Maynard Institute archives

Univision Buys TheRoot.com

Broadcaster, Black-Themed Site Each See Chance for Growth

Broadcaster, Black-Themed Site Each See Chance for Growth

TheRoot.com has been sold to Univision Communications Inc. for an undisclosed amount, the parties announced Thursday, in a deal that puts a slice of the African American market in the domain of the U.S. company most dominant in Spanish-language broadcasting.

“I’m excited,” Donna Byrd, publisher of TheRoot.com, told Journal-isms by telephone. “Everyone’s looking for how we can grow our business, and they’re looking to do the same thing.” For TheRoot, ownership by Univision means access to Univision’s televison, radio, video and digital production facilities.

For Univision, the acquisition represents another step in expanding beyond its Hispanic base. Spokesman Jose Zamora told Journal-isms, “We focus a lot on diversity. Everything is tied to our multicultural aspect. It’s how America is now.” He pointed to the Fusion network, a Univision partnership with Disney Co. that targets millennials of all races.

Univision said in its news release, “In joining UCI, The Root will leverage UCI’s extensive digital production facilities and publishing infrastructure, while its editorial team will retain its voice and stay true to its mission, which has made it successful throughout its history.

” ‘This bold new partnership between Univision and The Root underscores the ties that have long bound people of color together throughout the Western Hemisphere and is a sign of even greater levels of communication, collaboration and exchange between these culturally vital groups of people,’ said Professor Henry Louis Gates Jr., director of the Hutchins Center for African and African American Research at Harvard University and chairman of The Root, who co-founded The Root along with Donald Graham, CEO and chairman of Graham Holdings Company, in January of 2008. . . .”

Pinkie Mayfield, a spokeswoman for Graham Holdings, formerly the Washington Post Co., told Journal-isms that Univision approached Graham Holdings. For TheRoot.com, “We just think it is a unique opportunity for growth.” Graham cited the same motivation in his company’s release.

The Univision announcement continued, ” ‘Like Univision, The Root aims to serve a significant segment of America’s diverse population. Our diverse communities are continuing to define the fabric of the country, from buying power, to social influence, to elections,’ said Isaac Lee, president of News and Digital for UCI and CEO of Fusion. ‘This game-changing union strengthens our ability to fulfill our shared missions of informing and empowering our communities.’

“Donna Byrd, VP, Digital and Publisher of The Root, is joining the leadership team of Univision Digital, which recently added seasoned executives Mark Lopez (EVP, General Manager) and Joe Simon (Chief Technology Officer, Digital) in the past two months. Lyne Pitts will continue in her role as the managing editor of The Root.”

TheRoot.com ranked fourth on a list of African American-oriented websites that Journal-isms submitted to comScore, Inc., in January to determine rankings for most unique visitors in 2014.

The list began:

1. BET.com, 8.473,000; monthly totals representing an increase of 25 percent over December 2013.

2. MadameNoire.com, 6,601,000; increase of 78 percent.

3. World Star Hip-Hop, 6,146,000; decrease of 43 percent.

4. TheRoot.com, 4,375,000; increase of 286 percent.

5. Bossip.com, 4,269,000; increase of 47 percent.

Byrd told Journal-isms that she would move from Washington to Miami and that those in TheRoot’s New York office would work in Univision space. The Washington office of TheRoot would remain open.

While Byrd would not disclose a purchase price, she said that “a number of companies” had made overtures for TheRoot “and we think Univision is a great partner.”

Univision is not owned by Hispanics and TheRoot is not owned by African Americans. Like them, other media companies have made efforts to link the two ethnic groups. The former Black Issues in Higher Education became Diverse: Issues in Higher Education in 2005 to better appeal to advertisers, and Edward Lewis, founder of Essence magazine, went on to become chairman of Latina magazine.

In 2011, Time Inc. named Essence Communications Inc. President Michelle Ebanks to the additional post of president of People en Español.

“Journal-isms” also appears on TheRoot.com.

Whites OK With Upcoming Minority Status

May 20, 2015

Resistance to Immigration Tame Compared With Past Years

Waco Bikers Include Hispanics, Blacks; CNN Called Out
 
ASNE Opposes Reauthorizing Patriot Act

Man Tries to Steal News Van With Reporter Sitting Inside

Detroit’s LeDuff Nabs Suspect Who Mugged Restaurateur


Iverson’s Advice: Treat Sources Like People in Your Life


5-Part Series Tackles Mental Health in the Newsroom


Female Journalists Sound Alarm on Issues Affecting Women

Activists Call Attention to Black Women Killed by Police

Short Takes

Photographer Tyler Shields imagined racial role reversals, among others, in his

Resistance to Immigration Tame Compared With Past Years

No nation with a white European ethnic majority has evolved to become a nonwhite-majority nation, a shift the U.S. is on track to achieve by mid-century,” Francis Wilkinson wrote Tuesday for BloombergView. “Certainly no nation has done so after half a millennium in which white Europeans and their American kin colonized much of the (nonwhite) world, and dominated global economics and warfare.

“This is the context in which current U.S. debates over immigration take place. Given the enormity of the change, opposition to immigration among white Americans is shocking only for its lack of breadth and urgency.

“We have been here before — almost. ‘The projected shift to a “majority minority” nation with respect to the white race as it’s classified now in the U.S. has a parallel with an earlier shift,’ noted William Frey, a demographer at the Brookings Institution, via e-mail. The official response in that case was significantly more vehement.

“In the early 20th century, Congress, backed by the ‘science’ of eugenics, restricted immigration by the ‘races’ of southern and eastern Europe, which were generally viewed as inferior stock. Madison Grant’s 1916 book, ‘The Passing of the Great Race,’ argued for Nordic supremacy to maintain the nation’s stature. A 1917 law created the Asiatic Barred Zone to further curtail already limited immigration from most of Asia and the Middle East. And in 1921 and 1924 new immigration restrictions were imposed to privilege admission to the U.S. of immigrants from Germany, Ireland and the U.K. and to reduce the flow of most others.

“Current resistance to nonwhite immigration — including opposition to the legalization of undocumented immigrants who are already here — is weak by comparison. . . . “

Although Wilkinson wrote that “White fears of being overrun aren’t entirely dead, and evidence of white backlash isn’t hard to come by,” he quoted a few theories about its lack of intensity from Deborah Schildkraut, a political scientist at Tufts University and the author of “Americanism in the Twenty-First Century: Public Opinion in the Age of Immigration.”

“Schildkraut cited a few theories, including increasing acceptance of the notion that American identity has been decoupled from racial ancestry. That could be one reason that the overt white nationalism of European right-wing parties has struggled to gain stronger purchase in the U.S. Instead, Republican immigration restrictionists appear likely to be eclipsed by those who view political support from Hispanics (and Asians) as the only viable route to the party’s national success.

“On the Democratic side, restrictionists already have been routed. When Hillary Clinton recently announced her solidarity with undocumented immigrants, promising to surpass [President] Obama in the aggressive use of executive action in their behalf, there was no rebuttal from Democrats and the mainstream Republican response was strikingly muted. . . .”

Wilkinson’s piece appeared as some news outlets took note of an exhibit by photographer Tyler Shields at the Andrew Weiss Gallery in Santa Monica, Calif., that includes staged photos with racial role reversals.

Waco Bikers Include Hispanics, Blacks; CNN Called Out

Juan Garcia, left, and Martin Lewis (Credit:  McLennan County Sheriff’s Office)

It has become an article of faith on social media that the bikers arrested after the Waco, Texas, shootout Sunday that left nine bikers dead were white and that their treatment by police and the media contrasts with that meted out to black protesters.

While that is largely true, several of the 171 people arrested have Hispanic surnames, and at least two appear to be black.

Nicole Chavez of the Austin American-Statesman reported Tuesday that Juan Garcia, 45, was being held on two felony charges on a combined bond of $2 million.

Chavez reported that Garcia is an engineer with the Public Works Department and is not on any statewide lists of known gang members, according to an Austin police spokeswoman.

Garcia was one of three motorcycle gang members released from jail Tuesday after mistakenly being given reduced charges, resulting in lower bond amounts. They made arrangements later in the day to turn themselves in to authorities, Tommy Witherspoon reported for the Waco Tribune-Herald.

In the San Antonio Express-News, Mark D. Wilson and Guillermo Contreras reported Tuesday that “Martin Lewis — the retired San Antonio police detective with ties to the Bandidos Motorcycle Club who was arrested at the biker brawl in Waco this weekend — has been fired from his job as a bus driver for Northside ISD.” Lewis appears to be African American.

Wilson and Contreras also wrote, “He served 32 years with SAPD until his retirement in February 2004 and was most recently in the vice unit. He was charged with engaging in organized criminal activity and still being held on $1 million bond, according to McLennan County jail records. . . .”

Meanwhile, Erik Wemple wrote Tuesday in the Washington Post, “Waco Police Sgt. Patrick Swanton, the department’s public affairs officer, just finished a briefing that brushed back a certain news organization. ” ‘If you don’t know that it’s a fact, please come to me and I will give that information if I can,’ said Swanton, in what he called the ‘brutally honest’ phase of his briefing about Sunday’s biker-gang violence at the Texas city’s Twin Peaks restaurant.

“He continued at scolding length:

” ‘There was a media outlet that was reporting that law enforcement killed four of the individuals at this scene Sunday afternoon. I will tell you, whoever told you that, that person belongs on ‘CSI’ because the autopsies have not been completed and it is impossible at this point to determine that fact. I will tell you, is it possible? Yes. Is it a fact? No. Not until the autopsies are complete and we get the final results.

“Will we tell you how many we shot and how many were possibly deceased by police rounds? Without a doubt we will. You will know that when we know that. The information that is out there right now — if you got lucky and guessed that number, congratulations. If you didn’t, shame on you for putting that information out there that may have been incorrect.

“What ‘media outlet’ is Swanton singling out here?

“CNN maybe? The 24-7 news outlet cited a ‘law enforcement source’ as saying that ‘preliminary information indicates that four of the bikers killed were killed by police gunfire. The investigation continues and the ballistics will be analyzed to determine for certain who was responsible for each shooting.’ . . .”

ASNE Opposes Reauthorizing Patriot Act

The American Society of News Editors, the Association of Alternative Newsmedia and the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press are among 52 organizations signing a letter to House and Senate leadership that opposes a straight reauthorization of Section 215 of the USA Patriot Act, ASNE announced on Tuesday.

“Signed by a wide spectrum of organizations, the letter opposes S 1035, which would reauthorize the Patriot Act without affecting the controversial Section 215. That section, which allows the government to compel the production of certain ‘tangible things’ in relation to terrorism investigations, has provided the basis of many of the bulk surveillance programs that have been in the news lately and has resulted in the issuance of subpoenas to communications companies for the phone and email records of reporters.

“With the USA Patriot Act up for renewal this year and the recent ruling by a United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit that the bulk surveillance programs violate the Constitution, we urge Congress to take a hard look at Section 215 rather than rubber stamp its renewal.”

Man Tries to Steal News Van With Reporter Sitting Inside

Da Lin

An 18-year-old man tried to steal a KPIX news van parked outside Oakland City Hall — not knowing that the reporter was sitting in the back — and was quickly arrested by an armed security guard, authorities said Tuesday,” Henry K. Lee reported Tuesday for the San Francisco Chronicle.

Marshawn Daniels jumped into an idling 2010 Ford Transit van parked on 14th Street at about 3:50 p.m. Thursday, apparently not realizing that the unmarked vehicle was a KPIX news van and that reporter Da Lin was sitting in the back working on a story, officials said. The van’s ignition was on to power the equipment inside.

“Lin, who is small in stature, had moved the driver’s seat close to the steering wheel. Daniels, who is 6 feet 4 inches tall, had trouble adjusting the seat, officials said.

“Lin told co-workers that he looked over from the back of the van to see if the suspect was armed. Not noticing a weapon, Lin yelled at the suspect, asking him what he was doing in the van.

“Surprised, Daniels jumped out of the van, authorities said. An armed security guard assigned to shadow Lin emerged from his sport utility vehicle and chased Daniels to the entrance of City Hall and held him at gunpoint. . . .”

Charlie LeDuff of WJBK-TV in Detroit tackled a suspect who grabbed a woman's cel

Detroit’s LeDuff Nabs Suspect Who Mugged Restaurateur

American Coney is a Detroit institution. So is Charlie LeDuff,” Charlie Langton reported Tuesday for Detroit’s WJBK-TV. “So when the owner of the restaurant was mugged in broad daylight, FOX 2’s own was on the scene to take the bad guy down.

Grace Keros owns American Coney Island. She said it all happened in the blink of an eye.

” ‘I had my cell phone in my back pocket,’ Keros said. ‘He came right up to me, leaned in, it happened so quick. He pulled the cell phone out and I was like ‘he took my cell phone!’

“Grace said it happened on Monday in broad daylight, in front of the American Coney Island. But the hero who nabbed Orlando Thomas, the alleged cell phone thief, is Charlie LeDuff.

“She said the guy grabbed her cell phone, ran across the street and is tackled by LeDuff.

“LeDuff is no stranger to taking people down. He’s brought down shameful judges and county executives, but now Charlie LeDuff can add cell phone robbers to his resume. . . .”

Langton also reported, “According to the Wayne County prosecutor’s office, Thomas pleaded guilty to unarmed robbery from an incident in January of this year was sentenced to probation. He absconded, until LeDuff got him.

” ‘Yeah we need more cops!’ LeDuff told Langton. ‘I’m being told we have more cops but I certainly didn’t see any. The guy is wanted, he’s wandering around, he’s got warrants. Come on now. That’s bull s***.’ . . .”

5-Part Series Tackles Mental Health in the Newsroom

When Hurricane Katrina swirled onto the Louisiana shore and residents of New Orleans clogged highways to flee, John McCusker stayed behind,” the Huffington Post’s Gabriel Arana reported Monday in the first of a five-part series on mental health in the newsroom.

“A photographer for The Times-Picayune for more than two decades, McCusker paddled through the city’s muddy waters in a kayak, day after day, documenting the destruction. Like many of the city’s residents, he had lost his home and all of his possessions. His family had relocated to Birmingham, Alabama, five hours away.

“On Aug. 8, 2006 — after nearly a year of documenting the trauma surrounding him — McCusker was seen driving erratically through the city. When police caught up with him at a traffic stop, he begged officers to end his life. ‘Just kill me, just kill me,’ he repeated. ‘Get it over with.’ McCusker backed up, pinning a cop between vehicles before speeding off, crashing into cars and signs along the way. When police caught up with him again, they subdued him with a stun gun and arrested him. McCusker says he only remembers waking up in four-point restraints.

” ‘I had no idea how I got there,’ he said.

“As much as journalists may fancy themselves superhuman observers of history, the truth is that we are as susceptible to trauma as the victims whose stories we tell. . . .”

Arana also wrote, “Specific data about journalists and mental health is hard to come by. Research on the topic only began to pick up steam in the mid-1990s, and journalists are notoriously reluctant to divulge information about themselves.

“A 2001 study found that upwards of 85 percent experience work-related trauma. Other research shows that 4 to 28 percent suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder over the course of their careers, and up to 20 percent experience depression. Even when psychological symptoms like nightmares, flashbacks, insomnia and anxiety don’t rise to the level of a disorder, they still take a toll. . . .”

Journalist Houda Malloum interviews a woman in a refugee camp in Chad fo

Female Journalists Sound Alarm on Issues Affecting Women

Women and children often fare the worst during conflict and in refugee situations,” Internews, an international nonprofit organization created to empower local media worldwide, says on its website.

“After the terrible earthquakes in Nepal this month, Viviane Fluck, who is conducting a post-earthquake humanitarian information assessment for Internews, noted that violence against women has been on the rise during the disaster. Fluck recommends leveraging Nepal’s vibrant community radio sector to help mitigate this situation.

“On the other side of the world, in Chad, journalist Houda Malloum reported for a community radio station set up by Internews to serve refugees from Darfur. She focused an episode on the problem of attacks on Darfuri women and girls who were leaving the refugee camps to gather firewood. The episode helped alert local authorities to the problems of violence against women, and at the same time gave the women alternatives so that they could avoid areas where they might be attacked.

“Women’s issues need to be heard so that humanitarian organizations can respond to their particular needs. Women journalists can help drive the debate beyond guns, troops and tents. Local women journalists can provide a better understanding of what women need to take better care of their families and safeguard themselves. . . .”

Activists Call Attention to Black Women Killed by Police

Weeks after Trayvon Martin was killed in Sanford, Fla., in 2012, a Chicago police officer fatally shot an unarmed 22-year-old black woman in the head as he fired into a group in the early hours of a March morning,” Marcia Davis wrote Wednesday for the Washington Post.

“Not long after Michael Brown, 18, was killed in Ferguson, Mo., last summer, a 21-year-old black woman was found dead in a Pagedale, Mo., cell after being picked up on warrants over a dispute she allegedly had. She had hanged herself with her T-shirt, authorities said, adding that they had video because of cameras in the facility. The case is now closed.

“And in February, before Freddie Gray died from injuries sustained while in the custody of Baltimore police in April, a 37-year-old black female inmate just down the road in Fairfax County, Va., died several days after being shocked with a stun gun. At least six officers were present as the mentally ill woman — hands cuffed, feet shackled and head hooded in a spit mask — was Tasered four times. A medical examiner’s ruling that ‘excited delirium’ was the cause of death has been controversial.

Rekia Boyd. Kimberlee ­Randle-King. Natasha McKenna.

“Their names and their stories — as well as those of other black women who have been killed by police or died while in their custody — are the focus of several days of activity this week meant to highlight what some activists say has been missing from the national discussion on race and criminal justice: Black women are dying, too, not just black men. . . .”

Short Takes

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