Request After Erica Garner’s Death Prompts Debate
U.S. Muslims Projected to Outnumber Jews by 2040
Simeon Booker Services Set for National Cathedral
Kotb Won’t Make Near Lauer’s Salary on ‘Today’
Henderson to Return to Detroit Public TV
Marshall Project Makes Diversity a ‘Central Pillar’
K.C. Star Forces Release of Chilling Footage
St. Paul Paper Applauds New Mayor on Diversity
“I’m never giving up, I’m never going to forget, and I don’t want the world to forget what happened to my dad.” Erica
Garner (@es_snipes) dedicated her life to activism after her father was killed by a police officer. She has died at the age
of 27. pic.twitter.com/RrH4FDXCuF
— Channel 4 News (@Channel4News) January 3, 2018
Request After Erica Garner’s Death Prompts Debate
“Within minutes of Erica Garner’s death Saturday, the administrator of her Twitter account faced backlash over a post requesting that only black journalists reach out to the family,” Chris Sommerfeldt reported Saturday for the Daily News in New York.
” ‘Out of respect to Erica please do not request comment if the journalist is not Black,” tweeted the account used by Garner, who became an anti-police brutality activist after NYPD officer Daniel Pantaleo placed her dad, Eric Garner, in an illegal chokehold that killed him on July 17, 2014.
“The tweet drew ire from some Twitter users, who called it ‘racist’ and said it affronted Erica Garner’s legacy of unity and equality.’
“Reggie Harris, a friend of Erica Garner’s from California who spent time at her hospital bedside after she suffered a massive heart attack last weekend, was identified earlier in the week by her relatives as the person operating her Twitter feed. He did not respond to requests for comment Saturday.
” ‘Those who knew erica call this post a disrespect to her and her legacy,’ ABC anchor Bill Ritter tweeted about the ‘black journalists’ only request. . . .” Ritter is white.
Others defended Harris.
Eugene Scott, a reporter for the Washington Post who is black, tweeted Saturday, “Non-black journalists complaining about how it is unfair that the Garners want to share their story with black journalists should just ask the black person in their newsroom to ask for comment — unless their newsroom doesn’t have a black journalist …”
Scott also tweeted, “It is a PRIVILEGE that people choose to share their stories with us. We’re not entitled to their stories. Considering how often the media misrepresents marginalized communities in our coverage, we should be grateful they even pick up the phone when we call much less talk to us.”
On mic.com, Zak Cheney Rice wrote Tuesday of the request for a black journalist, “A cursory scan of Erica’s past comments about race and media shows that this statement was not just compatible with her legacy — it crystallized it. Erica frequently bemoaned the lack of black representation in journalism. She [broadcast] her decisions to give exclusive interviews to black reporters, most notably black women reporters, and to take stories to black journalists before giving comment to others.
“Never mind that, by doing this, Erica was fighting a strain of institutional racism that news companies have spent decades failing to fix on their own. Ignoring this amounts to co-opting her legacy. Instead of honestly assessing what Garner actually stood for, these commenters are engaging in the well-trod practice of recasting black rights advocates as colorblind figures who just wanted everyone to get along. . . .”
Thursday on The Root, Michael Harriot, also black, wrote of “white tears.” “They had nothing to do with Erica Garner, her activism or even her death,” Harriot wrote. “Caucasian tear ducts don’t even open for black bodies. They only respond to the perceived oppression of white people. The salty faces were because Erica Garner’s family announced that they would give interviews and comments only to black journalists. . . .”
Harriot argued, “black media members might be more sympathetic to a black family’s pain and loss. Regardless of their experience, professionalism or allyship, there are certain things even well-meaning white people can sometimes take for granted — intentionally or not. While this idea might seem exclusionary and discriminatory, it is nonetheless true. How do I know?
“Because I have been the well-meaning journalist who got a story wrong — not because I was inconsiderate, prejudiced or unqualified — but because I wasn’t as vigilant as someone who was more connected to the story. . . .”
The exchanges illustrate how much the chasm between some members of the media and some members of communities of color remains. Scott noted that some women ask for female reporters to discuss sexual harassment or gender issues, and news managers sometimes make that decision in hopes of getting a better story.
In addition, reporters who parachute into stories about police-community tensions have given journalists a bad name, and many of them have been white.
However, Harris, the administrator of Erica Garner’s account, wrote Sunday, “for all who don’t know Erica that call her racist or other things. There was no journalist that she spent more time with or gave more access to than @mtaibbi he became a friend. BUT AT FIRST HE WAS A BEST SELLING AUTHOR… see the difference. she was smart. She was strategic.” Matt Taibbi, who wrote the recently published “I Can’t Breathe: A Killing on Bay Street,” about the death of Eric Garner, is white.
Megan Carpentier, an editor at NBC News THINK who is white, tweeted Sunday, “I was honored that @es_snipes chose to trust me as an editor with her story, as I am always grateful when a marginalized writer with a deeply personal story agrees to enter into a very intellectually intimate engagement with a relatively privileged stranger.”
Funeral services for Erica Garner are planned for Monday at First Corinthian Baptist Church, 1912 Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Boulevard in Manhattan. Viewing is 4 p.m. and services are 5 p.m.
- Kashana Cauley, New York Times: Erica Garner and How America Destroys Black Families
U.S. Muslims Projected to Outnumber Jews by 2040
Despite President Trump’s efforts to impose a ban on immigration from majority-Muslim countries, “Muslims are expected to become the second-largest religious group in the United States after Christians by 2040, according to a new report,” Al Jazeera reported Thursday.
“There were 3.45 [million] Muslims living in the US in 2017 representing about 1.1 percent of the total population, a study by Pew Research Center found.
“At present, the number of Jewish people [outnumbers] Muslims as the second-largest religious group but that is expected to change by 2040 because ‘the US Muslim population will grow much faster than the country’s Jewish population’, the report said. . . .”
- Jarvis DeBerry, NOLA.com | Times-Picayune: Steve Bannon vs. Donald Trump is a comic-book battle of villains
- Editorial, Kansas City Star: What the demise of Trump’s voter fraud commission teaches Kansans about Kris Kobach
- Editorial, Miami Herald: Trump’s pitiably wrong on Haitians and AIDS. Here are the facts. (Dec. 26)
- Daniel C. Kurtzer, Daily News, New York: How Obama and the nuclear deal he brokered may have helped spark Iran’s protests — in a good way
- Leonard Pitts Jr., Miami Herald: Was 2017 the ‘craziest’ year? It all depends on how you define ‘crazy’
Simeon Booker Services Set for National Cathedral
The memorial service for Simeon Booker, who for 50 years was Washington bureau chief for Jet and Ebony magazines, is to be held Jan. 29 at the Washington National Cathedral, his family announced Thursday. Booker, a civil rights journalism pioneer, died Dec. 10 at age 99.
The nave of the cathedral has been the site of services for many prominent journalists, most recently Washington news anchor Jim Vance, but also the Washington Post’s publisher Katharine Graham, executive editor Benjamin C. Bradlee and columnist William Raspberry. It can hold about 3,000 people, cathedral spokesman Kevin Eckstrom said.
Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., a civil rights icon, has been confirmed as a speaker, Carol McCabe Booker, Simeon Booker’s widow, told Journal-isms. Accompanying the Congress of Racial Equality, Lewis and Booker, along with reporter Moses Newson, confronted danger together on the Freedom Rides of 1961, testing segregated bathroom and restaurant facilities in bus and train stations throughout the South.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Simeon Booker Scholarship at Youngstown State University, an announcement said. “All gifts designated for this minority scholarship are matched by the [YSU Foundation], to which checks should be payable, at 655 Wick Avenue, Youngstown, Ohio 44502.”
- Herb Boyd, Amsterdam News, New York: Two civil rights icons—Simeon Booker Jr. and Ernest Finney Jr. (Dec. 14)
- Editorial, Afro-American: Simeon Booker — A Significant Reporter of the 1950-1970’s Civil Rights Wars Has Passed Away at 99 (Dec. 14)
- W. Ralph Eubanks, New Yorker: Remembering the Pioneering Black Journalist Simeon Booker, “The Man from Jet” (Dec. 12)
- Howard W. French, New York Times: The Legacy of Simeon Booker, a Pioneer of Civil Rights Journalism (Dec. 13)
- Hamil Harris, Afro-American: In Memoriam: Life of Simeon Booker Jr.: Black Press Loses its Dean Who Got His Start at the AFRO (Dec. 14)
- Curtis Stephen, Columbia Journalism Review: Simeon Booker was a leader among early, unheralded reporters on race (Dec. 15)
Kotb Won’t Make Near Lauer’s Salary on ‘Today’
“Hoda Kotb might be raking in the ratings on ‘Today,’ but she tells People magazine she won’t be making the same salary as the man she’s replacing,” Doha Madani reported Wednesday for Huffington Post.
“NBC announced on Tuesday that Kotb would be replacing Matt Lauer as the co-anchor of the ‘Today’ show after Lauer was accused of sexual misconduct in the workplace. Kotb will join Savannah Guthrie to lead the first two hours of the program, making history as the first female co-anchors for that segment.
“Kotb told People on Wednesday that neither she nor Guthrie are making the same kind of money Lauer was.
“ ‘I think the whole money thing for me, I’ve always been sort of — I know it sounds ridiculous that I’m going to say this, but I really have done jobs I liked for the job I liked because I never wanted to be happy every other Friday on pay day,’ Kotb told People. ‘Like, I didn’t want that to be the happy day. I wanted to feel good throughout. So no, I’m not making Matt Lauer money. Not even close.’
“Kotb did not mention what her contracted salary is, but Page Six reports that she and Guthrie are each making $7 million annually. Lauer ended his 25-year career at the network with a $25 million contract. . . .”
Kotb’s parents were born in Cairo. The NBC move marks the first time “Today” has had two female co-anchors, breaking from the male-female template.
Henderson to Return to Detroit Public TV
“Fired Detroit Free Press opinion editor Stephen Henderson will return to Detroit Public TV now that the station has completed its investigation into whether there were any misconduct claims against him,” Sarah Rahal reported Saturday for the Detroit News.
“Henderson, who hosts ‘American Black Journal’ and is a contributor for ‘MiWeek’ on WTVS-TV (Channel 56), was terminated as managing director of opinion and commentary at the Free Press for misconduct on Dec. 15. There were no accusations or evidence of sexual assault.
“The Free Press’ internal investigation found inappropriate behavior toward female colleagues stretching back several years, and WTVS officials said due to his termination at the newspaper, they launched an internal investigation.
” ‘We hired an independent law firm who found there were no inappropriate actions of any kind. Everyone spoke of how highly professional he is, and we are excited to have Stephen back,’ said Martin Fischhoff, spokesman for WTVS. . . .”
Marshall Project Makes Diversity a ‘Central Pillar’
The Marshall Project, launched three years ago to conduct investigative reporting on criminal justice issues, was named after the first African American Supreme Court justice, Thurgood Marshall.
However, the project conceded in a report Thursday, “When The Marshall Project launched in November 2014, two of our eight staff writers were people of color, but the leadership was entirely white and predominantly male. We realized that we needed to take steps to broaden representation, and began work to systematically improve our diversity profile.”
The report showed, “As of a staff survey in November 2017, the third anniversary of our launch, 12 of 29 employees (41 percent) identify as people of color, including nine of 21 members of the newsroom team (43 percent). Women make up 55 percent of the full staff and 48 percent of the newsroom, including the president and managing editor. . . .”
Carroll Bogert, president of the project, explained the genesis of the report via email. “Last August, several Marshall Project staff members attended the annual NABJ conference,” she said, referring to the National Association of Black Journalists, “where we hosted a panel (‘Nonprofit News: Journalism’s Next Frontier’) and staffed a Marshall Project booth.
“They came back feeling that a lot of people were unaware of what The Marshall Project was doing to diversify its staff and board. We decided we should provide a public accounting.
“We were already discussing these issues at meetings of our staff diversity committee, but we also convened a full staff conversation about diversity and devoted part of a board meeting to the topic as well. A commitment to staff and board diversity is now one of the central pillars of our strategic plan, approved by our board last month.”
The report also gave readers the racial percentages for the board (15 percent black, 8 percent Asian), but did not break out the composition of its leadership.
“We will continue to put a premium on diversity as we recruit, hire and promote, including for leadership positions,” the report said. “We will continue to seek out experienced journalists of color, but we will also do more to add to their ranks in the industry at large. The Marshall Project is committed to building internships and fellowship programs to bring young journalists of color into our newsroom and provide the training and mentoring they need for their talents to blossom.”
(Credit: Kansas City Star)
K.C. Star Forces Release of Chilling Footage
“Ciara Howard’s last act of defiance was slamming closed the laundry room door that stood between her and an arsenal of officers determined to arrest her one more time,” Joe Robertson reported Wednesday for the Kansas City Star.
“Suddenly, in chilling body camera footage obtained after The Star filed a lawsuit, the lead Olathe police officer forced the door open and three-plus hours of standoff came to a deadly end for an emotionally troubled 26-year-old woman with a history of nothing but small, nonviolent crimes.” Olathe is a Kansas City suburb of 135,000.
“For 13 harrowing seconds, Howard stood shouting and trembling in the small room with a gun in her hand, waving it aimlessly at first but at times clearly pointing it at officers who screamed at her to drop the weapon.
“The officers opened fire and Howard pitched forward, falling dead on the concrete floor.
“Two Olathe officers and a Johnson County deputy sheriff shot Howard in the Aug. 23 confrontation, and a review by the Johnson County District Attorney’s Office determined the shooting was justified.
“But family members who have seen the video are anguished by decisions police made to even enter the house, knowing Howard was alone, emotionally disturbed and had a handgun with her.
“Her crime was that she had not returned to a residential center as required under her probation; she had been charged with a felony of escape. A call two days later to 911 tipped police that she was at her boyfriend’s house. Distraught friends and family say she was a threat to no one. . . .”
- Editorial, Kansas City Star: Ciara Howard was killed in a police standoff. Why won’t Olathe release the body camera footage? (Dec. 25, updated Dec. 26)
St. Paul Paper Applauds New Mayor on Diversity
“A new era began in St. Paul this week with a vigorous reminder from Mayor Melvin Carter that we exist in a long line of immigrants and refugees who found hope in St. Paul,” the Pioneer Press of St. Paul, Minn., editorialized on Thursday.
“This beautiful, diverse city they built for us is our ticket to the future,” Carter told a joyful audience of hundreds moments after taking the oath of office at Central High School, where he graduated in 1997.
“The new mayor, one of St. Paul’s youngest ever at 38, is the city’s first African American chief executive. He asks us to imagine the place St. Paul will be when it starts celebrating — instead of merely accepting — its diversity.
“There is power in doing so and, in making his point, Carter echoed a resonant message from his two-year campaign: that we stop approaching diversity as ‘a problem to fix.’ Instead, it should be an asset that can help St. Paul compete in a global economy. . . .”
The editorial also said, approvingly, “Important cues about how he’ll support that vision, made public on Friday, include selection of economist Bruce Corrie to oversee the city’s Department of Planning and Economic Development. Corrie — a faculty member at Concordia University in St. Paul since 1987 — is known for his focus on the economic contributions of immigrants and people who are among ethnic minorities. Included is work involved with the Little Africa and Little Mekong developments along University Avenue. . . .”
- Tad Vezner, Pioneer Press, St. Paul, Minn.: Understanding Mayor Carter’s reference to national anthem as ‘an ode to slavery.’
Short Takes
- “The amount of investigative journalism on US television is low (my study found that only 1 in 5 newscasts featured investigative stories), and in an era of extreme ownership consolidation, it could sink even lower,” Jesse Abdenour, a former television reporter who now teaches at the University of Oregon School of Journalism and Communication, wrote Wednesday for Columbia Journalism Review. He also wrote, “But large corporations may not be the bogeymen they’re sometimes made out to be. Stations owned by corporations with public shareholders (often a sign of large, profit-minded companies), such as Sinclair, produced more investigative journalism than stations owned by smaller, private companies in my research. . . .”
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Keith A. Owens is stepping down after two years as senior editor of the Michigan Chronicle, part of the black press, to become deputy communications director for the Wayne County, Mich., executive, Owens told readers on Wednesday. “It was just time to go is all,” Owens said by email. “. . . Plus the job with Wayne County is a great place to land.” He told readers, “it often seems like Detroit is consistently the most newsworthy city in the country. It’s not easy to get hired by anyone at the age of 57, and it’s definitely not easy for a 57-year-old African American male to land a job as a journalist — let alone senior editor — in Detroit where, like most cities, many more people are being let go than brought on board. . .”
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Gustavo Arellano, the author of the syndicated “Ask a Mexican” column who resigned in October as editor of OC Weekly, will be writing once a week for the Los Angeles Times Opinion section, as will cultural critic Virginia Heffernan, Juliet Lapidos, Times op-ed editor, said in a note to staff members. Longtime Washington bureau columnist Doyle McManus told readers on Dec. 31, ” I won’t be writing twice a week for this page any more.This isn’t goodbye, though. I’ll still be contributing to Opinion, just on a less regular basis.” Arellano’s first column appeared Wednesday.
- A painting of a nude woman that hung over the bar at the Milwaukee Press Club is coming down, “yet another ripple from the #metoo movement against sexual assault and harassment, mostly of women by men in power,” Jim Stingl wrote Thursday for the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
” ‘There was no reason for her to be displayed where she was in the Newsroom Pub because it has absolutely nothing to do with news or journalism. The question was, well, why is she there anyway?’ said LaToya Dennis, president of the Press Club and a news reporter at WUWM public radio. The painting dates to 1920. For decades, women were not allowed to join the club.
- “The depiction of race in The Greatest Showman, while offering a hopeful spirit of inclusiveness, is nonetheless a lie,” David Mindich, chair of the journalism department at the Klein College of Media and Communication at Temple University, wrote Tuesday for philly.com. “When we whitewash history, we risk two things: First, we diminish the crimes committed by whites. Second, we minimize the suffering of people of color. Most important, our history doesn’t make sense when we omit racial injustice. . . .” The musical drama stars Hugh Jackman, Zac Efron and Michelle Williams, and the soundtrack is on track to become No. 1 on the Billboard 200 Chart, according to Natalie Maher, writing Thursday in Billboard.
- “Newsweek posted a tweet on Monday that referenced the death of Martin Luther King Jr. and deleted it after his daughter called out the publication for being thoughtless,” Doha Madani wrote Monday for HuffPost Black Voices. “The post included a photo of the civil rights leader in his casket and the caption ‘Has anybody here seen my old friend Martin?’ ‘ a song lyric. ” ‘Why, @Newsweek? Wow,’ Bernice King tweeted in response. Many Twitter users replied to her, agreeing that Newsweek’s post was insensitive.”
- “Journalist and transgender rights advocate Ashlee Marie Preston garnered public praise in August when she lambasted Caitlin Jenner’s support for President Donald Trump,” Zahara Hill wrote Wednesday for Ebony. “. . . The activist and former editor-in-chief of the inter-sectional feminist magazine Wear Your Voice gave her followers further reason to look forward to the new year when she shared she’d be running for California’s District 54 State Assembly seat. . . .”
- The case of Emilio Gutierrez Soto, 54, a Mexican journalist who sought refuge in the U.S. amid death threats almost a decade ago and now faces deportation, “is a high-profile example of the years it can take for asylum claims to wind through the country’s backlogged immigration court system [paywall], compounded by appeals and the challenge of claiming refuge from countries that are U.S. allies, such as Mexico,” Alicia A. Caldwell wrote Wednesday for the Wall Street Journal. “Because of a backlog of more than 650,000 cases in the immigration court system, asylum cases can take years to be decided. In 2016, the most recently available Justice Department statistics, nearly 13,000 Mexicans asked the U.S. government for refuge. Judges approved 464 requests while denying more than 2,600 others. To win asylum, applicants must prove they have or are likely to suffer persecution because of their race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group or political opinion. . . .”
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“James Harris has been named afternoon host for News station 550 KFYI-AM in Phoenix,” Radio Ink reported Wednesday. Program Director Aaron Trimmer “said, ‘As the ringleader of the Conservative Circus, James brings a unique perspective and unrivaled enthusiasm for talk radio to 550 KFYI.’ . . . We’re thrilled to add his voice to the station weekday afternoons.’ Harris previously worked as afternoon host for KQTH-AM in Tucson, Arizona. . . .”
- “If journalism is to thrive, it must pair trustworthy facts with trust-building practices,” Molly de Aguiar, managing director for the News Integrity Initiative at the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism, wrote for Nieman Lab. “This means moving beyond the often extractive ‘community engagement’ practices and toward ‘community collaboration.’ It means listening to understand without being defensive . . . If journalism is to thrive, it must fix its foolish lack of diversity in newsroom staff, sources, and stories. It must also uphold democracy by being more democratic in its newsgathering process, and take bold action in defense of the First Amendment by partnering with media justice activists. . . .”
- “Amanda Davis, the CBS46 morning anchor who died of a sudden stroke last week at age 62, is getting much love from several black female anchors across the country wearing red in her honor and to promote stroke awareness,” Rodney Ho wrote Tuesday, updated Wednesday, for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. “They are posting with the trending Twitter hashtag #RedforAmanda. . . . African-American women are more likely to have a stroke than any other racial group of women and twice as likely as white women, according to the Centers for Disease Control. . . .”
- “After a local TV anchor said St. Paul officers looked up her private driver’s license information for non-law enforcement purposes, the city council agreed Wednesday to settle her federal lawsuit for $33,000,” Mara H. Gottfried reported Wednesday, updated Thursday, for the Pioneer Press in St. Paul, Minn. The lawsuit claimed that “Fox 9 Morning News” co-host Alix Kendall’s driver’s license information was accessed more than 3,800 times during a 10-year period. . . . ‘these personnel, charged with protecting and serving the public, knowingly abused their position of trust to unlawfully peek behind the curtain into the private life of Kendall,’ her lawsuit said. . . . Driver’s-license data available to law enforcement includes home address, photographs, date of birth, height, weight and potentially medical information. . . .”
- Denise Clay, a Philadelphia writer active in the National Association of Black Journalists, and Mark Kelly Tyler, her co-host on Philadelphia’s “Wake Up With WURD,” say they are starting a new morning radio show after leaving WURD, Pennsylvania’s only black talk radio station. They wrote Wednesday on their GoFundMe page, “While we can’t disclose the name of the new station just yet, the signal is 10x greater than the previous location enabling us to reach a larger audience in the Philadelphia region!” Clay and Kelly wrote a news release announcing their departure and Jenice Armstrong wrote Tuesday for the Philadelphia Daily News on her dismay about changes at the station.
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In Mexico, during “the recent oral hearing of the accused mastermind of the murder of Miroslava Breach Velducea, audio was presented allegedly linking two members of the ruling National Action Party (PAN, for [its] acronym in Spanish) with the March 23, 2017 murder of the correspondent from La Jornada,” Paola Nalvarte reported Wednesday for the Knight Center for Journalism in the Americas. According to the newspaper Proceso, “the recording of a 2016 conversation between Breach and Alfredo Piñera, spokesperson for the PAN, allegedly confirmed what the murdered journalist reported on in numerous articles: the collusion between drug traffickers and politicians in the state of Chihuahua, who are also allegedly implicated in Breach’s murder. . . .”
- “Boko [Haram] has threatened to attack some media houses in Nigeria,” Wale Odunsi reported for Nigeria’s Daily Post. “This is contained in a new video released today, Wednesday. The organisations include, Punch, Daily Sun, Vanguard, Guardian, Nation, Tribune, and National Accord. The reason for their planned attack according to the clip include, misinforming the public about their operation, lies, dishonouring their prophet, ‘Mohammad’, among others. . . .” The terrorist group carried out such a threat in 2012, leaving eight dead.
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View previous columns (after Feb. 13, 2016).
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2 comments
The debate over the request or demand for “black journalists only” itself requires a serious response. I did not believe–and still find incredulous–the “request” that only “black journalists” “reach out to the family” of deceased antipolice brutality activist Erica Garner. Does such a request include coverage of the funeral, too? No one in life or death much less their spokesperson can expect journalists to check or affirm their skin color before inquiring or “reaching out” out to the family for comment on the life or death of a public figure such as Garner. Truth: Neither blacks nor whites are of one mind, ideologically or in terms of disposition or sensitivity on “race” issues or about police-community relations. If journalists of any “race” profess to be so, premised on their “race”, they aren’t serious journalists. And no self-respecting journalist or his/her editor should accede to such a “request” for racial identification or racial solidarity in their reporting.
That such a request for “black journalists only” has stirred a “debate” is itself concerning. Instead of debating the demand, journalists and humanity should instead push back and debate and dispute the idea of “race” as a qualification or disqualification for conducting one’s craft. Skin color alone is not a legitimate basis in any circumstance–in life or death–to do one’s job as a journalist. Racist is one way to describe a skin-color test/request–racial idiocy is another.
Michael Meyers, executive director, New York Civil Rights Coalition, Manhattan, New York
Comments From The Root:
Who’s Got the Pain when they do the Mambo?
1/06/18 12:37pm
I’ve seen a lot of grieving folks make a lot of questionable decisions. I believe that people in grief should be allowed to make any decision they want to about what they do with their grief, as long as they don’t hurt themselves or other people. And some of the decisions have been so terrible that I had to catch my breath. This isn’t one of them.
I’m sorry that white journalists have to go through the inconvenience of talking to black journalists.
But not very sorry.
Kojimoko
1/07/18 1:54am
They already had to deal w/ various forms of white journalistic fuckery when her father was murdered. I can understand why they wouldn’t be up for round two again so soon.
Meh-zuzah
1/07/18 2:53am
I’m with Eugene Scott on this one.
Eugene Scott, a reporter for the Washington Post who is black, tweeted Dec. 30, “Non-black journalists complaining about how it is unfair that the Garners want to share their story with black journalists should just ask the black person in their newsroom to ask for comment — unless their newsroom doesn’t have a black journalist …”
Scott also tweeted, “It is a PRIVILEGE that people choose to share their stories with us. We’re not entitled to their stories. Considering how often the media misrepresents marginalized communities in our coverage, we should be grateful they even pick up the phone when we call much less talk to us.”