The Only One Whose Job Is Not in Jeopardy, but —
.@VP Pence swears Jon Kyl into the U.S. Senate, filling seat
left vacant by passing of Senator John McCain. pic.twitter.com/iAbqk5uEjA
— CSPAN (@cspan) September 5, 2018
The Only One Whose Job Is Not in Jeopardy, but —
A spokesman for Vice President Mike Pence strongly denied Thursday that he was the author of a New York Times op-ed who claimed to be part of a ‘resistance’ effort within the administration, as frenzied speculation continued about who penned the piece,” John Wagner reported for the Washington Post.
But Peter Eisner, co-author of the just-published “The Shadow President: The Truth About Mike Pence,” tells Journal-isms that the vice president “is the only person whose job would not be jeopardized by disclosure of his name.”
Still, Eisner is doubtful that Pence wrote the op-ed.
Eisner said Thursday by email:
“I don’t think that the New York Times is playing around with the ID, and I disagree with the notion that Pence would also be in jeopardy because of possible disclosure. Pence has been deceptive throughout his career, but I still think that he is the only person whose job would not be jeopardized by disclosure of his name. The writer has to accept the possibility that his name will be revealed at any time — and may even be considering the possibility of revealing himself.
“Pence stands to benefit politically more than any other person in the United States, should Trump be driven from office, either by impeachment or under the 25th Amendment.
“Some are referring to this as a ‘soft coup,’ and in such a coup, Pence emerges at the 46th president of the United States.
“The writer, of course, could be representing a group of people, and Pence could be involved in some way. Based, however, on our previous contacts with sources close to Pence and his view of the presidency, I doubt that he is involved.
“Pence has worked carefully to attract Trump’s base, and to be accepted by them, in dozens of speeches around the United States. In each appearance, he says ‘I bring greetings from the president’ and that Trump has done a great job, the greatest in U.S. history. He can’t be Trump’s greatest supporter in public and then claim in print that he’s known all along that Trump is unfit for the presidency.
“Meanwhile, there’s a strange element in the op-ed. The writer says that ‘there were early whispers within the cabinet of invoking the 25th Amendment, which would start a complex process for removing the president. But no one wanted to precipitate a constitutional crisis.’
“The problem with that is that invoking the 25th Amendment does not on its face lead to a constitutional crisis. Rather, it invokes the Constitution as written. Unless, someone, like Pence would dissent from using the amendment. That would, in fact, invoke a crisis. An argument can be made that the letter writer himself (it appears to be a man) has in fact provoked the constitutional crisis that was feared.”
- Peter Baker and Maggie Haberman, New York Times: Trump Lashes Out After Reports of ‘Quiet Resistance’ by Staff
- Michael D’Antonio, CNN: NY Times op-ed writer took huge gamble on stopping Trump
- Martin Finucane, Boston Globe: Who wrote the anonymous Times op-ed? Here are some prime suspects
- Michael M. Grynbaum, New York Times: Anonymous Op-Ed in New York Times Causes a Stir Online and in the White House
- David K. Li, New York Post: Bookies place odds on anonymous White House official
- Susan Page, USA Today: Analysis: A storm gathers around Donald Trump, and two Constitutional crises could follow
- Jack Shafer, Politico Magazine: How Soon Will the NYT’s Trump Resistance Writer Be Outed?
- Taylor Telford, Washington Post: All the speculation that’s fit to tweet: Who wrote that anonymous Times op-ed?
- Brian Stelter, CNN: The story behind the New York Times’ anonymous op-ed blasting Trump
What if Trump Were Out and We Got Pence?
September 5, 2018
Authors: V.P. Gave Racial Issues ‘Benign Neglect’
Trump Adviser Almost Quit Over Charlottesville
Sinclair Stations Must Run Praise of Kavanaugh
Journalists Rally Behind Sentenced Reporters
Politics in Aretha Service Shouldn’t Be Missed
Howard Lets Go Another at Communications School
Craig Melvin Promoted to News Anchor for ‘Today’
Ahtone Named NAJA President After Pollard Moves
Asian Americans on Both Sides of Affirmative Action
Detained by ICE, Journalist Describes His Hell
Support Journal-isms
Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb pardoned Keith Cooper on an armed-robbery conviction last year after his predecessor, Mike Pence, refused. Cooper had maintained his innocence since his arrest in 1997. He served more than eight years in prison. (video) (Credit: Dwight Adams/Indianapolis Star)
Authors: V.P. Gave Racial Issues ‘Benign Neglect’
Political reporters say the Democrats don’t want to talk about impeaching President Trump just yet because it might energize Trump’s base before the midterm elections. But what if impeachment came to pass and Trump were forced to leave office? What would the nation get if Vice President Mike Pence were in the top job?
For people of color, Pence’s record as governor of Indiana suggests they could expect “benign neglect” of their issues, according to Michael D’Antonio and Peter Eisner, journalists who have written the new “The Shadow President: The Truth About Mike Pence,” published Friday.
Journal-isms asked Eisner, an author who has worked at Newsday, the Associated Press and the Washington Post, what journalists should make of their findings. Here is his edited response:
“Pence’s time as governor of Indiana does give us hints about who he is. He treated controversy, in cases that happened to involve African Americans and other minorities, with benign neglect. He would deny this with a turn of the cheek, but would he explain himself? He never has.
- “Keith Cooper had been arrested for the crime of being black and in the vicinity of a crime he had not committed. Once serving 10 years after a faulty trial, he was set free, and only wanted Pence to acknowledge reality. Pence’s own state parole board recommended a full pardon. Tens of thousands of people signed a petition demanding action. Cooper only wanted his good name back. Pence never addressed the matter in public and — acting through subordinates — refused to give him a pardon.
- “Pence faced his own version of the Flint, Mich., lead crisis, this case in East Chicago, Ind., where local officials in the predominantly African American city said they had run out of money to help 1,500 families whose water and the soil beneath them were poisoned with lead and other heavy metals. Pence rejected a request for declaring a local disaster — his staff responding that enough had been done. In both cases, his successor, Eric Holcomb, a conservative Republican and Pence’s own former lieutenant governor, reversed Pence’s lack of action within weeks of taking office. Holcomb pardoned Cooper, saying he had already suffered more than enough; he declared an emergency in East Chicago, and took a key step: He went to East Chicago himself to meet with members of the community. Pence never bothered.
- “Pence’s secretary of state promoted a bogus voter fraud claim against a progressive voter registration drive in 2016 in a mostly black suburb of Indianapolis. A local prosecutor said there had been no finding of fraud. The case involved 45,000 registrants and more who could have been registered — most of them would have been likely Democratic voters. Pence aligns himself now with Trump’s baseless charges of nationwide voter fraud. Why?
“Pence in all cases stands in the shadows, employing deniability, and hiding behind professions of faith. Nonbelievers, he says, are attacking him unfairly. But he never answers the questions of policy. He would deny charges of bias — but it just so happens that the most high profile acts he is criticized for involve inaction to alleviate the suffering of minorities in his home state and now immigrants to the United States.”
Eisner also noted, “Pence did not criticize Trump for his outrageous statements in Charlottesville — ‘some of them are good people’ — nor did he say anything about a government policy that separates parents from their children on the Mexican border. . . .”
- Nathalie Baptiste, Mother Jones: This Lead-Poisoned City Could Be Trump’s Flint (March 15, 2017)
- Becky Malewitz , South Bend (Ind.) Tribune: Keith Cooper: ‘The system is biased’ (July 27)
- Charles P. Pierce, Esquire: I Can’t Seem to Find the Bible Verse About Neglecting Poisoned Constituents
Trump Adviser Almost Quit Over Charlottesville
Gary Cohn, the president’s former top economic adviser, came to regard President Trump as “a professional liar” and threatened to resign in August 2017 over Trump’s handling of a deadly white-supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Va., according to Bob Woodward’s forthcoming book “Fear,” Philip Rucker and Robert Costa reported Tuesday in the Washington Post.
“Cohn, who is Jewish, was especially shaken when one of his daughters found a swastika on her college dorm room,” they continued, reporting on just one of many revelations in the book.
“Trump was sharply criticized for initially saying that ‘both sides’ were to blame. At the urging of advisers, he then condemned white supremacists and neo-Nazis but almost immediately told aides, ‘That was the biggest fucking mistake I’ve made’ and the ‘worst speech I’ve ever given,’ according to Woodward’s account.
“When Cohn met with Trump to deliver his resignation letter after Charlottesville, the president told him, ‘This is treason,’ and persuaded his economic adviser to stay on.” White House Chief of Staff John F. Kelly “then confided to Cohn that he shared Cohn’s horror at Trump’s handling of the tragedy — and shared Cohn’s fury with Trump.
“ ‘I would have taken that resignation letter and shoved it up his ass six different times,’ Kelly told Cohn, according to Woodward. Kelly himself has threatened to quit several times but has not done so. . . .”
- Greg Dool, folio:: The Economist Stands By Steve Bannon Speaking Gig; Pledges “Rigorous Questioning”
- Greg Jaffe, Washington Post: The ‘Trump effect’: How a norm-scrambling presidency and a viral video are changing the way black and white residents in Summerville, S.C., talk about race
- Roy S. Johnson, al.com: With Trump normalizing racism, candidates gain comfort using not-so-coded language
- David Lauter, Los Angeles Times: Who do you trust? Trump’s attacks take a toll on his own credibility, as well as the media’s
- Natasha Leonard, the Intercept: The New Yorker Dropped Steve Bannon, but Misses the Point of Why the Invite Was a Mistake in the First Place
- Clarence Page, Chicago Tribune: Trump predicts violence from the left in November. That’s rich.
- Eugene Robinson, Washington Post: This vile, unadulterated racism
- Fabiola Santiago, Miami Herald: Trump didn’t do ‘a fantastic job’ in Puerto Rico. Ask the loved ones of 2,975 dead
- Chuck Todd, the Atlantic: It’s Time for the Press to Stop Complaining — And to Start Fighting Back
- Michael Wolraich, Daily Beast: How Robert Mueller Outfoxed Donald Trump
Because of SCOTUS decision in Brown v. Board, 61 yrs ago the brave Little Rock Nine were empowered to desegregate their school.
Today I invited one of them –Carlotta Walls LaNier– to witness Kavanuagh’s hearing. She’s a living testament to the importance of the Supreme Court. pic.twitter.com/s5MGzFrwTT
— Sen. Cory Booker (@SenBooker) September 4, 2018
Sinclair Stations Must Run Praise of Kavanaugh
“Conservative TV giant Sinclair Broadcast Group is requiring its local news stations across the country to air multiple ‘must-run’ segments praising ‘perfectly qualified’ Supreme Court nominee Judge Brett Kavanaugh and encouraging a quick confirmation,” Pam Vogel reported July 30 for Media Matters for America, updated Aug. 27.
“As of August 27, Sinclair has produced at least six ‘must-run’ commentary segments about the open Supreme Court seat, including three that feature excerpts from interviews with Vice President Mike Pence, Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-UT), and Rep. Lamar Smith (R-TX). The segments either laud Kavanaugh’s qualifications, dismiss real concerns about what’s at stake if he is confirmed, or push for a quick confirmation process. Some do all three.
“Sinclair designates that certain news and commentary segments, produced in its national studios, must air on its local news stations across the country — including all four of the Kavanaugh-related segments. According to a Media Matters search of the iQ media database, one or more of these segments have aired in at least 22 states, including those with potentially key senators in a confirmation vote like Alabama, Maine, Nevada, and West Virginia. . . .”
The confirmation hearings opened Tuesday. “Senate Democrats tore into President Trump’s Supreme Court nominee on Tuesday, painting Judge Brett M. Kavanaugh as a narrow-minded partisan as the opening day of his confirmation hearings verged on pandemonium,” Sheryl Gay Stolberg and Adam Liptak reported for the New York Times..
Sens. Cory Booker, D-N.J., and Kamala Harris, D-Calif., both of color, raised racial issues. Harris said she might not have attended the schools she did were it not for the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision ordering school desegregation. Booker invited Carlotta Walls LaNier, the youngest of the Little Rock Nine who integrated Central High School in 1957 in Little Rock, Ark. He said some of Trump’s judicial nominees have refused to acknowledge that the Brown decision is settled law.
Condoleezza Rice, secretary of state under President George W. Bush and the second African American to hold that post, vouched for Kavanaugh’s character.
- Todd Gitlin, Columbia Journalism Review: Reporters should out Kavanaugh
- Rev. Dr. Donald D. Moore, Philadelphia Inquirer: Brett Kavanaugh will be bad for African Americans
- Andrew Seidman and Jonathan Tamari, Philadelphia Inquirer: ‘So much is at stake’: Why Cory Booker has shed his nice guy image in Brett Kavanaugh hearings (Sept. 6)
Journalists Rally Behind Sentenced Reporters
“Reuters journalists in bureaus around the world on Tuesday voiced support for a pair of reporters for the news service who were sentenced this week to seven years in jail in Myanmar,” Joe Concha reported for the Hill.
“Free speech advocates have decried a Myanmar judge’s ruling Monday that Wa Lone, 32, and Kyaw Soe Oo, 28, broke the law by obtaining confidential documents for a report on the persecution of Rohingya Muslims.
“U.S. ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley slammed Myanmar’s government over the ruling Monday on Twitter, saying it was ‘another terrible stain’ on the country and calling for the reporters’ immediate release.
“Reuters employees in Washington, D.C., New York and bureaus in multiple other countries shared photos on social media on Tuesday showing journalists standing in solidarity with the jailed reporters. . . .”
Reuters President and Editor-in-Chief, Stephen J. Adler said in a statement, “We will not wait while Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo suffer this injustice and will evaluate how to proceed in the coming days, including whether to seek relief in an international forum.”
International press freedom groups also expressed outrage.
- Pete Vernon, Columbia Journalism Review: A travesty in Myanmar
Politics in Aretha Service Shouldn’t Be Missed
The eight-hour “homegoing” for Aretha Franklin in Detroit Friday was such a cultural and civic celebration that commentators often overlooked its political elements.
Some did notice, however.
“In speech after speech, Ms. Franklin in death became a rallying point for speakers who used her example to address political and social frustrations, and to vow to persevere,” Ben Sisario and Steve Friess wrote Friday for the New York Times. The Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr. “noted that there were long lines for her viewings but short lines at voting booths. Pastor William J. Barber II described Ms. Franklin’s voice itself as being vital to the civil rights movement.
“ ‘Before [Barack] Obama said, “Yes we can,” ‘ Pastor Barber announced, ‘Aretha sang, “We can conquer hate forever, yes we can,” ‘ alluding to her song ‘Wholly Holy.’
“Mr. [Stevie] Wonder cited similar themes before a rousing musical performance near the end of the ceremony. ‘We can talk about all the things that are wrong,’ he said, ‘and there are many, but the only thing that can deliver us is love. So what needs to happen today, not only in this nation, but throughout the world, is that we need to make love great again. Because black lives do matter’. . . .”
E.R. Shipp noted Tuesday in the Baltimore Sun, “Among the many constituencies that have suffered as the president tries to recast the United States as a white supremacist ‘America First’ plutocracy, black people have a growing list of grievances. So honoring the Queen of Soul became an outlet for venting frustration, anger, longing and loss while reasserting pride and honoring resilience. Yes, her reign stretched far beyond black America, but Aretha Franklin was unapologetically black.
“In her music, the scholar Michael Eric Dyson said in remarks more meaningful than the drivel the official eulogist later spewed, she conveyed ‘the reality of the hurt and pain, the ardor, the ecstasy, the suffering and the reality that we had to confront as a black people.’ And in her quiet commitment to justice, he said, from supporting Martin Luther King Jr. and Angela Davis to playing secret Santa to Detroit families who’d suffered tragedies, “she was about transforming the existence of black America.”
Those who heard Dyson won’t soon forget his takedown of President Trump.
“And then this orange apparition had the nerve to say she worked for him!” Dyson said.
Dyson told the audience. “You lugubrious leech! You dopey doppelgänger of deceit and deviance! You lethal liar, you dim-witted dictator, you foolish fascist!
“She ain’t work for you!” he exclaimed. “She worked above you! She worked beyond you! Get your preposition right!
“Then he got the nerve to say he gonna grab it!” Dyson continued. “That ain’t what Aretha Franklin said — I’mma give you something you can feel.
“Like the brothers in the streets say, tap lightly! Like a woodpecker with a headache!” he concluded.
Mildred Gaddis, beloved Detroit talk radio host, told the crowd that Franklin followed the news. She would call WJBK-TV anchor Huel Perkins and ask “Why did you have to run that story?” In addition, however, “Aretha would see a family, a family that had been burned out, a child that had been hit on the head, she would say to Huel Perkins, ‘I want to send a check, and don’t you tell anybody about it.’ That’s who our Aretha was.”
Meanwhile, Essence magazine repackaged its “bookazine” on Franklin, first launched last year in honor of the 50th anniversary of the song, “Respect.” “We printed around 250,000 for the original run (edited by Patrik Henry Bass),” spokeswoman Sheila Harris told Journal-isms. “For the re-issue we printed about 275,000 copies. It’s 96 pages long” and sells for $12.
- Kelley L. Carter, the Undefeated: Aretha Franklin’s biggest legacy wasn’t singing; it was social justice
- Britni Danielle, Essence: Aretha Franklin’s Epic 9-Hour Funeral Reminded Me Of Why I Love The Black Church
- Rochelle Riley, Detroit Free Press: It’s official: Chene Park to become Aretha Louise Franklin Amphitheater
- Rochelle Riley, Detroit Free Press: Funeral for Queen of Soul was a loving family reunion
- JoAnn Watson, Detroit Free Press: Jasper Williams dishonored Aretha Franklin’s life, legacy
- Errin Haines Whack, Associated Press: At Franklin’s funeral, a call for respect for black America
- Damon Young, the Root: The 10 Best, Blackest, Messiest and Ugliest Moments From Aretha Franklin’s Epic Marathon Homegoing
Howard Lets Go Another at Communications School
Within days of Carol Dudley losing, then regaining her job mentoring students at Howard University’s Cathy Hughes School of Communications, Robin Thornhill, another longtime faculty member at the school, was let go.
“It blindsided me. I technically was dean of students,” Thornhill, a 18-year veteran of the school who was assistant dean for student affairs and assessment, told Journal-isms by telephone on Friday. “I do all things students. I never imagined they would terminate that person because it’s so central.”
Thornhill also taught advertising and public relations. She also said the university let go six others in the School of Communications, mostly administrative assistants. Thornhill questioned the timing of the layoffs, as school had already begun.
Asked what she wanted to do next, Thornhill replied, “I don’t know. I’m still sort of trying to get my feet back under me.”
Craig Melvin Promoted to News Anchor for ‘Today’
Craig Melvin, who recently stepped down as co-anchor of Saturday Today, is moving to the weekday side of NBC News’ morning show as news anchor,” Patrick Hipes reported Tuesday for Deadline: Hollywood. “His new Today role was announced Tuesday morning by co-anchors Savannah Guthrie and Hoda Kotb.
“Melvin had been a busy guy. In addition to co-hosting the Saturday edition of Today, he had been a correspondent and fill-in anchor on the weekday edition. He anchors MSNBC Live at 1 PM ET weekdays for the cable news network. . . .”
Brian Stelter reported for CNN that Melvin’s promotion “is the latest sign that NBC is still treading carefully with its morning show nearly one year after Matt Lauer was fired. . . . some executives at NBC News have believed that ‘Today’ needed more of an ensemble feel — which meant having more supporting players next to Guthrie and Kotb.
“Melvin has basically been playing that role for months, and now it’s been formalized. Carson Daly and Al Roker also appear on the show every morning. . . .”
Ahtone Named NAJA President After Pollard Moves
Less than six weeks after being elected to a third term as president of the Native American Journalists Association, Bryan Pollard (Cherokee) resigned his seat on the board and became a staff member at the organization, NAJA announced on Tuesday. Board member Tristan Ahtone (Kiowa) was named president during NAJA’s monthly board meeting meeting Aug. 30.
“Pollard will join NAJA in the new full-time staff position of director of programs and strategic partnerships, where he will oversee programming including annual conference training, awards, the Native American Journalism Fellowship (NAJF) and the RED Press Initiative,” an announcement said.
“He will also be responsible for developing partnerships and assisting with fundraising, in accordance with the organization’s 2018-2020 strategic plan.
“Pollard joins NAJA after serving as the communications director and AmeriCorps VISTA Coordinator at the Indigenous Food and Agriculture Initiative at the University of Arkansas. Prior to joining the U of A, he was executive editor of the Cherokee Phoenix, the tribal news media for the Cherokee Nation based in Tahlequah, Oklahoma. . . .”
“Ahtone is a citizen of the Kiowa Tribe of Oklahoma, a lifetime NAJA member and associate editor for tribal affairs at High Country News. His stories have won multiple honors, including investigative awards from Public Radio News Directors Incorporated and the Gannett Foundation. He is a graduate of the Institute of American Indian Arts and Columbia School of Journalism.
In 2017 Ahtone was awarded a Nieman Fellowship to study at Harvard University. . . .”
- Tristan Ahtone, High Country News: Journalism is less diverse than Hollywood — and Congress (July 27)
Asian Americans on Both Sides of Affirmative Action
“Some of the headlines read: ‘DOJ sides with Asian Americans against Harvard admissions.’ They could easily have said, ‘DOJ goes against Asian Americans in Harvard admissions, ‘ ” As Am News reported on Friday.
“Asian Americans were on both sides of the controversy over Harvard’s admissions procedures.
“The Department of Justice sided with the plaintiffs challenging Harvard when it filed a Statement of Interest on the side of the plaintiff in Students For Fair Admissions’ discrimination case against Harvard in the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts.
“Also Thursday, civil rights advocates Asian Americans Advancing Justice (Advancing Justice) alongside the National Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, the Boston-based Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights and Economic Justice, and pro bono counsel Arnold & Porter, filed a second amicus curiae, ‘friend of the court,’ brief on behalf of a diverse group of students, including Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders who support Harvard’s race-conscious holistic admissions policy. The students have special status in the case, which allows them to submit evidence and participate in oral argument. . . .”
In June, the group AAPI Data reported:
“Asian Americans have consistently supported affirmative action policies, with some differences in support depending on question wording;
“Support among Chinese Americans has declined dramatically over four years, while it has remained stable for other Asian Americans;
“Despite declines due to opinion change among Chinese Americans, nearly two-thirds of Asian Americans still support affirmative action. . . .”
- Quyen Dinh, HuffPost: I’m A Lower-Income Asian-American, And Comprehensive Review Helped Me Get Into College
- Iris Kuo, the Atlantic: The ‘Whitening’ of Asian Americans
Detained by ICE, Journalist Describes His Hell
“Emilio Gutiérrez Soto, a Mexican journalist based in the United States, has twice been detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement,” Columbia Journalism Review reported on Tuesday. “In late July, he was released from his second round of detention. For the first time, he has written a first-person account of the experience.”
“I need to spell out some of my recent experiences, so that others will not go through these extremely degrading hardships in a foreign place where universal liberties are proclaimed and then inhumanely denied to those who would seek protection,” Gutiérrez wrote.
“Ten years ago, in spite of the danger of working as a journalist in my home country, Mexico, and President Felipe Calderón’s “War on Drugs,” I never imagined that I would cross the border to the US, seeking the protection of the authorities, or that I would twice be imprisoned in holding camps, the second time with my son Oscar at my side.
“But the decision to request asylum was quick. Crossing the armed forces of my country, the executing arm of the Mexican state under the control of Calderón, was not something to think twice about. I had received serious threats from the Mexican government. Because of my work, I lost access to my true heritage, lost a family, lost a beloved woman, lost a community, lost a Motherland, and was forced to venture out in search of charity.
“When I crossed the border to El Norte from my small community in the northeast of Chihuahua, to save my life and that of my son, I requested political asylum.
“I remember the moment of crossing.
“ ‘What are you bringing?’ La Migra (the Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer) asked when we crossed that morning through El Berrendo to the US.
“ ‘Fear,’ I responded right away.
“ ‘Of whom?’
“ ‘Of the military officials who want to kill me. I’m a journalist.’
“ ‘And what do you want here?’
“ ‘Political asylum,’ I answered.
“La Migra slid his sunglasses down the bridge of his nose to peer over them at me inquisitively. ‘But aren’t soldiers there to look after you?’
“ ‘Not those ones!’ I said. I turned white.
” ‘Okay! Please step down to the office,’ La Migra said.
“That’s when the way of sorrows began, and would last more than ten years.
“I was sent to a holding camp, and my son — just 15 years old — to a youth center. Jail! And with jail came separation from Oscar, who is my life, my very breath. Our separation was a disgrace. The limbo began, and it was without mercy. . . ”
Gutiérrez also wrote, “the criminalization of those of us seeking political asylum has just begun. . . .”
- Jeremy Barr, Hollywood Reporter: Geraldo Rivera is an Immigration Advocate Embedded Inside Fox News
- David Beard, Poynter Institute: How to report Trump’s move against Texas Latinos who have U.S. birth certificates?
- Editorial, Dallas Morning News: As Saudi Arabia considers killing a women’s rights activist, the United States should offer her asylum
- Silvia Higuera, Knight Center for Journalism in the Americas: Judge denies bail to Cuban journalist seeking asylum in the U.S. who is being held by ICE
- Ruben Navarrette Jr., Washington Post Writers Group: Immigrants work harder than native-born Americans
Short Takes
- Roland Martin launched his daily digital program Tuesday, after announcing on Thursday that he had left TVOne after 13 years. “Over the last eight months, we’ve had numerous discussions about what I would do next with TV One. As that was happening, I was planning my own daily digital show, #RolandMartinUnfiltered, to take advantage of this new media world we are now living in. So with much sadness, but tremendous gratitude, my tenure at TV One comes to a close on Friday, Aug. 31,” he wrote. Asked what prevented him and TV One from concluding the discussions successfully, Martin replied by email, “Column speaks for itself.” Interview
- “Jemele Hill and ESPN tried to stay together before agreeing to a divorce and a buyout on the nearly three years and multimillions of dollars remaining on her contract,” Andrew Marchand reported Tuesday for the New York Post, citing “sources on both sides” who called the discussions “amicable.”
- “Great publications don’t die all at once, they get dismembered over time,” Erik Wemple wrote Friday for the Washington Post.”The Village Voice, founded in 1955, had been losing staff for more than a decade. It lost its print edition last year. And on Friday came the news that it would cease publishing altogether. . . .” As reported here two years ago, the roster of writers of color associated with the Voice over the years includes Amiri Baraka, Greg Tate, Stanley Crouch, Jill Nelson, Lisa Jones, Carol Cooper, Hilton Als, Peter Noel, Chanel Lee, Dasun Allah, Dennis Lim, Chisun Lee, Nita Rao, Andy Hsiao, Luis Francia, Ed Park, Pablo Guzman, Ed Morales, Jorge Morales, Enrique Fernandez, Colson Whitehead, Scott Poulson-Bryant, Steven Thrasher, Ta-Nehisi Coates, Nick Charles, Terence Samuel and Thulani Davis.
- “The United States Marine Corps has taken steps to combat racial extremists in its ranks, issuing an updated order emphasizing that participation in white supremacist and other groups is prohibited and encouraging service members to report fellow Marines involved with such groups,” Rahima Nasa reported for ProPublica in cooperation with PBS’ “Frontline.” “The actions come after an active-duty Marine was documented taking part in last year’s deadly white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, and two others were arrested after hanging a racist banner off a building in North Carolina.” She also wrote, “A ProPublica and Frontline investigation this year revealed that Vasillios G. Pistolis, a Marine based at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, had engaged in a series of assaults during the Charlottesville rally. . . .”
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“Karma Lawrence, the woman who snuck a picture of former ‘Cosby Show’ actor Geoffrey Owens as he cashed out her groceries at an N.J. Trader Joe’s, is filled with regret,” Jessica Remo reported Tuesday for NJ Advance Media, updated Wednesday. “The photo — and the story of Owens working at the supermarket — went viral after Lawrence submitted them to a few celebrity websites and the Daily Mail published them.” Remo also wrote, “So why’d she do it? Because she reads Hollywood websites and sees paparazzi shots all the time, she said. . . .”
- “NBC has ordered a new ‘Law & Order’ series from Dick Wolf, the network announced Tuesday,” Joe Otterson reported Tuesday for Variety. “The series is titled ‘Law & Order: Hate Crimes’ and has received a 13 episode commitment. . . . the latest installment of the iconic TV franchise is based on New York’s actual Hate Crimes Task Force, the second oldest bias-based task force in the U.S. . . .”
- “In more than three dozen interviews, writers, producers, and studio and network executives said heightened scrutiny in the wake of #OscarsSoWhite and other controversies has led to the concerted push, particularly for women of color in senior positions,“ Cara Buckley wrote Sunday for the New York Times. Buckley also wrote, “a major reason . . . seasoned writers are suddenly batting away job offers is that relatively few are in the supply chain. It is a problem of Hollywood’s own making. . . .”
- “A new study says that the TV industry’s hiring of first-time female directors and directors of color hit record highs for the second year in a row,” the Associated Press reported on Aug. 30. “According to a Directors Guild of America study out Thursday, women represented 41 percent of first-time TV episode directors in the 2017-18 season. . . . The study found that directors of color represented 31 percent of first-time hires last season, up from 27 percent in the 2016-17 season. . . .”
The Washington Post has hired award-winning journalist and veteran audio storyteller Madhulika Sikka as an executive producer on The Post’s audio team” the Post announced Tuesday. Sikka was public editor at PBS. Public editor opening
- Juana Summers Marchand, who has worked at NPR, Mashable, DCist and CNN, is joining the Associated Press, where she will cover Democratic politics, Julie Pace, Washington bureau chief for the AP, tweeted Tuesday.
- “Terrie M. Williams, one of the country’s premiere public relations professionals, whose firm has represented some of the biggest names in entertainment, sports and business, has announced that the company that bears her name will be closing in September 2018,” the agency said on Wednesday. “After 40 years of being in the public eye, Williams said she is retiring to focus on personal wellness, family and travel, and the next chapter of her extraordinary life. . . .”
- “Let me just cover the fundamentals — I’m coming to The Athletic DC after two-and-a-half years at ESPN’s The Undefeated, where I wrote features, profiles and stories about the intersection of race and sports,” Rhiannon Walker wrote Tuesday for the Athletic.” I’ve also spent time at the Dallas Morning News, Chicago Tribune, WUSA9, Washington Post, Houston Chronicle, USA TODAY Sports, The Oklahoman, The Baltimore Sun and Lacrosse Magazine. . . .” She plans to cover the Washington NFL team. Walker’s job at the Undefeated included video, aggregation, original reporting and social media. Lisa Wilson, the Undefeated’s senior editor for sports, announced two weeks ago that she, too, was leaving for the Athletic.
- “It’s not surprising that Mayor Rahm Emanuel won’t be around for a third term,” Mary Mitchell wrote Tuesday for the Chicago Sun-Times. “He served the people of Chicago for two terms — and many of us fought him every step of the way. Unlike his predecessor, Richard M. Daley, Emanuel didn’t own a Teflon suit. . . .”
-
“In the most exhaustive review undertaken of Elizabeth Warren’s professional history, the Globe found clear evidence, in documents and interviews, that her claim to Native American ethnicity was never considered by the Harvard Law faculty, which voted resoundingly to hire her, or by those who hired her to four prior positions at other law schools,” Annie Linskey reported Saturday for the Boston Globe. “At every step of her remarkable rise in the legal profession, the people responsible for hiring her saw her as a white woman. . . . “
- “A veteran Twin Cities journalist will join Minnesota Public Radio News this fall as host of its daily 11 a.m. program,” MPR reported on Sunday. “Angela Davis brings more than 20 years of experience as a reporter and news anchor, most recently at WCCO-TV. She’ll start in her new position at MPR News in early November. . . .”
- “Ghanaian authorities should thoroughly investigate and bring to justice all those responsible for an attack on Jerry Azanduna, a reporter with the government-funded Ghana News Agency (GNA), and ensure his belongings are returned,” the Committee to Protect Journalists said Friday. “Azanduna said that on August 27, a group of men tricked him into getting in a car by saying they would drive him to a press conference he had been told to attend. The men instead drove the journalist to the house of Hassan Ayariga, an opposition Ghanaian politician with the All People’s Congress party, who questioned him about a recent report by GNA before ordering the men to ‘teach him a lesson,’Azanduna said. . . .”
- Reporters Without Borders said Monday it denounces the Chinese foreign minister’s decision to exclude a Japanese journalist from a China-Japan diplomatic meeting in Beijing last Wednesday. “A reporter, sent to Beijing by Japanese conservative daily newspaper Sankei Shimbun on August 29th to cover the meeting between the Foreign Ministries of China and Japan, was suddenly declared persona non grata without giving a precise reason at the request expressed by Chinese Minister Wang Yi. . . . In response, other Japanese journalists who came to cover the meeting boycotted the event. . . .”
-
“In this exclusive broadcast, Democracy Now! breaks the media blockade and goes to occupied Western Sahara in the northwest of Africa to document the decades-long Sahrawi struggle for freedom and Morocco’s violent crackdown,” Amy Goodman reported Friday for “Democracy Now!” She also said, “The international media has largely ignored the occupation — in part because Morocco has routinely blocked journalists from entering Western Sahara. But in late 2016 Democracy Now! managed to get into the Western Saharan city of Laayoune, becoming the first international news team to report from the occupied territory in years. . . .” The reporting showed that under Moroccan occupation, Western Sahara is operated as a police state.
When you shop @AmazonSmile, Amazon will make a donation to Journal-Isms Inc. https://t.co/OFkE3Gu0eK
— Richard Prince (@princeeditor) March 16, 2018
Facebook users: “Like” “Richard Prince’s Journal-isms” on Facebook.
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To be notified of new columns, contact journal-isms-subscribe@yahoogroups.com and tell us who you are.
View previous columns (after Feb. 13, 2016).
- Journalist Richard Prince w/Joe Madison (Sirius XM, April 18, 2018) (podcast)
- Richard Prince (journalist) (Wikipedia entry)
- February 2018 Podcast: Richard “Dick” Prince on the need for newsroom diversity (Gabriel Greschler, Student Press Law Center, Feb. 26, 2018)
- Diversity’s Greatest Hits, 2017 — Where Will They Take Us in the Year Ahead?
- Book Notes: Best Sellers, Uncovered Treasures, Overlooked History (Dec. 19, 2017)
- An advocate for diversity in the media is still pressing for representation, (Courtland Milloy, Washington Post, Nov. 28, 2017)
- Morgan Global Journalism Review: Journal-isms Journeys On (Aug. 31, 2017)
- Diversity’s Greatest Hits, 2016
- Book Notes: 16 Writers Dish About ‘Chelle,’ the First Lady
- Book Notes: From Coretta to Barack, and in Search of the Godfather
- Journal-isms’ Richard Prince Wants Your Ideas (FishbowlDC, Feb. 26, 2016)
- “JOURNAL-ISMS” IS LATEST TO BEAR BRUNT OF INDUSTRY’S ECONOMIC WOES (Feb. 19, 2016)
- Richard Prince with Charlayne Hunter-Gault,“PBS NewsHour,” “What stagnant diversity means for America’s newsrooms” (Dec. 15, 2015)
- Book Notes: Journalists Follow Their Passions
- Book Notes: Journalists Who Rocked Their World
- Book Notes: Hands Up! Read This!
- Book Notes: New Cosby Bio Looks Like a Best-Seller
- Journo-diversity advocate turns attention to Ezra Klein project (Erik Wemple, Washington Post, March 5, 2014)
- Book Notes: “Love, Peace and Soul!” And More
- Book Notes: Book Notes: Soothing the Senses, Shocking the Conscience
- Diversity’s Greatest Hits, 2015
- Diversity’s Greatest Hits, 2014
- Diversity’s Greatest Hits, 2013
- Diversity’s Greatest Hits, 2012
- Diversity’s Greatest Hits, 2011
- Diversity’s Greatest Hits, 2010
- Diversity’s Greatest Hits, 2009
- Diversity’s Greatest Hits, 2008
- Book Notes: Books to Ring In the New Year
- Book Notes: In-Your-Face Holiday Reads
- Fishbowl Interview With the Fresh Prince of D.C. (Oct. 26, 2012)
- NABJ to Honor Columnist Richard Prince With Ida B. Wells Award (Oct. 11, 2012)
- So What Do You Do, Richard Prince, Columnist for the Maynard Institute? (Richard Horgan, FishbowlLA, Aug. 22, 2012)
- Book Notes: Who Am I? What’s Race Got to Do With It?: Journalists Explore Identity
- Book Notes: Catching Up With Books for the Fall
- Richard Prince Helps Journalists Set High Bar (Jackie Jones, BlackAmericaWeb.com, 2011)
- Book Notes: 10 Ways to Turn Pages This Summer
- Book Notes: 7 for Serious Spring Reading
- Book Notes: 7 Candidates for the Journalist’s Library
- Book Notes: 9 That Add Heft to the Bookshelf
- Five Minutes With Richard Prince (Newspaper Association of America, 2005)
- ‘Journal-isms’ That Engage and Inform Diverse Audiences (Q&A with Mallary Jean Tenore, Poynter Institute, 2008)
Behind Walls, ‘Completely Out of Public View’
September 7, 2018
Prison Strike Continues, but Reporters Kept Away
Harris, Booker Futures Are Part of Kavanaugh Story
Steele Suspects N.Y. Times Op-Ed Was Group Effort
Durhams Is First Black President of LGBTQ Group
“Coverage of the killings, and the strike, have been limited, and not because they aren’t noteworthy.” (video) (Credit: WSPA-TV, Spartanburg, S.C.)
Prison Strike Continues, but Reporters Kept Away
“On a Monday in April, at Lee Correctional Facility, in South Carolina, a bloody brawl erupted,” Alexandra Ellerbeck and Avi Asher-Schapiro reported Thursday for Columbia Journalism Review.
“More than four hours passed before guards intervened; in the meantime, seven men died and dozens lay injured. The violence was so intense, and the sluggish response from authorities so disconcerting, that, starting August 21, incarcerated people across the country launched a peaceful strike in protest
“In an effort organized by the Incarcerated Workers Organizing Committee, a union group, and Jailhouse Lawyers Speak, an anonymous collective, prisoners are refusing to perform their assigned jobs and demanding that authorities address a range of concerns — from little or no pay for prison labor to racial disparities in sentencing to the lack of voting rights for incarcerated citizens and ex-felons.
“Coverage of the killings, and the strike, have been limited, and not because they aren’t noteworthy. Although prisons and jails can be found in nearly every community in America, journalists struggle to keep the public informed. ‘What happens behind prison walls — with public funds and in the name of public safety — is completely out of public view,” Jessica Pupovac, a reporter in Chicago, says.
“Pupovac, who has worked with the Society of Professional Journalists to document media access to prisons in all 50 states, has found that, in many cases, authorities will simply avoid reporters they don’t want to deal with. ‘If they’d prefer a story not get out,’ she tells CJR, ‘it doesn’t.’
“In addition to a complex network of state policies that restrict everything from the length of interviews to the pens and paper reporters can bring in, journalists say that the system is often unresponsive to information requests and that they must worry about retaliation against their sources. . . .”
Harris, Booker Futures Are Part of Kavanaugh Story
“Eleven years after Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton used Senate hearings as an anti-Iraq war launchpad for their presidential ambitions, two Democratic senators are similarly seizing on the Supreme Court battle to play to the gallery of 2020 primary voters,” Eric Bradner and Stephen Collinson reported Friday for CNN.
“Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmation hearing has given California Sen. Kamala Harris and New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker an opportunity to show the Democratic base they can put up a fight against President Donald Trump while the national television cameras are running.”
CNN’s was but one story casting the futures of Harris and Booker as part of the storyline of the Kavanaugh hearings.
“The two have seized the moment,” the reporters continued, “upending the conversation around the hearing with exchanges that demonstrated qualities at the core of their political appeal: Booker, a willingness to break norms to stand for his principles, and Harris, a long-time prosecutor’s ability to undermine a cagey witness.
“It comes in one of the last major Senate fights before major Democratic 2020 presidential candidates are expected to launch their campaigns after November’s midterm elections.
“Republicans have complained that Harris and Booker are posturing with 2020 in mind. . . .”
According to the website becauseofthemwecan.com, “This marks the first time two African Americans have sat on the committee at the same time in its 201-year- history.
“As a matter of fact, no African American senator has sat on this committee since the 1990’s when Carole Moseley-Braun served. Moseley-Braun was the first Black woman elected to the Senate as a Democrat from Illinois in 1993. Booker is now the first Black man to sit on this committee. . . .”
- David Brock, NBC Think: I knew Brett Kavanaugh during his years as a Republican operative. Don’t let him sit on the Supreme Court.
- Matt Lewis, Daily Beast: Liberals Are Now in Love With Cory Booker and Kamala Harris? That’s What’s Wrong With Liberalism.
- Jay Michaelson, Daily Beast: Newly Released Emails Show Brett Kavanaugh May Have Perjured Himself at Least Four Times
- Julie Millican, Media Matters for America: The apathy in the media regarding Brett Kavanaugh is a national scandal
- Fabiola Santiago, Miami Herald: Kavanaugh declines to shake Parkland parent’s hand
- Andrew Seidman and Jonathan Tamari, Philadelphia Inquirer: ‘Bring it’: Cory Booker’s Supreme Court stand
- David Siders and Elana Schor, Politico: Harris and Booker borrow Trump’s tactics in Supreme Court fracas
- Linda Valdez, Arizona Republic: A funny thing happened while Cory Booker and Chuck Grassley were fighting over Brett Kavanaugh
- Jay Willis, GQ: It’s About Time Senate Democrats Showed Some Damn Backbone
- Sarah D. Wire and Jennifer Haberkorn, Los Angeles Times: Kavanaugh hearings showcase the starkly different political styles of Sens. Feinstein and Harris
Steele Suspects N.Y. Times Op-Ed Was Group Effort
“Former Republican Party National Chairman Michael Steele goes on the record with NNPA Newswire and it turns out there are more resisters inside the White House — a high-level group of Republican resisters to President Donald Trump — not a single individual, but a large and still growing group,” Stacy M. Brown wrote Friday for the National Newspaper Publishers Association.
“In an NNPA Newswire exclusive, Steele said the damning New York Times op-ed by a senior Trump administration official was likely written by a team of the president’s trusted hierarchy and it’s a clear signal that America is now witnessing a White House in utter chaos. . . .”
Others were not only trying to determine the identity of the op-ed writer, but debating the propriety of the Times’ publishing the piece with a promise of anonymity.
In addition, Michael Calderone reported Friday for Politico:
“Press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders . . . scolded the media for its ‘wild obsession’ with the writer’s identity and directed those who ‘want to know who this gutless loser is,’ to ‘call the opinion desk of the failing New York Times.’ She also posted the Times’s main number and at least a half dozen journalists —including reporters and editors who work on the news, rather than opinion side of the paper — acknowledged getting calls.
” ‘Not sure this is what [Sanders] had in mind when she urged people to call The New York Times,’ tweeted political reporter Ken Vogel, along with audio of caller thanking the paper. The Times’s Andrew Das, Sydney Ember, Elizabeth Dias, Vivian Lee, and Edmund Lee also noted receiving calls, some positive and others negative. ‘The vitriol against the paper is astounding,’ tweeted Lee, who covers media. ‘I don’t know how politics reporters do this every day.’ . . .”
- Editorial, Chicago Sun-Times: Trump is a disaster, but the ‘resistance within’ is undemocratic
- Tom Kludt, CNN: The anonymity dilemma: New York Times rivals react to explosive op-ed
- Editorial, Miami Herald: Anonymous op-ed is a wake-up call to a compliant Congress. Otherwise, what was the point?
- Indira A.R. Lakshmanan, Boston Globe: Crazytown, USA: Have we finally reached peak Trump?
- Kelly McBride, Poynter Institute: How the NYTimes’ anonymous op-ed may change journalism
- Tony Norman, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: Every act of resistance should have a byline
- Leonard Pitts Jr., Miami Herald: Anonymous ‘adult’ in the White House has the jellyfish spine common among Republicans these days
- Joe Pompeo, Vanity Fair: “People Are Totally Stunned”: Even Within the Times, the Deep Throat–esque Op-Ed Heard ’Round the World Dropped Jaws
- Eugene Robinson, Washington Post: We’re in a constitutional crisis. Only voters can save us now.
- Fabiola Santiago, Miami Herald: Is anonymous New York Times op-ed an act of courage — or a Republican ploy?
Durhams Is First Black President of LGBTQ Group
Sharif Durhams, a senior editor for news and alerting for CNN Digital, was “confirmed” as president of the National Lesbian & Gay Journalists Association, the organization, also called NLGJA: The Association of LGBTQ Journalists, announced on Friday.
Durham’s appointment takes effect at the conclusion of NLGJA’s 2018 National Convention in Palm Springs, Calif., on Sunday. It makes him the first African American president of the 28-year-old NLGJA, the National Association of Black Journalists noted in a congratulatory announcement.
NABJ noted that Durhams has been a member of NLGJA since 2000 and previously served as vice president of broadcast and treasurer.
The NABJ announcement continued, ” ‘My goal is to improve the diversity of this organization as well as [its] outreach,’ said Durhams, who has lifetime memberships in both NLGJA and NABJ. ‘I definitely want both organizations to work more together. In some ways, our issues mirror each other, such as making sure there is support in our newsrooms for diversity and getting people from diverse backgrounds into leadership positions.
” ‘There are ways we can back each other up to make sure all of our voices are heard.’ . . .”
- Doris Truong, Poynter Institute: Q&A with incoming NLGJA President Sharif Durhams: ‘Having more diversity … is a priority’
When you shop @AmazonSmile, Amazon will make a donation to Journal-Isms Inc. https://t.co/OFkE3Gu0eK
— Richard Prince (@princeeditor) March 16, 2018
Facebook users: “Like” “Richard Prince’s Journal-isms” on Facebook.
Follow Richard Prince on Twitter @princeeditor
To be notified of new columns, contact journal-isms-subscribe@yahoogroups.com and tell us who you are.
View previous columns (after Feb. 13, 2016).
- Journalist Richard Prince w/Joe Madison (Sirius XM, April 18, 2018) (podcast)
- Richard Prince (journalist) (Wikipedia entry)
- February 2018 Podcast: Richard “Dick” Prince on the need for newsroom diversity (Gabriel Greschler, Student Press Law Center, Feb. 26, 2018)
- Diversity’s Greatest Hits, 2017 — Where Will They Take Us in the Year Ahead?
- Book Notes: Best Sellers, Uncovered Treasures, Overlooked History (Dec. 19, 2017)
- An advocate for diversity in the media is still pressing for representation, (Courtland Milloy, Washington Post, Nov. 28, 2017)
- Morgan Global Journalism Review: Journal-isms Journeys On (Aug. 31, 2017)
- Diversity’s Greatest Hits, 2016
- Book Notes: 16 Writers Dish About ‘Chelle,’ the First Lady
- Book Notes: From Coretta to Barack, and in Search of the Godfather
- Journal-isms’ Richard Prince Wants Your Ideas (FishbowlDC, Feb. 26, 2016)
- “JOURNAL-ISMS” IS LATEST TO BEAR BRUNT OF INDUSTRY’S ECONOMIC WOES (Feb. 19, 2016)
- Richard Prince with Charlayne Hunter-Gault,“PBS NewsHour,” “What stagnant diversity means for America’s newsrooms” (Dec. 15, 2015)
- Book Notes: Journalists Follow Their Passions
- Book Notes: Journalists Who Rocked Their World
- Book Notes: Hands Up! Read This!
- Book Notes: New Cosby Bio Looks Like a Best-Seller
- Journo-diversity advocate turns attention to Ezra Klein project (Erik Wemple, Washington Post, March 5, 2014)
- Book Notes: “Love, Peace and Soul!” And More
- Book Notes: Book Notes: Soothing the Senses, Shocking the Conscience
- Diversity’s Greatest Hits, 2015
- Diversity’s Greatest Hits, 2014
- Diversity’s Greatest Hits, 2013
- Diversity’s Greatest Hits, 2012
- Diversity’s Greatest Hits, 2011
- Diversity’s Greatest Hits, 2010
- Diversity’s Greatest Hits, 2009
- Diversity’s Greatest Hits, 2008
- Book Notes: Books to Ring In the New Year
- Book Notes: In-Your-Face Holiday Reads
- Fishbowl Interview With the Fresh Prince of D.C. (Oct. 26, 2012)
- NABJ to Honor Columnist Richard Prince With Ida B. Wells Award (Oct. 11, 2012)
- So What Do You Do, Richard Prince, Columnist for the Maynard Institute? (Richard Horgan, FishbowlLA, Aug. 22, 2012)
- Book Notes: Who Am I? What’s Race Got to Do With It?: Journalists Explore Identity
- Book Notes: Catching Up With Books for the Fall
- Richard Prince Helps Journalists Set High Bar (Jackie Jones, BlackAmericaWeb.com, 2011)
- Book Notes: 10 Ways to Turn Pages This Summer
- Book Notes: 7 for Serious Spring Reading
- Book Notes: 7 Candidates for the Journalist’s Library
- Book Notes: 9 That Add Heft to the Bookshelf
- Five Minutes With Richard Prince (Newspaper Association of America, 2005)
- ‘Journal-isms’ That Engage and Inform Diverse Audiences (Q&A with Mallary Jean Tenore, Poynter Institute, 2008)