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Tony Cox Show Hurting; Dyson Plans Return

"Not Dead Yet, but . . . We’re in Trouble"

Woods Has Long Love-Hate Relationship With Press

Handful of Journalists of Color at Vancouver Olympics

Miami Herald Is Right to Tilt Pro-Gay, Ombudsman Says

N.Y. Times, NYU Plan Web Site For East village Short Takes

"Not Dead Yet, but . . . We’re in Trouble"

Veteran journalist Tony Cox says the African American-oriented daily talk show he hosts on about 15 public radio stations is in financial trouble and might not last much longer. But social critic Michael Eric Dyson, whom Cox replaced on many of those stations, is set to return with his own show in March.

"We’re victims of the economy," Cox told Journal-isms. "Public radio is suffering across the board, and black public radio is even worse.

"We’re not dead yet, but there is no point in looking at it any other way: We’re in trouble."

"Up Front With Tony Cox" began Oct. 1 as part of the offerings of African American Public Radio Consortium, which in 2002 produced "the Tavis Smiley show" and in 2005 National Public Radio’s "News & Notes" program with first Ed Gordon, then Farai Chideya hosting. Cox worked on all three of those shows, and hosted the latter in its final days. The consortium continues to produce "Tell Me More" with Michel Martin on NPR.

The consortium, whose members are primarily stations at historically black colleges and universities, launched "The Michael Eric Dyson Show" in April — with Oprah Winfrey as his first guest — but that program lasted only four months when the Georgetown University professor took a break and never returned. Cox filled in amid the bad feelings some harbored toward Dyson’s departure.

"The Michael Eric Dyson show is no longer," Loretta Rucker, executive director of the consortium, told Journal-isms in September. "We had a good four months with Dr. Dyson but the arrangement eventually devolved over compensation."

But Dyson’s producer, LaFontaine F. Oliver, general manager of WEAA-FM, the Morgan University station, meanwhile secured a $505,000 grant to continue production of the program.

Bruce Theriault, senior vice president for radio at the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, told stations last week that the new Dyson show would be ready by the end of March.

The previous Dyson show was a low-budget affair in which Dyson indulged his passions, sometimes devoting the entire hour to a single guest. The show ran on 18 stations.

"WEAA, an AAPRC member that played a key role in recruiting Dyson to public radio, is now planning a different show for Dyson, one that involves more recorded segments than the earlier live format," Karen Everhart wrote in October for Current, which covers pubolic broadcasting. ‘The new production arrangement also opens the door for broader carriage of a Dyson show on mainstream public radio outlets, Theriault said."

the broader financial base and the grant from CPB could make the difference in its success, stations that have carried one or both of the men told Journal-isms.

"Tony Cox is a great journalist," Ron Jones, program director of WDET-FM in Detroit, Dyson’s hometown, told Journal-isms. But he said he did not think "UpFront" was even made available to his station, which is not a member of the African American consortium. "We’re very interested in the show," he said of Dyson’s new offering. "I’ve been a fan of Michael Eric Dyson and met with him with a group of black public radio broadcasters last fall to talk about the show."

Charles Hudson, program manager at KTSU at Texas Southern University in Houston, said, "we’ll probably run both" shows, not having heard of UpFront’s financial problems. "My main thing is diversity of perspective," he said, saying "we want as many different viewpoints as we can get."

credit: Mike Luckovich

Woods Has Long Love-Hate Relationship With Press

"Last Friday morning’s news conference wasn’t the revelation some critics have suggested" — just another chapter in Tiger Woods’s love-hate relationship with the press," David Carr wrote Sunday for the New York Times. "Even as he offered up an abject, if very rehearsed, public apology, it became apparent that, on the course and off, Tiger Rules still prevailed.

"In his speech, Mr. Woods spoke directly about how entitlement led him to make horrible decisions. But part of the reason that he lived his life so recklessly was that he froze out any reporter or media organization that went off message. Setting aside his off-course interests, most beat writers didn’t bother to spill a lot of ink talking about his tendency to slam a club on occasion, blow past autograph-seekers and curse out the gods and the galleries when a shot fell short of perfection.

"His footprint in the game was so large that Mr. Woods was able to dictate the terms of coverage. Probably the last time Tiger Woods let it all hang out was in 1997 in a piece by Charles P. Pierce in GQ. Mr. Woods came off as profane, funny and a bit of a player. He hated the profile, and after that, it was nothing but wonky golf talk from the microphone and baleful stares at anybody who wanted more than that.

‚Äú ‘He stopped being impressed by coverage at a very young age, and after that, he became very cold-eyed and wondered, "What‚Äôs in it for me?" ‘ Mr. Diaz said. ‘He would love to play golf and never have to answer a question.’ (Golf Digest has a long-term contract with Mr. Woods for a monthly column that is currently suspended.) "Rob Tannenbaum wrote a piece about Mr. Woods for TV Guide in 2001. The magazine had agreed not to make race a subject of the interview, but Mr. Woods brought it up independently. Even that was not allowed. ‚Äú ‘His handler walked over and the interview ended immediately,’ Mr. Tannenbaum said. ‘Tiger just got up and left the room, and no amount of explaining that I had not breached the agreement was going to get Tiger to come back and sit down.’ (Mr. Tannenbaum wrote up what he had, including Mr. Woods‚Äôs father, Earl Woods, saying he hoped his son didn‚Äôt marry anytime soon: ‘Let‚Äôs face it, a wife can sometimes be a deterrent to a good game of golf.’)"

Lewis Johnson of NBC Sports is one of a handful of journalists of color covering the Winter Olympics in Vancouver, Canada. (Video)

Handful of Journalists of Color at Vancouver Olympics

A handful of journalists of color are among the hundreds of media people covering the Winter Olympics in Vancouver, Canada. There are fewer newspaper reporters than at any recent Olympics, and a greater share of digital journalists.

when credentialing took place in November, Tripp Mickle wrote for Sports Business Journal:

"Suffering from the one-two punch of declining ad dollars and an evolving media landscape, newspapers plan to send fewer reporters to the Vancouver Olympics than to any recent Winter Games."

"The U.S. Olympic Committee, which issued 481 credentials to publications and Web sites for the event, has had 135 credentials returned this year. More than 90 percent of the credentials were returned by newspapers and traditional publications like Newsweek, which returned five of six credentials; The Dallas Morning News, which returned four of six; and the McClatchy’s Washington bureau, which returned seven credentials and kept four.

"Digital media is taking up a larger chunk of credentials for the Vancouver Games than any previous Olympics. Yahoo!, which had one credential for the 2006 Winter Games in Turin, will have 21 this year; AOL, which had one in 2006, will have five; and ESPN.com, which had no credentials last time, will have seven."

Among the journalists of color at the Games are Howard Bryant of ESPN; Shannon Shelton of the Detroit Free Press; Jean-Jacques Taylor of the Dallas Morning News; Kevin Blackistone of AOL Fanhouse; Jerry Brewer of the Seattle Times; Sal Ruibal of USA Today; Roxanna Scott, assignment editor at USA Today; Jerry A. Williams, USA Today I.T. director; Deborah Barrington, USA Today senior assignment editor; Jerome Solomon of the Houston Chronicle; Jonathan Abrams of the New York Times; Phil Taylor of Sports Illustrated; and Lewis Johnson of NBC Sports.

"I viewed the Olympic assignment as an opportunity to really grow as a writer and reporter because the Winter Games have forced me to stretch myself," Taylor told Journal-isms by e-mail from Vancouver. "Outside of hockey, I don’t follow any of the other Olympic sports, so it’s been a challenge to familiarize myself with them. That’s the challenge and that’s the fun.

"I haven’t seen many journalists of color here, which doesn’t really surprised me. Relatively speaking, there aren’t that many columnists of color and there aren’t that many reporters of color who cover the Olympics. Typically, those are the folks who cover the Olympics. Hopefully, that’s something that will change quickly over time."

Miami Herald Is Right to Tilt Pro-Gay, Ombudsman Says

Since June, the Miami Herald "ran seven op-ed columns supporting various gay rights, versus two that opposed. News columnist Daniel Shoer Roth, who is openly gay, wrote three more in the news pages that were sympathetic to gay causes," the paper’s ombudsman, Edward Schumacher-Matos, wrote on Sunday.

"The pro views, for the most part, supported gay adoption of children, gay service in the military and gay marriage. The anti ones, both by Cal Thomas, rejected having gays in the military, gay marriage and the ordination of gay Episcopal bishops.

"Add to this two editorials in which The Herald editorial board endorsed allowing gay adoption and ending the military’s don’t ask/don’t tell policy and the balance on the pages clearly favored expanding gay rights. Is this wrong? I don’t think so ."

"Two- or three-to-one may be the right balance of op-ed columns representing community views in favor and against an expansion of gay rights. . . . If morality is important in guiding the newspaper — and I think it is ‚Äî then this means that the newspaper is morally obliged to be more concerned about its impact on gays in our community than on those whose life choice is to restrict them."

N.Y. Times, NYU Plan Web Site For East village

"NYTimes.com announced today a collaboration with New York University’s Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute to create a new Local community news and information Web site covering the East Village¬†in New York City," the Times announced on Monday.

"The Local East Village site will be developed by N.Y.U.’s journalism faculty and students and is scheduled to launch later this fall. Richard G. Jones, an award-winning veteran journalist and former New York Times reporter, will serve as the editor of the site. Mr. Jones will work with students, faculty and the East Village community to cover the news of everyday life in the neighborhood.

"Together with N.Y.U. professors Yvonne Latty and Darragh Worland, Mr. Jones will also manage ‘The Hyperlocal Newsroom,’ a course that will allow students to engage in a variety of ways, including reporting and writing for the site. Summer courses will also be available for students of other journalism institutions.

"N.Y.U. will coordinate with Mary Ann Giordano, a New York Times deputy Metropolitan editor, on the editorial content for The Local East Village. The site will live on NYTimes.com. The Times is advising on the development of the site by the Carter Institute’s ‘Studio 20 concentration,’ which is taught by Journalism Institute faculty members Jay Rosen and Jason Samuels."

Short Takes

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