Maynard Institute archives

Journal-isms Mon Apr 14

Brit Hume, Julie Pace, George Will, Bob Woodward, Chris Wallace

All-White “Fox News Sunday” Panel Takes Up Issue of Race

Have President Obama and Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. been disrespected because of their race? Are some states’ efforts to restrict the vote racially motivated?

An all-white panel on “Fox News Sunday” considered that question — black journalist Juan Williams was absent — and the near-unanimous rejection of those propositions demonstrated the difference diversity can make in such forums.

The next morning, on TVOne’s “NewsOne Now” with Roland Martin, an all-black panel weighed those issues and — surprise — the conclusions were nearly diametrically opposed.

Where on “Fox News Sunday” the reference point for how Holder was treated was Janet Reno, President Clinton’s attorney general, on “NewsOne Now” it was the “you lie!” shouted at the president during his 2009 State of the Union Address by Rep. Joe Wilson, R-S.C. Joia Jefferson Nuri of the Public Eye Communications made that reference in conversation with Martin and Armstrong Williams, the conservative commentator, who contended that the subject on the table should be lack of sufficient black economic progress.

Media Matters for America excerpted the Fox discussion, which can be found in its entirety here:

CHRIS WALLACE, HOST: Attorney General Eric Holder complaining about treatment of him and also the president after another testy exchange with House Republicans on Capitol Hill, and we’re back now with the panel. Well Attorney General Holder said the Obama administration has faced, his words, unprecedented, ugly opposition and speaking to Al Sharpton’s National Action Network he clearly implied it’s because of race. Brit, does he have a point?

BRIT HUME, FOX NEWS SENIOR POLITICAL ANALYST: I don’t think so. And I think, you know — first of all, it’s false that no attorney general, no president have been subjected to this kind of treatment. After all, Bill Clinton was impeached, think about that for a moment. [Nixon administration Attorney General] John Mitchell went to jail. I mean the list is long of attorneys general and other officials who have been subjected to some very rough treatment on Capitol Hill and elsewhere.

And this strikes me as kind of crybaby stuff from Holder. My sense about this is that both Eric Holder and Barack Obama have benefited politically enormously from the fact that they are African-American and the first to hold the jobs that they hold and this — I don’t know if he specifically meant race or not, I suspect perhaps he did. But to those two men race has been both a shield and a sword that they have used effectively to defend themselves and to attack others. And I think it is depressing at this stage in our national life after all we’ve been through on this issue and given the overwhelming consensus on the issue of civil rights that this kind of stuff is still going on.

[…]

WALLACE: We asked you for questions from the panel, for the panel rather, and we got this on Twitter from Michael Daigeaun. Why is it that if you oppose their position and you’re white, you are branded a racist? Both AG Holder and POTUS — President of the United States — race bait. George, is that what’s going on here?

GEORGE WILL, FOX NEWS CONTRIBUTOR: Sure. Look, liberalism has a kind of Tourette Syndrome these days, it just [is] constantly saying the word racism and racist. There is an old saying in the law. If you have the law on your side, argue the law. If you have the facts on your side, argue the facts. If you have neither, pound the table. This is pounding the table.

There is kind of intellectual poverty now. Liberalism hasn’t had a new idea since the 1960s, except Obamacare and the country doesn’t like it. Foreign policy is a shambles from Russia to Iran to Syria to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. And the recovery is unprecedentedly bad. So what do you do? You say anyone who criticizes us is a racist. It’s become a joke among young people. You go to a campus where this kind of political correctness reigns and some young person will say, “Looks like it’s going to rain,” and a person looks and says, “You’re a racist.” I mean, it’s so inappropriate, the constant invocation of this, that I think it’s becoming a national mirth [emphasis added].

Others on the panel were Julie Pace, who covers the White House for the Associated Press, and Bob Woodward, associate editor of the Washington Post.

ESPN Analyst Writes of Being Profiled in His Own Driveway

Doug Glanville

“Powerful stuff today, via The Atlantic, from former MLB player and current ESPN baseball analyst Doug Glanville,” Richard Horgan wrote Monday for FishbowlNY. “The athlete-turned-author-turned-broadcaster details a very unpleasant recent encounter with a wayward patrol cop, who assumed the black man shoveling snow in front of a certain West Hartford residence must be hustling for bucks.

“From Glanville’s piece:

“After getting legal advice from my neighbor and my wife, I ruled out any immediate action. In fact, I was hesitant to impulsively share my story with anyone I knew, let alone my media friends at ESPN or the New York Times. I hoped to have a meaningful, productive conversation with West Hartford leaders — something that might be hard to achieve if my story turned into a high-profile controversy. Instead, I asked my neighbor to help me arrange a meeting with the West Hartford officials. I arrived at Town Hall, I was flanked by my neighbor and my wife. They came as supporters, but it helped that they were also attorneys…

“In a sense, the shoveling incident was a painful reminder of something I’ve always known: My biggest challenge as a father will be to help my kids navigate a world where being black is both a source of pride and a reason for caution. I want them to have respect for the police, but also a healthy fear ? at least as long as racial profiling continues to be an element of law enforcement. But I also want them to go into the world with a firm sense of their own self-worth. . . .”

“Lots more in the essay, including the reaction of Glanville’s mother and how this incident reminded him of something that happened to him as a kid at summer camp. Read the full piece here.

Staff of the new Los Angeles Register. (Credit: Leonard Ortiz/Orange County Regi

New L.A. Register — A Picture of Diversity?

“Looks like the Los Angeles Register staff falls a little short,” Phillip Blanchard wrote Sunday on his Testy Copy Editors blog under the headline “Diversity.”

Mary Ann Milbourn wrote over the weekend in the Orange County Register, “The Los Angeles Register, a new daily newspaper, will debut Wednesday in Freedom Communications’ latest expansion in Southern California.

“Freedom owns the Orange County Register.

“Publisher Aaron Kushner said he is launching a Los Angeles newspaper because it makes good business sense and will introduce residents in the nation’s second largest city to the Register’s style of community-based journalism.

“ ‘We are going to bring our fabulous brand of local journalism and political perspective to a very large market,’ Kushner said.

Donna Wares, managing editor of the Register, could not be reached for comment on Monday.

According to the 2010 Census, the city of Los Angeles was 9.6 percent black or African American; 0.7 percent American Indian or Alaska native; 11.3 percent Asian American, 48.5 percent Hispanic or Latino and 28.7 percent white only, not Hispanic or Latino. Another 4.6 percent said they were two or more races.

Obama Drops 77-Cent Figure as Amount Earned by Women to Man’s Dollar

In his weekly radio address, President Obama dropped mention of the 77-cent figure he had given as the amount of money that women made for every dollar a man earned, Glenn Kessler reported Sunday in his “Fact Checker’ column in the print version of the Washington Post.

Kessler had given the president two Pinocchios for the statement in the online version of the Fact Checker column that appeared last week.

“From a political perspective, the Census Bureau’s 77-cent figure is golden,” Kessler wrote. “Unless women stop getting married and having children, and start abandoning careers in childhood education for naval architecture, this huge gap in wages will almost certainly persist. Democrats thus can keep bringing it up every two years.

“There appears to be some sort of wage gap and closing it is certainly a worthy goal. But it’s a bit rich for the president to repeatedly cite this statistic as an ’embarrassment.’ . . . The president must begin to acknowledge that “77 cents” does not begin to capture what is actually happening in the work force and society. . . .”

Meanwhile, Daniel Holloway of Broadcasting & Cable wrote that the Writers Guild of America, in its 2014 Hollywood Writers Report released on Monday, found:

Bernie Lunzer, president of the Newspaper Guild, Communications Workers of America, told Journal-isms on Friday that he pay disparity between men and women and among the races has nearly vanished from newspaper newsrooms.

Robin Roberts on Gay Disclosure: “You Gotta Live Your Life”

Robin Roberts

In an interview with Good Housekeeping magazine, “Good Morning America” anchor Robin Roberts linked her coming out as gay in December to a renewed appreciation for the value of life after her bone marrow transplant.

“Shortly after I posted about my relationship with Amber on Facebook last year, I showed a picture of us with my niece — who’d gotten married in Baton Rouge, LA — on GMA,” Roberts said in an interview with Jane Francisco.

“It was like a beautiful family picture. I was so moved that people got it and said, ‘You’re happy.’ Others, though, were asking, ‘Why didn’t you say something about her before? Why are you only recognizing her now?’ News flash: Some people like their anonymity. This is what’s right for me. Love is love, and I’m grateful to have that. Sometimes there’s a stigma attached to how people view you if you’re living a certain way. But I don’t care — you gotta live your life. You gotta find what happiness is and what it means for you, and you can’t get caught up in what someone is saying about you on Twitter. You don’t go through a year like I did to not be happy and not make your own choices. . . .”

Short Takes

    Five D.C. groups sponsored the journalism job fair.

  • About 200 people participated in the journalism job fair co-sponsored by the District of Columbia chapters of the National Association of Black Journalists, National Association of Hispanic Journalists, Asian American Journalists Association, National Lesbian & Gay Journalists Association and Society of Professional Journalists, according to Brandon Benavides, the NAHJ chapter president. He said participants exceeded expectations among recruiters and job-seekers, some of whom came from other cities. The event was officially called the “Washington, D.C. Job Fair hosted by Georgetown University’s Master’s Journalism Program.”
  • Univision is launching an English-language video channel today called TheFlama.com with an eye on Hispanics between ages 15 and 30,” Christopher Heine reported Monday for AdAge. “Condom maker Trojan is the cross-programming launch partner for the online endeavor, while McDonald’s is sponsoring the funny-minded show, Super Accurate Soccer History. The initiative builds on the youngster-targeted, English-language television channel, Fusion, which Univision debuted last fall in conjunction with Disney. . . .”
  • Marie Arana, former editor of the Washington Post’s Book World section, won the 2013 Los Angeles Times Book Prize for biography for “Bolivar: American Liberator” (Simon & Schuster). The ceremony took place Saturday at the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books.
  • Dwight A. Dugas, news director at KLFY-TV in Lafayette, La., is stepping down for another unspecified job at the station, Dugas told Journal-isms on Monday. The changes come as a result of the merger of Media General and LIN Media in a $1.6 billion cash and stock deal that will create the nation’s second-largest pure-play broadcast group with 74 stations. In 2008, Dugas became making him the first African American television news director in Southwest Louisiana.
  • The ongoing standoff over Pacifica’s leadership reached the California courts last week, opening what could become a protracted legal battle over the Pacifica Foundation board of directors’ decision to fire executive director Summer Reese,” Ben Mook reported Monday for Current.org. “Reese, who has defied the board’s March 14 vote to fire her and taken up residence in Pacifica headquarters in Berkeley, filed a civil lawsuit in Alameda County, seeking a restraining order to reverse the board’s decision. . . .”
  • Now we REALLY know that NBC’s Saturday Night Live does not give a crap when it comes to mocking Latinos,” the Latino Rebels website wrote on Sunday. “A few weeks back, we saw a non-Latina (Cecily Strong) fail with perhaps one of the most unfunny loud Latina stereotypes. Last night, it happened again with non-Latino Kenan Thompson doing a heavily accented and over-the-top Dominicano version of Red Sox slugger David ‘Big Papi’ Ortiz. . . .”

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