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Black Fox Staffers Call Out Company

Top Brass Hear About ‘Rampant Racism’
Lewis’ Life Passion, Voting Rights, Set Back
L.A. Times Discourages Use of ‘Looting’
‘Negro’ Demoted to ‘Racial Slur’ in News Reports
Covering Protests Is ‘Ever More Dangerous’:
. . . ‘A Press Badge Should Not Be a Bullseye’
. . . Police Want to Withhold Body Cam Footage
. . . Cops Hadn’t Heard of Boston’s Black-Owned Paper
Creating a New Generation of the Black Press
Diversity Jobs Fell Before George Floyd Protests
Latinos Driving U.S. Population Growth
2020 Could Be Banner Year for Native People
2 Black Women to Help Reshape Publishing
Neo-Nazi Admits Targeting Journalists
4 Win International Press Freedom Awards
Journal-isms Fund Drive Continues

Short Takes

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Fox Business host Charles Payne, who has been at Fox since 2007, lamented the network’s tone when covering Black cultural stories, including the killing of California rapper and anti-gang activist Nipsey Hussle. (video)

Top Brass Hear About ‘Rampant Racism’

“Four days after Fox News aired a particularly tone-deaf graphic connecting the killings of Black men — including George Floyd and Martin Luther King Jr. — to stock market gains, many of the network’s Black staffers took part in a phone call with company brass to confront Fox’s increasingly racist and hostile rhetoric towards the protests against police brutality,” Lachlan Cartwright, Lloyd Grove, Andrew Kirell, Noah Shachtman and Justin Baragona reported Friday, updated Saturday, for the Daily Beast.

“It did not go well.

“The call on June 9 lasted more than 90 minutes and included Fox News Media CEO Suzanne Scott, President Jay Wallace, and HR chief Kevin Lord, people familiar with the matter told The Daily Beast. It was led by Scott, who is white, and Marsheila J. Hayes (pictured), the vice president of diversity and inclusion at Fox Corporation, who is Black.

“It was almost immediately rife with tension. One staffer directly asked why Bret Baier — the anchor of the network’s key weekday news broadcast, Special Report, which aired the offensive graphic — was not on the call, nor any other white on-air talent. (Baier had previously apologized for the ‘major screw-up,’ noting that, because the show bears his name, ‘the buck stops with me.’ Fox News also apologized for the ‘insensitivity’ of the infographic, adding that it ‘should have never aired on television without full context.’)

“Other participants on the call expressed anger and distress about rampant racism at Fox, both on- and off-air.

“Fox Business Network host Charles Payne, who is Black, was particularly incensed, according to multiple people who attended the call. In fact, he had previously called Scott directly and, per a person familiar, was ‘ripshit’ about the Baier graphic debacle and about racist remarks that Laura Ingraham had recently made on the air.

“At one point on the June 9 call, sources told The Daily Beast, an irate Payne suggested he’d been the victim of racial discrimination, repeatedly passed over for opportunities given instead to white colleagues. Elsewhere, the staffers recalled, Payne, who has been at Fox since 2007, lamented the network’s tone when covering Black cultural stories, including the killing of California rapper and anti-gang activist Nipsey Hussle. How can he talk to his children about Fox News, the host wondered, when it portrays people like Hussle in a racist, stereotypical manner as a gangster? . . .”

John Lewis’ longtime friend, Rep. James Clyburn, noted the Georgia Democrat’s advocacy of voting rights.

Lewis’ Life Passion, Voting Rights, Set Back

The late Rep. John Lewis, who will forever be remembered for his participation in the 1965 voting-rights march from Selma to Montgomery, Ala., died Friday as the Supreme Court was moving in the opposite direction, Adam Liptak reported Saturday for the New York Times.
 
For the fourth time since April, the Supreme Court this week made it harder for Americans to vote,” Liptak wrote. “The ruling, Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote in dissent, was part of ‘a trend of condoning disfranchisement.’

“The court’s rulings — in cases from Alabama, Florida, Texas and Wisconsin — provide a contrast to an image of the court that emerged at the end of the term that ended last week, one in which liberals achieved some significant victories. The recent run of election cases tell a different story.

“ ‘One might have thought that the crisis in voting created by the pandemic would have caused the justices to rise above their usual ideological and partisan divide on election questions,’ said Richard L. Hasen, a law professor at the University of California, Irvine. ‘But there’s no sign of that on the horizon.’ . . .”

Liptak also wrote, “But the bottom line was uniform: The Supreme Court, which is dominated by five Republican appointees, sided with arguments pressed by Republicans to restrict voting rights in every case. . . .”

On CNN’s “State of the Union” Sunday, host Jake Tapper asked Rep. James Clyburn, D-S.C., friend of Lewis’ since 1960, how President Trump could honor Lewis.

‘”The best way he can honor John Lewis is to go to the media and say to the country that we have a road map given to us by the Supreme Court in a [Chief Justice John] Roberts decision seven years ago in Shelby v. Holder,” Clyburn said.

As Vox explained in 2019, “That ruling . . . invalidated a key portion of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, long seen as one of the most important civil rights laws of the past century. On June 25, 2013, the court’s conservative majority ruled that the government was using an outdated and unconstitutional process to determine which states were required to have their voting rules approved by the government. Before the ruling, nine states (and several other counties and townships) had been subjected to this requirement. . . .

“The ruling had an impact that continues today, with several civil rights and voting rights groups telling Vox that the post-Shelby era has presented various difficulties: an uptick in legal actions taken against states, increased costs for monitoring and pursuing litigation over voting restrictions, and, perhaps most significantly, more laws creating new requirements in the voting process — many of them disproportionately affecting black voters and other communities of color. . . .”

Clyburn continued, “The Supreme Court gutted the 1965 Voting Rights Act. And it said in that decision that these are some things you can do to reauthorize this act. The House of Representatives has passed that.

“I think that Trump and, in the Senate leadership, Mitch McConnell, by their deeds, if they so celebrate the heroism of this man, then let’s go to work and pass that bill, because it’s laid out the way the Supreme Court asked us to lay it out.

“And if the president were to sign that, then I think that’s what we would do to honor John. It should be the John R. Lewis Voting Rights Act of 2020. That’s the way to do it.

“Words may be powerful, but deeds are lasting.”

Criticism over applying the term “looting” to actions of African Americans was at a peak during Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

L.A. Times Discourages Use of ‘Looting’

 At the urging of the newsroom’s Black Caucus, the Los Angeles Times is discouraging the use of “looting” and “looters” in its news stories.

Its standards and practices committee updated its guidance regarding use of “looting” on July 2.

The new style entry reads: 

“ ‘Looting’ is a crime that occurs only during a state of emergency (in any jurisdiction: state, county, city, etc.). Do not use it as a broad label or term for protest, burglary, theft or chaos. Because of the racial connotation and history of the word, use terms like ‘looting’ or ‘looters’ only in the context of criminal proceedings.

“Unless a story is specifically about looting or those charged with the crime, ‘looting’ or its derivations (‘looted,’ ‘looters’) should not be used in the story, display type (headline, captions, pull quotes, etc.), SEO type and headlines, story description, URL, social sharelines, tweets or Facebook posts.

“If in doubt about whether to use ‘looting,’ talk to your immediate supervisor. There may be exceptions to this guidance, and any deviation requires a managing editor’s approval.

“When writing or talking about the actions of people in stories and visuals (photos, videos, etc.), it is best to describe what they specifically appear to be doing. Examples: 1) Some people broke into the store and stole whatever was on the shelves. 2) A group of at least 20 people threw bricks and shattered the windows of an electronics store. One woman quickly emerged with an armful of iPods. 3) Before leaving the disaster area, a man stopped by his local convenience store and, finding no one at the register, took several 12-packs of beer without paying. . . .”

“Other words to use in lieu of ‘looting’ in headlines could include theft, damage, break-ins, vandalism, burglaries. . . .”

Angel Jennings, a leader of the Black Caucus, told Journal-isms by email Sunday that the caucus “appreciates that its concerns were swiftly addressed, particularly the discussion around ‘looting.’ . . .”

Jennings also said, the “backlash over the term ‘looting’ as well as other cultural and editorial decisions at the paper [spawned] The Black Caucus, a sub-arm of our news guild aimed at addressing issues of Black representation at the Los Angeles Times.

“Our first action as a group was a social media campaign called #BlackatLAT, where Black journalists past and present lay bare the treatment we faced at the paper. We published an open letter addressed to the paper’s owner and management that outlined ways that they could right these wrongs — hire more Black journalists, create a pipeline for us to advance, pay us fairly and give us a seat at the table. Here’s a link to that letter.

“The paper’s owner agreed to all of our demands [except] one, which was to end furlough without lay-offs. . . .”

Criticism over applying the term “looting” to actions of African Americans was at a peak during Hurricane Katrina in 2005, when two photos were widely circulated. The caption for one said that a white survivor was “finding” food while another assumed a Black survivor, on the same quest, was “looting” a store — even though the images looked nearly identical.

In fact, as Journal-isms reported at the time, the complaint was more metaphor than fact. The photos were taken by different photographers working for different news services, each with its own standards of what could be called “looting” and what “finding.”

‘Negro’ Demoted to ‘Racial Slur’ in News Reports

The word “Negro,” once a term so respectable that Black scholars such as W.E.B. Du Bois fought a campaign to have the media capitalize it, is now considered a “racial slur,” according to reporting of an encounter Saturday night between Roger Stone, whose prison sentence was recently commuted by President Trump, and radio host Morris O’Kelly.

Around 12 minutes into the interview, host Morris O’Kelly pressed Stone on how his closeness to Trump influenced his commutation,” Isabel Togoh wrote for Forbes.

“ ‘I do believe that certain people are treated differently in the federal justice system…There are thousands of people treated unfairly daily. Hell, your number just happened to come up in the lottery. I’m guessing it was more than just luck, Roger, right?,’ O’Kelly asked Stone.

“Stone was heard pausing before audibly muttering: ‘I don’t really feel like arguing with this negro,’ to which O’Kelly responded by asking: ‘Roger? I’m sorry, what did you say?’

“Stone stays silent for about 40 seconds, during which the line remained audible, before he sighed and responded: ‘Uhh, you’re back, you there? Hello?’

“Asked again about saying the word ‘negro’, Stone replied: ‘I did not. You’re out of your mind. You’re out of your mind,’ before going on to blame the phone connection.

“Speaking with The New York Times after the interview, O’Kelly said the derogatory term was the ‘diet version of the N-word’ and something that, as a Black man, he comes across ‘pretty frequently’.”

Reports by Forbes and NBC lower-cased the word used by Martin Luther King Jr. in his famous “I Have a Dream” speech but which has since become outdated. Ironically, NBC announced it was capitalizing “Black.”

The slur that Mr. Stone used was commonly used to refer to Black Americans through part of the 1960s, but for decades it has been considered offensive,” Aimee Ortiz and Marie Fazio wrote for the Times.

A more nuanced explanation might say the offensiveness depends on who is using the word and why.

Andrea Sahouri, a Des Moines Register reporter, discusses her arrest after covering a demonstration protesting the police killing of George Floyd. (video)

Covering Protests Is ‘Ever More Dangerous’

It is “becoming ever more dangerous for reporters to cover legitimate public assemblies where police are sometimes literally gunning for them,” Gary Arlen wrote Friday for the Radio Television Digital News Association.

Arlen also wrote, “The Committee to Protect Journalists tallied nearly 500 incidents in U.S. cities from late May through June where police and/or protesters’ actions affected reporters.

“According to the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker (a joint project of CPJ [Committee to Protect Journalists], the Freedom of the Press Foundation, and other free-press organizations), during the weeks after George Floyd’s death in Minneapolis, there were 112 physical attacks on reporters (67 by law enforcement officers); 64 arrests of reporters and about 200 tear gassings, pepper sprayings and 104 rubber-bullet or projectile strikes. In addition, the report identified nearly 70 incidents of media equipment or newsroom damage. . . .”

Arlen also wrote for RTDNA, “One ongoing challenge is to educate police about press freedom rights. Most local law enforcement officers take an oath to support the U.S. Constitution as well as state constitutions, but their actual training may be limited to about two hours of media training while at the police academy, according to sources I interviewed — hardly enough time to delve into the First Amendment. Supervisors get additional training as they work their way up the ranks, but those constitutional values may lapse in the heat of a confrontation. . . .”

There were these recent developments:

. . . ‘A Press Badge Should Not Be a Bullseye’

In New Jersey, “An Asbury Park Press reporter arrested covering a Black Lives Matter protest in June filed a federal lawsuit Monday claiming the police had violated his First Amendment and other civil rights protections,” Joe Strupp and Mike Davis reported July 13 for the newspaper. ​

“The lawsuit by Gustavo Martínez Contreras (pictured), 40, filed in federal court, names as defendants the cities of Asbury Park and Belmar, Monmouth County, Asbury Park Police Capt. Amir Bercovicz and 14 unnamed officers. . . .

” ‘I’m filing this lawsuit because a press badge should not be a bullseye,’ Martinez Contreras said in a statement.

“The action stems from a June 1 protest in Asbury Park over the May 25 death of George Floyd . . . Martínez Contreras covered the protest for the Press, including shooting live video from the scene that aired on social media.

“Despite wearing press credentials and identifying himself as a reporter, Martínez Contreras was violently tackled by police dispersing the crowd at the protest’s chaotic conclusion, detained, transported and jailed for several hours. . . .”

The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press said July 13 that its safety tips for reporters covering protests were being misused by the Monmouth County prosecutor’s office. “An investigation into the arrest improperly cited Reporters Committee resources in concluding that the arresting officers did not know they were apprehending a reporter.”

Its findings “only detail practical safety tips for reporters covering protests — not the legal standard for when officers should know someone is a journalist. . . .”

. . . Police Want to Withhold Body Cam Footage

In Des Moines, Iowa, lawyers are arguing over whether police should release body cam footage in the case of Andrea Sahouri, (pictured) a Des Moines Register reporter who was arrested during a protest.

“Sahouri was covering demonstrations after the death of George Floyd on May 31 “when some in the crowd began destroying property and looting nearby stores,” Tyler J. Davis reported Thursday, updated Friday, for the Register.

“As Des Moines police deployed pepper spray and other nonlethals outside the Target, the crowd began to disperse. Sahouri and boyfriend Spenser Robnett, who accompanied her to the protest because he was worried about her safety, made it as far as the Verizon store parking lot across Douglas Avenue when officers sprayed and detained them. . . .”

​”Sahouri, 24, was charged with two misdemeanors: interference with official acts and failure to disperse. . . .”

Brad Kinkade, an assistant Polk County attorney, argued that his office is too busy and the case is too low-priority to immediately turn over body-camera footage. . . .”

But “Nick Klinefeldt, an attorney for Sahouri, rejected this premise in court, as he did in previous filings, saying if authorities thought it reasonable to arrest and jail Sahouri and give her a criminal record, it should be reasonable that they provide evidence of the crime she committed. . . .”

. . . Cops Hadn’t Heard of Boston’s Black-Owned Paper

In Boston, meanwhile, “As Bay State Banner Senior Editor Yawu Miller (pictured) left Roxbury Municipal Court Monday, where he had been taking photos on the job, seven Boston police officers stopped him, Miller wrote in a tweet,” Gal Tziperman Lotan reported Tuesday for the Boston Globe.

“ ‘1st time in more than 20 years! I thought the gray hair disqualified me. Apparently not!’ Miller wrote.

“Miller, like people involved in about 70 percent of police stops, searches, and observations in Boston, is Black.

“ ‘They FIOed me!’ Miller wrote in a tweet, referring to the acronym the city’s police department uses for what it calls Field Interrogations and Observations.

” ‘Black Bostonians make up about 25 percent of the city’s population, but a vast majority of FIOs — a broad description that can apply to stop-and-frisks, searches, or police officers recording observations of someone. The FIO data the department releases is only for stops in which officers did not find evidence of a crime; stops that ended in arrests are not included. . . .

“Miller said the officers told him they stopped him because he was taking photos near the B-2 district station in Nubian Square. He said they did not recognize the name of the Bay State Banner, a Black-owned weekly newspaper that has operated in Boston since 1965. . . .”

Tiffany Walden, left, and Morgan Elise Johnson co-founded The TRiiBE to reshape the narrative being told about Chicago’s Black communities. (Credit: Chantal Redmond/The TRiiBE)

Creating a New Generation of the Black Press

The new Black press is changing the lenses of victimization and dysfunction into lenses of empowerment and agency,Deborah Douglas wrote Tuesday for Nieman Reports.

“At least 10 Black legacy outlets have joined the newly launched Fund for Black Journalism — Race Crisis in America, organized through the Local Media Foundation. The campaign aims to raise $2 million to create shared video, data, and investigative reporting projects and provide stipends to help local outlets enhance their reporting on race issues.

“Participating media organizations include New York Amsterdam News, The Atlanta Voice, Houston Defender Network, The Washington Informer, The Dallas Weekly, St. Louis American, Michigan Chronicle, The Afro, Seattle Medium, and The Sacramento Observer. . . .”

The fund is part of a larger trend.

” ‘News and reporting about Black communities, which is what mainstream news offers, is a lower bar than news and reporting for Black communities,” says journalist and researcher Carla Murphy, who is working on a report about the Black news ecosystem for the Center for Community Media at the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism at CUNY.

“Outlets like The TRiiBE; theGrio, a video-centric site devoted to African-American perspectives; ZORA, a publication for women of color hosted on Medium; digital sports and culture site The Undefeated; Coronavirus News for Black Folks, a newsletter focused on the disparate impact of the pandemic on African-Americans; The Root, whose tagline is, ‘The Blacker the Content the Sweeter the Truth’; Outlier Media in Detroit, which leverages text messaging to drive coverage; The Plug, a news and insights platform covering the Black innovation economy; Blavity, a community for Black creativity and news; and networked journalism, which includes citizen journalists as well as trained professionals in the production of news are some of the sites and initiatives targeting Black audiences that have found their sweet spot in providing news, information, and resources for Black communities as national attention has been focused on the coronavirus and the protests” after the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis.

Companies observed Juneteenth as a holiday for the first time last month after nationwide protests calling for racial equality. Here, employees up and down the corporate ladder explain what they hope the day will achieve. (Credit: Wall Street Journal) (video)

Diversity Jobs Fell Before George Floyd Protests

American companies cut back sharply on hiring for jobs related to diversity and inclusion when the coronavirus pandemic struck in mid-March, with openings falling twice as fast as for other listings, according to data from one of the country’s biggest career sites,” Jena McGregor reported Wednesday for The Washington Post.

“Postings for job titles such as ‘chief diversity officer,’ ‘diversity and inclusion recruiter’ or ‘D&I program manager’ fell nearly 60 percent between early March and early June, according to the careers site Glassdoor, which plans to publish the report Wednesday. That’s a sharper drop than for overall human resources jobs, which fell 49 percent, or job openings overall, which fell 28 percent.

“But as corporate America offered new commitments to work for inclusion amid the national reckoning on racial injustice that erupted after the killing of George Floyd in police custody, the same category of job openings rebounded. D&I postings rose 50 percent in June on Glassdoor, the largest percentage increase over a four-week period since January 2016, though they are still well below their March peak.

“ ‘The fact that D&I job openings fell very quickly is concerning if it indicates companies are more willing to cut back on that function when times get tough,’ said Daniel Zhao, a senior economist at Glassdoor.

“As for the rebound, Zhao said: ‘I think the timing is demonstrative. Because the increase in D&I jobs occurs almost immediately after the protests began, it points to increased pressure both from society and from their employees.’ . . .”

Latinos Driving U.S. Population Growth

Hispanics have played a significant role in driving U.S. population growth over the past decade, though the group is not growing as quickly as it once did,Jens Manuel Krogstad reported July 10 for the Pew Research Center.

“From 2010 to 2019, the U.S. population increased by 18.9 million, and Hispanics accounted for more than half (52%) of this growth, according to a Pew Research Center analysis of new U.S. Census Bureau population estimates, the last before 2020 census figures are released.

“In 2019, the number of Hispanics reached a record 60.6 million, making up 18% of the U.S. population. This is up from 50.7 million in 2010, when Hispanics were 16% of the population. The number of Hispanics is growing more slowly than it previously did, due to a decline in the annual number of births to Hispanic women and a drop in immigration, particularly from Mexico. From 2015 to 2019, the Hispanic population grew by an average of 1.9% per year, down significantly from a peak of 4.8% from 1995 to 2000. . . .”

Mutual of Omaha is retiring its logo featuring a Native American chief. The symbol is seen here on the company’s headquarters on Farnam Street in Omaha, Neb. (Credit: Lily Smith/Omaha World Herald)

2020 Could Be Banner Year for Native People

Change has been the operative word in tribal communities of late: The Supreme Court ruled on July 9 that a large swath of eastern Oklahoma remains a Native American reservation based on a treaty signed with the Creek Nation in the 19th Century,” Ethan Sacks wrote Tuesday for NBC News.

“This month, there have also been legal victories for Native environmental activists in their attempts to block two major oil pipelines. Statues of Christopher Columbus, whose arrival in the New World heralded the conquest and mass murder in the eyes of many Indigenous Americans, have been toppled in several states.

“In short, 2020 is shaping up to be a chapter unlike most others in American history books for Native Americans.

“ ‘I see this moment in history as a day of reckoning that Native Americans have known is ahead of us because of what we’ve endured for 20 generations of intergenerational trauma as a result of genocide,’ said Fawn Sharp, president of the National Congress of American Indians, the largest and oldest Native American advocacy organization in the country.

” ‘This is a moment we believe that we’re finally seeing the principles that this country is built upon . . . — equality, racial and social justice,’ added Sharp, who is also president of the Quinault Indian Nation in Taholah, Washington.

“Of all the recent victories, scrapping the Washington team name might be the most high profile. The name, changed from the Braves in 1933 when the team was still in Boston, had an ancient legacy by pro sports standards.

“Many Native American elders, however, have called the nickname a slur as offensive as the N-word . . .”

2 Black Women to Help Reshape Publishing

Dana Canedy (pictured), the former New York Times journalist who two weeks ago was appointed publisher of Simon & Schuster, becoming the first Black woman to head a major publishing house, says, “I want to influence the entire publishing community. . . .

I’m one person in one company,” Canedy, administrator of the Pulitzer Prizes, said Tuesday on the “PBS NewsHour,” discussing racial disparities. “But I think that there are some opportunities for leaders across publishing houses to put our heads together and figure out how we can influence this issue, how we can improve things related to both subject matter, pay equity for advances, the voices and the authors that get highlighted. . . .”

Within days of Canedy’s historic appointment, a second Black woman, Lisa Lucas (pictured), executive director of the National Book Foundation, was named senior v-p and publisher of Pantheon and Schocken Books, Calvin Reid reported Wednesday for Publishers Weekly.

Lucas is the first person of color to head the foundation, which oversees the annual National Book Awards and a variety of national reading programs.

“Asked whether her new role should be seen as a localized outgrowth of a national crisis, Lucas told PW, ‘this is not a cynical hire,’ and that she wouldn’t have taken the job if it was.

“ ‘It’s important to be hired for the job you think you can do and what people think you can do. You don’t want to be a symbol, you want to do the work,’ Lucas told PW. At the same time, she emphasized, ‘you also want to believe that change is possible, and that people are listening and hearing. It will take more than hiring me to shape an equitable book culture. But Black Lives Matter was an everyday concept at the National Book Foundation, it’s where you put your energy every day. I want to see diversity in thought and that takes a diverse set of people.’ . . .”

Neo-Nazi Admits Targeting Journalists

A man described by authorities as a leader of the neo-Nazi group Atomwaffen Division admitted in federal court in Alexandria, Va., on Tuesday that he harassed minorities and journalists by calling police to their homes and offices,” Rachel Weiner reported Tuesday for the Washington Post.

John Cameron Denton, 26, of Montgomery, Tex., while pleading guilty to a charge of conspiracy to make interstate threats, agreed with a federal judge that he had ‘expressed white supremacist views’ and was “motivated by racial animus.” He admitted in a statement of facts that he targeted a reporter for ProPublica ‘because they exposed his real identity and participation in Atomwaffen Division.’ ”

Targets of the neo-Nazi group included Miami Herald columnist Leonard Pitts Jr., (pictured, above) ProPublica reporter A.C. Thompson (pictured at left) and an unnamed member of the Arizona Association of Black Journalists.  

Investigative Reporters and Editors last month awarded its Don Bolles Medal to Pitts, Thompson and investigative journalists Chris Ingalls and Jeremy Jojola. The medal “recognizes investigative journalists who have exhibited extraordinary courage in standing up against intimidation or efforts to suppress the truth about matters of public importance.”

Clockwise from top left: Svetlana Prokopyeva (Credit: Artiom Avanesov); Dapo Olorunyomi (Credit: Dapo Olorunyomi); Shahidul Alam (Credit: Shahidul Alam); Mohammad Mosaed (Credit: Farid Kamran Nia)

4 Win International Press Freedom Awards

The Committee to Protect Journalists will honor four courageous journalists from Bangladesh, Iran, Nigeria, and Russia with the 2020 International Press Freedom Awards,” the press freedom organization announced July 13. “All four have been arrested or faced criminal prosecution in reprisal for their reporting. CPJ will also honor lawyer Amal Clooney with the Gwen Ifill Award.”

The awardees are photojournalist and commentator Shahidul Alam of Bangladesh, who spent 102 days behind bars, and said he was beaten in custody; Mohammad Mosaed of Iran, forced to resign from a reformist newspaper under government pressure; Dapo Olorunyomi, co-founder, CEO and publisher of the Nigerian newspaper Premium Times; and Svetlana Prokopyeva of Russia, a regional correspondent for Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty who was accused of “justifying terrorism,” convicted and ordered to pay a fine of 500,000 rubles (US$6,980).

<h2>Short Takes</h2>
The new issue of Vanity Fair featuring Oscar-winning actor Viola Davis marks the first time the publication has featured the work of a Black photographer on its cover.

Short Takes


Journal-isms Fund Drive Continues

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— Rebecca Aguilar, freelance reporter; diversity committee chair, Society of Professional Journalists; former vice president, National Association of Hispanic Journalists.

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Richard Prince’s Journal-isms originates from Washington. It began in print before most of us knew what the internet was, and it would like to be referred to as a “column.” Any views expressed in the column are those of the person or organization quoted and not those of any other entity. Send tips, comments and concerns to Richard Prince at journal-isms-owner@yahoogroups.com

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