.” 

Freeman continued, ” ‘That word should never be used, as far as I’m concerned,’ said Feely. ‘But when black players use it, it becomes desensitized.’

“Then, because it’s been desensitized, white players start to use it. Soon, white players are calling black players the N-word, and black players are calling white players the N-word. Or using other racial slurs for whites. We saw this in Detroit where tight end Tony Scheffler, who is white, would say to Louis Delmas, who is black: ‘How’s my n—-?’ And Delmas would say to Scheffler, ‘Hey, cracker.’ . . . “

Writing on Friday for the Shadow League, J.R. Gamble offered the episode as proof that the N-word has been mainstreamed.

Slavery ended almost two hundred years ago,” Gamble wrote. “We unfathomably have a black president at the helm. So why do brothers still have to hear a white dude calling him the N-word?

“As the Incognito situation is revealing, the use of the N-word—once totally unacceptable in any context — has become so layered, multi-purposed and confusing that people don’t even throw the same hissy fits about the use anymore. . . .”

Yet Jason Reid wrote in the Washington Post, “It seems the Dolphins could benefit from a refresher on how hard civil rights leaders of the 1950s and ’60s worked to make it socially unacceptable to say the racial slur Incognito is alleged to have used at least twice. . . .”

Credit: David Horsey/Los Angeles Times

Obama Said to Throw Defenders in Media Under the Bus

Many were hurled under President Barack Obama’s bus on Thursday night when he told NBC News reporter Chuck Todd that he was ‘sorry’ those who were losing their health insurance coverage were shocked by this eventuality because of repeated ‘assurances’ he made to the contrary,” Noah Rothman asserted Friday for Mediaite. “The president’s supporters in the media were first among those to take a dive under the wheels of the president’s forward-moving signature policy achievement.

” ‘Congressional Republicans have stoked consumer fears and confusion with charges that the health care reform law is causing insurers to cancel existing policies and will force many people to pay substantially higher premiums next year for coverage they don’t want,’ the New York Times editorial board declared on November 2. That, they say, violates President Obama’s pledge that if you like the insurance you have, you can keep it.’

” ‘Mr. Obama clearly misspoke when he said that,’ the Times editors continued, unconcerned with the damage they were doing to their institution’s credibility.

“The editorial board then launched into a thorough defense, not of the president’s promise, but of the correctness of the Affordable Care Act’s desired and intended effect of forcing insurance companies to terminate low-cost catastrophic coverage plans. . . .”

In Todd’s interview with the president, he quoted a column from Clarence Page of the Chicago Tribune, headlined, “The truth? Obama told a whopper.”

“You’ve been getting some tough criticism on this quote,” Todd said, according to the transcript.

Clarence Page, your hometown newspaper, The Chicago Tribune, this is not— not . . . White House. He’s been pretty supportive of what you said. He characterized this as a political lie. He called it a sort of— ‘the sort of rosy promise politicians sometimes make with such passion and confidence that they actually may have convinced even themselves that it is true.’ Did politics play a role and you felt as if as the Republicans were throwing stuff at the law that you’re trying to pass it. You’re trying to do this, that you shorthanded this?

Obama replied, “No, I— I think we, in good faith, have been trying to take on a health care system that has been broken for a very long time. And what we’ve been trying to do is to change it in the least disruptive way possible. I mean, keep in mind that there were folks on the left who would have preferred a single payer plan. That would have been a lot more disruptive. There were folks on the right who said, ‘Let’s just get rid of — you know, employer deductions for health care. And give people — a tax credit and they can go buy their own health care in their own market. That would have been more disruptive.

“We tried to find — a proven model. We’ve seen it work in Massachusetts. That would be as — as undisruptive as possible. And in good faith, tried to write the law in such a way that people could keep their care. Although we really believe that ultimately, they’re going to be better off when they’re buying health care through the marketplaces. They can — access tax credits. And they’re benefiting from more choice and competition. But obviously, we didn’t do a good enough job in terms of how we crafted the law. And, you know, that’s something that I regret. That’s something that we’re going to do everything we can to get fixed. In the meantime — . . .”

"We Cannot Trust Ken Cuccinelli," the television advertisement says.

In TV Ads, Only McAuliffe Sought Hispanic Vote in Va.

Tuesday’s Virginia gubernatorial election was ground zero for partisan strategists hoping to gain enough momentum to carry their party through the 2014 midterms and beyond,” Peter Olsen-Phillips reported Wednesday for the Sunlight Foundation Reporting Group.

“Outside groups spent furiously, as a win in the truly ‘purple’ Commonwealth would serve as a springboard for future electoral victories. Two of the biggest storylines in the Virginia race (aside from the much-publicized scandals) were the role of women and Hispanic voters. Ads from Planned Parenthood and Democrat Terry McAuliffe‘s campaign blasted Republican nominee Ken Cuccinelli (currently the state’s attorney general) for his stances on abortion, contraceptives and divorce. Interestingly, less money appeared to be devoted to wooing Hispanics, at least when it comes to TV ads.

“Ad files collected by Sunlight from the largest Spanish language TV station in the Washington area — the state’s largest media market, and the one with the highest percentage of Hispanic viewers — suggest there was little competition for the state’s burgeoning Latino vote. As of the week before the election, there were only three ad buys for the gubernatorial race in WFDC’s 2013 political ad file (compared to scores for other area stations). All were in support of McAuliffe. . . .”

Kevin Blackistone says there is too much military symbolism in sports.

Blackistone Decries “Star-Spangled Banner” at Games

“Appearing on ESPN this week, journalism Professor Kevin Blackistone railed against the military influence on professional sporting events, decrying ‘The Star-Spangled Banner’ as a ‘war anthem’ that should be abandoned along with other military-style icons of pre-game ritual,” Andrew Kirell reported Friday for Mediaite.

“Blackistone made the comments during an Around the Horn segment on Northwestern University’s controversial new uniform prominently featuring the American flag. Along with this new uniform, the guest said, people should reject ‘the rest of the military symbolism embraced in sports: whether it’s the singing of a war anthem to open every game, whether it’s going to get a hot dog and being able to sign up for the Army at the same time, whether it’s the NFL’s embrace of the mythology of the Pat Tillman story.’

“He added that the national anthem has been sung before every game since the 1917 World Series, but ‘it’s time for people to back away.’ . . .”Blackistone made the same argument in a February 2011 column for AOL Sports.

Blackistone told Journal-isms by email, “Much of the reaction was the same then as it is today. My email box is inundated with racial epithets and other name calling, calls to leave the country and demands are made of my employers to cut me loose.

“The difference this time is I’ve been elevated to a bull’s eye by http://www.breitbart.com/ and the #tcot movement that has taken to Twitter to equate my comments with an attack on the country, veterans, Wounded Warriors, God, etc. Part of the campaign has reached this crescendo on Twitter:

” ‘Truth Rules @PCtypesCanSukit 12h

” ‘@KMSSTV Someone should get a rope & string Kevin Blackistone up to a tall tree. If he doesn’t like the National Anthem then move to Africa.’

“This all because I’ve come to believe through study and observation that the now routine use of so much military symbolism in sport, especially that which is commercial and promotional, desensitizes us to war and elevates sport to a gravity that is untrue. I actually spend a few days in my JOUR458G class discussing nationalism and militarism in sports with readings by Michael Butterworth (Ritual in the ‘Church of Baseball’: Suppressing the Discourse of Democracy After 9/11), Samantha King (Offensive Lines: Sport-State Synergy in an Era of Perpetual War) and Kyle Kusz (From NASCAR Nation to Pat Tillman. Notes on Sport and the Politics of White Cultural Nationalism in Post-9/11 America).

“Then there is the small matter of the uniforms at my alma mater, Northwestern, which spurred this debate, being in violation of the US flag code which seeks to protect the dignity of the flag and those who uphold it around the world. I suspect I should’ve pointed that out to the legions of vile critics. . . .”

Blackistone’s LinkedIn profile describes him as a panelist on “Around the Horn,” occupant of the Shirley Povich Chair in Sports Journalism at the Philip Merrill College of Journalism at the University of Maryland, and an occasional contributor to Politico, NPR and PBS. He was a sports columnist for the Dallas Morning News from September 1990 to September 2006 and AOL Sports from October 2007 to March 2011.

This Much Whiteness Is “Not Healthy for the Field”

Apoorva Mandavilli

Apoorva Mandavilli is internship coordinator at the Science, Health and Environmental Reporting Department at the Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute at New York University.

Last weekend, she went to Gainesville, Fla., for a joint meeting of the National Association of Science Writers and the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing.

Did she stand out?

If you’re a young, white science journalist with good taste in eyeglass frames and dirty-blond hair, congratulations! You could have walked into any conversation in any room at the conference and felt instantly at home,” Mandavilli wrote Friday for medium.com. “I was born and raised in India, and look the part, so I wasn’t engaged in any mirroring. I had one brief conversation at the conference with a male journalist of Indian descent, and a longer one with an Asian-American one. I spotted a couple of East Asian women, and heard rumors of an African-American woman.

“Did I mention there were nearly 500 journalists at the conference?

“Perhaps to you all this seems normal. But I live in New York, where all colors, races and classes mingle constantly, and where this degree of — I’m just going to say it, ‘whiteness’ — is just not normal. More to the point, it’s not healthy for the field.

“To stay relevant, science journalism needs fresh ideas — and the homogeneous group I saw at the conference is inherently limited in the ideas it can offer. Newsrooms everywhere are grappling with this problem, and we can learn from them what’s working and what’s not. But first, we have to acknowledge that this is a problem.

“Without diversity in newsrooms, what you get is a small group of (mostly privileged) people writing for another small group of (mostly privileged) people. Entire stories are missed, and those that do get written have the same, tired perspectives, missing nuances of color, race, class, gender and ethnicity. . . .”

Africans, Asians, Latin Americans More Upbeat on Future

“Even though many in Africa continue to face serious financial adversity, their economic outlook is more positive than many others around the world, and they are hopeful about their children’s future,” the Pew Research Center reported on Friday. “Overall, Africans, along with Asians and Latin Americans, tend to express more positive views about economic conditions than do Europeans and Middle Easterners. Similarly, optimism for the next generation is higher in Africa, Asia, and Latin America.”

The report, part of a 39-nation survey by the Pew Research Center’s Global Attitudes Project, also found that “by many measures the economic outlook is far more grim in other parts of the world. In particular, most Middle Eastern and European publics surveyed offer overwhelmingly gloomy assessments of their economic situations — less than 5% describe economic conditions as good in Spain, Italy, and Greece – and in both regions there is relatively little optimism about the next generation’s economic prospects. In contrast, Africans, Asians, and Latin Americans tend to believe today’s children will be better off financially than their parents. . . .”

Short Takes

  • Demolition on the former Channel 41 Univision TV station downtown was halted Tuesday morning due to a court order,” Joey Palacios reported from San Antonio, Texas, Wednesday for Texas Public Radio. “Demolition began at 5:30 p.m. Monday, shortly after the West Side Preservation Alliance was denied an appeal that afternoon to contest a previous decision that blocked a historic designation. By the time the building was torn apart, about 50 percent of the building was torn apart.” The structure housed the first full-time Spanish-language television station in the United States.
  • These are alleged before-and-after photos of the estranged wife.The New York Post ran a story yesterday about a Chinese court siding with ‘fuming hubby’ Feng Jian, who sued his estranged wife for not telling him about her plastic surgeries and giving birth to an ugly child,” Jim Romenesko reported Friday on his media blog. The story also ran on Yahoo’s Shine site (since removed), crediting RT.com, which ran the story in October 2012. The tale was apparently one of those too good to check. Snopes.com labels the story “probably false” and said it has “been circulating on the Internet for the better part of a decade.”
  • Wednesday’s “Short Takes” section contained an item about Preston Gannaway, a staff photographer at the Virginian-Pilot in Norfolk, who undertook a year-long project photographing Tavaris ‘Teddy Ebony’ Edwards. Edwards is a 21-year-old gay man living in public housing in Chesapeake, Va., who came out when he was 16. He represented several demographics rarely covered in the paper — gay, black, poor. But the project never made the print edition of the Virginian-Pilot “because it wasn’t ready to be published,” Editor Denis Finley messaged Journal-isms on Friday. “The story about Teddy was unfocused and needed a better story line. Preston’s photos, however, were published later as a personal essay on our website. That disappointed Curtis Tate, president of the D.C. chapter of the National Lesbian & Gay Journalists Association. Tate said by email, “At our convention in Boston this summer, NLGJA honored Preston Gannaway’s outstanding work on this series with an Excellence in Journalism Award. While we’re pleased that her photos of Tavaris Edwards have received widespread attention and acclaim in numerous online publications across the country, we’re disappointed the project wasn’t printed in his hometown newspaper, the place where it would have the most impact.”
  • Rosy Chu, Rosy Chudirector of community affairs and public service at KTVU-TV in Oakland, Calif., announced Friday that she will retire from the Cox Media Fox affiliate in December after more than 42 years with the station, TVNewsCheck reported. Chu got her start as a secretary in the art department, then moved on to a number of producer roles. She has hosted and produced a variety of public affairs programs and was the first Asian American woman to host and produce a regularly scheduled talk show, “All the People,” in the San Francisco Bay Area. Chu was on the founding member of the Board of Directors for the San Francisco chapter of the Asian American Journalists Association and was the first Asian American on the Board of Governors for the San Francisco Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.
  • Among the Sunday talk shows, the program with the most growth continues to be Univision’s “Al Punto” with Jorge Ramos, Merrill Knox reported Thursday for TVNewser. It is up 58 percent in total viewers and 62 percent in the 25-54 demographic compared with the same week last year.
  • Mary Hudetz, Phoenix-based West Regional Desk editor at the Associated Press and president of the Native American Journalists Association, is the new editor of Native Peoples Magazine. She starts Monday. “I will oversee production of the magazine’s editorial content. It is a bimonthly publication, coming out every other month,” she told Journal-isms by email. “I am very much looking forward to growing the magazine’s online presence over the next year, and also looking forward to working with writers on stories about Native cultures and people. The magazine is now in its 27th year.”
  • In Britain, “Pat Younge, the BBC’s most senior black executive, has said he would have had a better and more lucrative career in television in the United States,” John Plunkett reported Friday for the Guardian, “because its television industry is more favourable to ethnic minorities. . . .”
  • The International Press Institute (IPI) has stepped into controversy by publishing a guidebook for journalists who cover the Middle East’s central conflict,” media blogger Roy Greenslade reported Friday for Britain’s Guardian newspaper. “The book, Use With Care: A Reporter’s Glossary of Loaded Language in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict, is aimed at finding neutral descriptive terms to balance media coverage.” Six anonymous Israeli and Palestinian media veterans spent a year helping to compile the guide, but “does anyone really believe that journalists on either side will be convinced of the need to adopt more impartial and neutral terms of reference?” Greenslade asked.
  • “The Arabic Network for Human Rights Information, ANHRI, expressed its annoyance concerning the ongoing attacks on media freedoms by the Egyptian authorities, particularly after [the arrest of] Ahmed El-Swefi, a journalist of Al-Ahram newspaper and head of Cairo office of the Iranian channel ‘Al-Alam’, without clear reasons,” ANHRI said Thursday in a news release.
  • In Sierra Leone, “After 19 days of prison detention, Managing Editor and Editor of the Independent Observer newspaper [Messers.], Jonathan Leigh and Bai Bai Sesay were granted bail on November 4, 2013 by a Freetown-Based High Court,” the Media Foundation for West Africa reported Thursday. “The granting of bail to the journalists followed a series of joint protests and appeals by the MFWA and Sierra Leone Journalists Association (SLAJ) that the two be granted bail and their rights respected. . . .”

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