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New Yorker Cover Imagines the Unimaginable for 2020

Double Standard Seen in Use of Graphic Videos

Charleston Paper Urges Death Penalty Over Massacre

FBI Agents Call After Story on Black Lives Matter

Journalists “Pushed Away” from Migrants at Train

Díaz-Balart Might Survive MSNBC Daytime Shakeup

Singing for the Pope

Media Covering Obama in Alaska Missed Tribal Story

Oakland Residents Trained as Correspondents for 4th Year

Short Takes

New Yorker Cover Imagines the Unimaginable for 2020

Kanye West’s announcement of his intention to seek the Presidency reminds us that it’s not too early to start thinking about the 2020 campaign. (2016’s already old hat by now, anyway),’ Barry Blitt says about ‘2020 Vision,’ his cover for next week’s issue,” Mina Kaneko and Françoise Mouly wrote Friday for the New Yorker.

“And when one considers Mr. West, it doesn’t take a whole lot of imagination to be reminded of another scrappy kid who won the Presidency, back in 1948, against all odds. The press wrote him off, too.

“That’s right — Harry Truman. Here is the historic photo that inspired Blitt’s image of the future.”

Double Standard Seen in Use of Graphic Videos

It’s sad enough when a violent crime mesmerizes the nation — such as the murder of nine African Americans in a Charleston, S.C. church, a fleeing Walter L. Scott being fatally shot in the back by a North Charleston Patrolman Michael T. Slager, or two young, White journalists, Alison Parker and Adam Ward, gunned down on live television — but those tragedies are compounded by the media’s double standard,” George E. Curry wrote Monday for the National Newspaper Publishers Association.

“Let’ begin with how the initial crime is reported.

“How many times have we seen the graphic video of a uniformed Michael Slager in South Carolina remove his gun from his holster on April 4 and shoot 50-year-old Walter Scott as he was running away? With two huge trees in the foreground, we heard eight shots, four of them striking Scott in the back and one lodging in an ear.

“Contrast that with the coverage of two promising White journalists in Roanoke, Va. Because it was what is called a live shot, we have even more graphic footage of their actual murders. The shooter also filmed his dastardly crime, later posting it on social media before committing suicide.

“Did we see repeated clips of the two White journalists being murdered? No, we saw some freeze-frames just before the act. And when the New York Daily News published freeze-frame photographs of Alison Parker as she was shot, there was widespread condemnation. . . .”

L. Chris Stewart, lawyer for the Scott family, could not be reached for comment.

Charleston Paper Urges Death Penalty Over Massacre

Ninth Circuit Solicitor Scarlett Wilson announced Thursday that she will seek capital punishment for Dylann Roof, who is charged in the Emanuel AME Church massacre” on June 17, the Post and Courier in Charleston, S.C., editorialized on Friday. “It’s hard to imagine a crime more fitting for the death penalty.

“As Solicitor Wilson aptly put it: ‘This was the ultimate crime, and justice from our state calls for the ultimate punishment.’ . . .”

FBI Agents Call After Story on Black Lives Matter

Government agents make a surprise visit to a young journalist’s home with questions about articles he’s written about an emerging protest movement,” Sarah Stuteville wrote Thursday for the Seattle Globalist, which describes itself as “a daily online publication that covers the connections between local and global issues here in Seattle. We highlight diverse voices and train the next generation of media makers.” Stuteville is a co-founder.

“It may sound like a scene from a distant and frightening land, but it happened last week to 22-year-old Jama Abdirahman, a college student and recent graduate of the Seattle Globalist’s youth-reporter apprenticeship program,” Stuteville continued.

“Abdirahman wasn’t home when the two FBI agents came calling, but his 16-year-old brother was, and handed over his cell phone number.

“During the apprenticeship program, where other Globalist reporters and I mentor young people hoping to become journalists, Abdirahman wrote about stereotypes of his South End neighborhood and even did the photography for a few of my Seattle Times columns, one about issues facing the Somali-American community.

“But it was a story he wrote about Black Lives Matter protests — specifically about women in the movement — that particularly interested the agents. . . “

 

Journalists “Pushed Away” from Migrants at Train

Journalists have reported being ‘pushed away’ by police from ‘distressing scenes’ involving migrants at a Hungarian train,” William Turvill reported Thursday for pressgazette.co.uk.

“According to reports, hundreds of migrants were allowed on to a train in Budapest, Hungary, bound for Austria before they were ordered off in Bicske, also in Hungary, to be taken to a registration centre. The migrants are reported to be resisting.

James Mates, Europe editor of ITV News, has been covering the situation since early this morning. As well as reporting for the 1.30pm news, he has also been tweeting and picturing the scene.

“Just before 2pm British time (Hungary is one hour ahead) he tweeted that journalists were being ‘shepherded away’ and accused the Hungarian authorities of not wanting the ‘world to see’ what they were doing. He also reported migrants as saying: ‘Don’t leave us.’ . . .”

Mates continued reporting, however, and tweeted on Friday, “If the Hungarian strategy was to create a media circus, they can consider this a triumph.”

Díaz-Balart Might Survive MSNBC Daytime Shakeup

José Díaz-Balart may not be leaving MSNBC dayside after all,” Joe Concha reported for Mediaite on Friday.

“The news comes after another highly-placed source with knowledge close to the situation says while Díaz-Balart may lose an hour off of his current two-hour weekday morning timeslot (The Rundown with José Díaz-Balart) as reported yesterday, he will remain as an anchor in a condensed capacity during weekday mornings.

“Said capacity will likely be the 10:00 AM-11:00 AM slot that immediately follows the extended version coming for Morning Joe, which — as originally reported here &mash; will run until 10:00 AM. . . .”

Adrian Carrasquillo reported for BuzzFeed,”A coalition of 40 national Latino organizations sent a letter to Phil Griffin, the president of MSNBC, and Andrew Lack, the head of NBC News, saying that any effort to eliminate or minimize Jose Diaz-Balart’s show would be met with strong organizational opposition, in response to a Thursday [Mediaite] report that the anchor would be the odd man out in lineup changes.

“The letter sent by Felix Sanchez, chairman of the National Hispanic Leadership Agenda’s (NHLA) media committee, said that the group met with MSNBC executives to discuss increasing Latino representation on air, and noted that the network has only had one Hispanic anchor since its inception in 1996. . . .”

Carrasquillo also reported, “Latino organizations mobilized soon after the  report was released, contacting MSNBC and each other to first find out if it was true, and second to decide how they would respond.

Alex Nogales, the president of the National Hispanic Media Coalition, spoke with Griffin who reassured him that the report was inaccurate. Briefed on the call, NHLA leaders were given the indication that Griffin would release a clarifying statement but with the long [Labor Day] weekend coming, decided to send the letter. . . .”

Concha also wrote, “As MSNBC continues its largest overhaul in history, some at the network win, some lose. Díaz-Balart may be losing one hour, but it appears he’ll still be keeping another, basically putting him back where got his own program on the network 16 months ago. . . .”

Media Covering Obama in Alaska Missed Tribal Story

President Barack Obama’s visit to Alaska was inspiring,” Mark Trahant wrote Thursday for his Trahant Reports. “I eagerly watched everything I could see online: The official restoration of the name Denali, his powerful words on the climate, his visits to Resurrection Bay, and his interaction with Alaska’s Native communities. I especially loved the Yup’ik dancing (and the president showing his moves).

“But there is one story that’s missing from the national accounts of the president’s visit: the role of tribes in determining Alaska’s future. The president himself referred to this debate in several ways.

“The first mention was in his statement to tribal leaders when he said: ‘My administration also is taking new action to make sure that Alaska Natives have direct input into the management of Chinook salmon stocks, something that has been of great concern here.’ Then a few sentences later he promised to follow up on ‘everything from voting rights to land trusts.’

“Those last two words are the story that needs to be told. . . .”

Oakland Residents Trained as Correspondents for 4th Year

When we in the media tell the story of East Oakland, we often weave a narrative of crime, violence and despair,” Martin G. Reynolds reported Friday for the Bay Area News Group. “And while significant challenges exist within this community, often untold or underreported are the stories of vibrancy, resilience, activism, diversity and pride.

“In late July, the newest Oakland Voices cohort began and, over the next nine months, these 12 East Oakland residents will be trained as community correspondents and write stories they feel need to be told.

“All the stories will appear on the www.oaklandvoices.us website and some will appear in this newspaper.

“The goal of the program is to empower residents to be the storytellers of their neighborhoods and to build a relationship between the community and this newspaper.

“Former Oakland Tribune columnist Brenda Payton enters her second year as our Oakland Voices coordinator, providing guidance and the benefit of her more than three decades of journalism experience.

“Oakland Voices began in 2010 and now enters its fourth cohort. The program is run in partnership with the Robert C. Maynard Institute for Journalism Education, an Oakland-based national nonprofit dedicated to diversifying America’s newsrooms, and is funded in large part by The California Endowment, a nonpartisan health care foundation. Voices has been replicated in Jackson, Mississippi, and has another cohort underway in Sacramento. . . .”

Short Takes

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