Maynard Institute archives

February 13, 2015

In 24 Hours, Obama’s Goofy Video Gets 25 Million Views

Obama Critical of HBCUs in Meetiing With Black Caucus

Pundits Abroad Call Western Media Slow on Killing of Muslims

Media Dig for Further Brian Williams Untruths

30 News Outlets Agree to Rules for Freelancers in War Zones

Black Ex-CIA Officer, Accused of Leaking, Appeals Conviction

Story Previews Whitlock’s Site on Race, Sports, Culture

Chilling Series Captures Dangers of Women on Migrant Trail

Short Takes

President Obama’s playful video is providing to be a viral sensation. (video)

In 24 Hours, Obama’s Goofy Video Gets 25 Million Views

A goofy BuzzFeed video featuring President Obama acting out “Things Everybody Does But Doesn’t Talk About” was an instant hit, passing the 25 million views mark Friday on — just a day after its release, BuzzFeed spokeswoman Liz Wasden told Journal-isms.

“Our BuzzFeed Motion Pictures group is always creating fun, shareable content — so when we had the opportunity to work with the President we knew it had HUGE potential, so the team worked hard to come up with something he could have fun with, and that would grab people’s attention,” Wasden said by email.

“We filmed in the White House this week and he was a good sport, came to play, and was up for all our wacky ideas.”

The message embedded in the fun and games was that Feb. 15 is the enrollment deadline for the Affordable Care Act.

BuzzFeed Editor-in-Chief Ben Smith filmed an interview with the president on Tuesday, but the video was a project of the Los Angeles-based entertainment division, said Wasden, who is vice president of communications.

The video proved a social media sensation, drawing such comments as, “I’m in love with the fact that a world leader can be so down to earth. Who cares if he’s the president and your views on him. At the end of the day we are all humans. Put your opinions behind your for a few minutes and enjoy this adorable video.”

Not everyone was laughing. Matt Wilstein reported for Mediaite, “Fox News has uncovered a brand new ‘controversy’ surrounding President Barack Obama’s silly BuzzFeed video, released Thursday, that aims to get more young people to sign up for Obamacare before this weekend’s deadline by showing the president using a selfie stick and saying ‘YOLO.’ The fact that Obama reportedly shot the video on the same day officials confirmed the death of American ISIS hostage Kayla Mueller, has some conservative commentators up in arms.

“ ‘The president says, “YOLO, man!” And for people at home who may not know what that stands for, YOLO stands for “you only live once,” ‘ Fox host Heather Childers told contributor Juan Williams Friday morning. ‘Well you know who’s not alive, Juan, now? Kayla Mueller.’ . . .”

Wasden also said the video, which also features BuzzFeed’s Andrew Ilnyckyj, garnered 1.2 million views in its first hour and 100,000 “likes” in two hours.

In its first 24 hours, it recorded 22.8 million views and reached 77 million people. There were 1.9 million “likes,” comments and shares, she said.

Betsy Klein added Thursday for CNN, “This isn’t the first time the White House has pulled out all the stops for the President’s health care website. Last year, the President appeared on “Between Two Ferns” with Zach Galifinakis, a move largely credited with boosting signups. . . .”

Obama Critical of HBCUs in Meetiing With Black Caucus

President Obama was critical of Historically Black Colleges and Universities during a meeting with members of the Congressional Black Caucus this week according to several in attendance, Lauren Victoria Burke reported Friday for crewof42.com. “The February 10 meeting was the first group gathering with the Black Caucus and the President since June 2013.

“Several who attended the meeting indicated that President Obama felt that the focus of HBCU’s needs to be on the schools changing their ways of doing business rather on changes in federal policy. Those who attended said he was specifically critical of graduation rates and loan policies. The President also spoke to CBC members on his free community college plan which some HBCU advocates believe will hurt HBCUs.

“The Chair of President Obama’s Board of Advisors on HBCUs, Hampton President Dr. William Harvey, was critical of the lack of input the Board had on the community college proposal during a speech in Washington to Administration officials on February 4. He also said he was “disappointed and saddened” by the lack of agency funding for Historically Black colleges and Universities. . . .”

Harvey once said that only 27, or 5.9 percent of the nation’s 458 journalism and mass communication programs are at HBCU institutions. Yet 24.2 percent of the black students who earn bachelor’s degrees in journalism and communications receive them from the 5.9 percent that are HBCU institutions. Influencing the graduation rates are the virtual open-admissions policies at many HBCUs, believing that all deserve a chance.

Pundits Abroad Call Western Media Slow on Killing of Muslims

“Whether three young students were shot and killed in North Carolina this week in a parking dispute or, as their families believe, because they were Muslims, online commentators here and outside the Middle East say the victims’ religion makes it a hate crime,” Rana F. Sweis reported Friday for the New York Times from Amman, Jordan .

“Failing to treat it as such, the commentators say on social media, indicates that Americans and the Western news media just do not understand the region.

“Even before learning that two of the three victims — Yusor Mohammad Abu-Salha, 21, and her sister, Razan Mohammad Abu-Salha, 19 — were Jordanian citizens, their compatriots on social media called for wider coverage of the killings.

“The shooting occurred Tuesday afternoon in Chapel Hill, N.C., but most news media outlets in the United States and abroad did not report on it until later the next day. This led some on social networks to suggest that the news media was slow to cover the story because the victims were Muslim. . . .”

Media Dig for Further Brian Williams Untruths

When NBC News decided to suspend Brian Williams for six months, it seemed clear that the network’s ‘truth squad’ had discovered lies — or ‘conflations’ — beyond the one that initially got him into trouble,” Caroline Bankoff reported Friday for New York magazine. “While NBC hasn’t commented on what they found, other news organizations are reporting on Williams’s further apparent untruths.

“It turns out that the helicopter story probably isn’t the only thing Williams exaggerated from his 2003 visit to Iraq. The Huffington Post notes that on several occasions over the last few years, Williams has talked about traveling with SEAL Team 6, the unit that went on to kill Osama bin Laden in 2011. . . .”

Bankoff also wrote, “The United States Special Operations Command and a former SEAL told the Huffington Post that this was all pretty unlikely. . . . There are similar problems with his memory of the 1989 fall of the Berlin Wall, which he has claimed to have witnessed from the Brandenburg Gate . . .”

30 News Outlets Agree to Rules for Freelancers in War Zones

So far, 30 organizations have signed on to “A call for global safety principles and practices,” developed after the murders of freelancers James Foley and Steven Sotloff last year and accelerated by the beheadings by Islamic State, Robert Mahoney, deputy director of the Committee to Protect Journalists, wrote on Friday.

“In the end everyone made accommodations, and what has emerged is unprecedented,” Mahoney wrote. “Editors sending freelancers to conflict areas will now follow these practices:

“News organizations and editors should endeavor to treat journalists and freelancers they use on a regular basis in a similar manner to the way they treat staffers when it comes to issues of safety training, first aid and other safety equipment, and responsibility in the event of injury or kidnap.

“News organizations should not make an assignment with a freelancer in a conflict zone or dangerous environment unless the news organization is prepared to take the same responsibility for the freelancer’s well-being in the event of kidnap or injury as it would a staffer. News organizations have a moral responsibility to support journalists to whom they give assignments in dangerous areas, as long as the freelancer complies with the rules and instructions of the news organization.

“Reporters covering stories in dangerous environments are urged to:

“…complete a recognized news industry first aid course, to carry a suitable first-aid kit and continue their training to stay up-to-date on standards of care and safety both physical and psychological. Before undertaking an assignment in such zones, journalists should seek adequate medical insurance covering them in a conflict zone or area of infectious disease. . . .”

Story Previews Whitlock’s Site on Race, Sports, Culture

The Undefeated, an ESPN site on race, sports, and culture for African Americans, which columnist Jason Whitlock once dubbed “Black Grantland,” released its first story Thursday ahead of the NBA All-Star Weekend, Chris Ip reported Thursday for Columbia Journalism Review.

“A prelude to the site’s full launch as early as June, the story was posted to ESPN.com. It is a 9,000-word profile of controversial pundit and former NBA star Charles Barkley that traces his outspoken comments on race to Booker T. Washington and their shared home state of Alabama.

“The profile is an example of the kind of reporting Whitlock, the site’s founder, says can use sports as a lens to look at larger society. . . .”

 

  • Jesse Washington with reporting by Ryan Cortes, the Undefeated: Up From Leeds

Short Takes

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