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Obama Takes Swipes at Fox News

President Underscores His Animus on Twitter

BuzzFeed, Columbia Plan Fellowship for Journalists of Color

Post-Dispatch Backs Redress for “Driving While Black”

Boston Herald’s Gaffe Coincides With Scant Diversity

NAACP Lawyer Succeeds David Honig at MMTC

NBC Cameraman With Ebola Virus Heads Back to U.S.

“Comics Journalism” Can Be More Memorable Than Words

Short Takes

President Underscores His Animus on Twitter

“With the ongoing ISIS and Ebola crisis, President Obama surely has a lot on his mind,” Jordan Chariton wrote Thursday for TVNewser. “And yesterday, apparently Fox News was too.

“In two separate speeches, the president cited the network during stump speeches.

” ‘There’s a reason, fewer Republicans, you hear them running around about Obamacare,’ Obama said during a speech at Northwestern University. ‘Cause good, affordable health care might seem like a fanged threat to the freedom of the American people on Fox News, it turns out it’s working out pretty well in the real world’ (watch Greta Van Susteren react . . .).

“To hammer home the point, the president leveraged social media.

“Later in the day, Obama was at it again, this time invoking one of the network’s primetime hosts.

” ‘You already know how powerful the Latino vote can be,’ President Obama said in front of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute’s gala on the subject of immigration reform. ‘In 2012, Latinos voted in record numbers. The next day, even Sean Hannity changed his mind and decided immigration reform was a good idea.’ . . .”

BuzzFeed, Columbia Plan Fellowship for Journalists of Color

“In March, everything Mark Schoofs had been noticing about all the white guys in journalism came together in one place — the Pulitzers,” Kristen Hare reported Thursday for the Poynter Institute.

“Schoofs, investigations and projects editor at BuzzFeed News, was on the jury for the investigative reporting category of the Pulitzer Prizes. He read about 80 entries.

” ‘It was overwhelmingly white and, by the way, overwhelmingly male,’ said Shoofs, (who himself is a white guy who has won a Pulitzer.) And he thinks he knows why.

” ‘What happens, I believe, is that all of the forces in our society that limit opportunities for people of color accumulate the higher up the ladder you go,’ he said in a phone interview. ‘Rightly or wrongly, investigative reporting is considered a plum job, so I think it’s whiter than “regular reporting.” ‘

“On Thursday, BuzzFeed and the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism announced a new fellowship to try and start changing that. Here’s the quick sketch:

Meanwhile, “Journalism minority advocates praised BuzzFeed Wednesday for releasing internal statistics on its staff diversity, along with a ‘rough and evolving’ hiring guide to ensure minorities are better represented in its future hires,” Rose Creasman Welcome wrote Thursday for American Journalism Review.

Post-Dispatch Backs Redress for “Driving While Black”

“There’s an old lawyer joke that, with a slight adjustment, helps explain why a plan by the city of St. Louis offers a level of amnesty to thousands of traffic offenders,” began an editorial posted Friday by the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

” ‘What do you call 220,000 outstanding warrants at the bottom of the ocean?’

“The punchline: ‘A good start.’

“On Oct. 1, the city of St. Louis Municipal Court canceled about 220,000 outstanding arrest warrants for certain nonviolent municipal offenses, many of them traffic violations. The unprecedented ‘amnesty’ program was a response to the situation in Ferguson, and the ongoing attention on the difficulty facing poor people, particularly people of color, who are often [disproportionately] targeted for traffic offenses. . . .”

The editorial also said, “While amnesty will be offered to offenders regardless of race, the argument for it stems from a history that shows municipal and judicial systems in the St. Louis region regularly violate the civil rights of black drivers. It starts with racial profiling, a well-documented problem in the state of Missouri over the past 14 years. In 11 of those years, the racial profiling statistics gathered by the state attorney general’s office showed an increase in the disparity between traffic stops among whites and blacks. In most of St. Louis County’s 90 municipalities, blacks are significantly more likely than whites to be stopped and searched, based on their percentage of population.

“Driving While Black isn’t a joke: The statistics in St. Louis and Missouri show that it is a very real thing.

“Add to that a system in which municipal courts charge fines for traffic offenses beyond the ability of poor people to pay, stacking one fine atop another. Some of those courts, primarily in north St. Louis County, threaten those who can’t pay with jail time, even though that’s illegal. . . .”

Boston Herald’s Gaffe Coincides With Scant Diversity

The Boston Herald’s apology over a racially insensitive cartoon this week might be the latest example of what can happen when a news organization employs so few culturally sensitive journalists.

As CBS News reported on Wednesday, “The cartoon shows the president brushing his teeth in a White House bathroom with a surprised look on his face as a white man sits in the bathtub behind him, asking [President] Obama, ‘Have you tried the new watermelon flavored toothpaste?’

“The caption reads, ‘White House Invader Got Farther Than Originally Thought.’

The cartoon, by Jerry Holbert, was a commentary on the failures of the Secret Service. It got by all the editors at the Herald, but was questioned by the company syndicating the cartoon.

Sue Roush, the managing editor of gocomics.com, told CBS Boston, the Holbert cartoon ‘was reviewed by an editor here, as all our content is, before being sent to syndication clients and posted on our GoComics website,’ ” the CBS report said.

” ‘The editor suggested to Jerry that the use of watermelon as a toothpaste flavor could inject a racial subtext that would distract from the point of the cartoon,’ she said. ‘Jerry agreed and happily replaced it with raspberry.’ . . .” Holbert said he regretted not calling the Herald to let them know about the syndicate’s objection.

The Boston tabloid did not participate in the latest diversity census of the American Society of News Editors, and Editor-in-Chief Joe Sciacca, a former political reporter and columnist, did not respond to an inquiry Friday about the paper’s diversity. Other Boston journalists said they were hard-pressed to think of journalists of color who worked there, though after reflection, came up with one or two possibilities. 

When Kimberly Atkins left the paper in 2006, this column reported, no journalists of color remained in the newsroom. [update: Atkins has returned as chief Washington correspondent and columnist.]

In 2010, the tabloid ran a front page with the headline, “Mass. Cracks Down on Illegals,” with a photo showing “No Tuition” stamped on the head of an apparent Hispanic man, “No Medicaid” on an Asian man and “No Welfare” on a black woman. The national associations of black and Hispanic journalists protested. [updated Oct. 5]

NAACP Lawyer Succeeds David Honig at MMTC

David Honig, co-founder and 28-year president of the Minority Media and Telecommunications Council, which lobbies for minority broadcast ownership and trains potential owners, has stepped down and Kim M. Keenan, general counsel and secretary of the NAACP, has succeeded him as president and CEO, the organization announced Friday.

Keenan said in a news release, “I am thrilled to join the MMTC staff and to pursue my passion in media and telecommunications law, where I started my career. I have always admired the way MMTC advocates for diversity and inclusion in the most important industries in the world, and I embrace this opportunity to contribute my experience and vision to their work.”

Honig has assumed the role of president emeritus and general counsel and will continue to lead MMTC’s media and telecom brokerage operations and advise on certain FCC matters, the release added.

Honig told Journal-isms by email that the succession plan was two years in the making. “Idea was to pass the baton to a new generation of leadership before I turn 65. We just made it (I’ll be 65 in December). I’ll still be fulltime, handling our FCC rulemaking docket, the station group and the media/telecom brokerage, so I won’t be going very far. And Kim Keenan is amazing. We [couldn’t] have chosen a better leader. The nation’s top civil rights attorney! Just what we needed.”

Before her NAACP service, according to the announcement, Keenan “was the principal of her own law firm and served in the litigation practices of two nationally recognized law firms for more than eighteen years. After law school, she served as law clerk to the Honorable John Garrett Penn in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia. A top litigator and civil rights attorney, Keenan is a past president of the 100,000 member District of Columbia Bar, as well as the National Bar Association, the nation’s oldest and largest association of lawyers of color in the world. . . .”

NBC Cameraman With Ebola Virus Heads Back to U.S.

“An American cameraman helping to cover the Ebola outbreak in Liberia for NBC News has tested positive for the virus and will be flown back to the United States for treatment,” David Bauder reported Thursday for the Associated Press.

“NBC News President Deborah Turness said Thursday the rest of the NBC News crew including medical correspondent Dr. Nancy Snyderman will be flown back to the U.S. and placed in quarantine for 21 days ‘in an abundance of caution.’

“NBC identified the freelance cameraman on its website as 33-year-old Ashoka Mukpo. He has been working in Liberia for three years for Vice News and other media outlets, and has been covering the Ebola epidemic, according to the network. He began shooting for NBC on Tuesday. . . .”

Short Takes

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