After 40+ Years, the University ‘Broke My Heart’
Reporter Posted Piece on ‘White Women’s Tears’
Paper Urges Restraint as Trump Bashes Immigrant
Daughter Denies Key Quote in New Till Case
Fearful Cuban Journalist Seeks Asylum in U.S.
Garcia to Receive Diversity Leadership Award
Aretha Services to Be Streamed, Televised
Threats Prompt April Ryan to Hire Bodyguard
CNN Suspends Trump Surrogate After Revelation
N. C. Papers Praise Students’ Takedown of Statue
38 J-Students Travel Nation to Document Hate
Chicago Photographers Recall ’68 DNC Riots
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Accepting an award in 2016, Carol Y. Dudley said she had helped change the lives of more than 6,000 young people. (Credit: YouTube)
After 40+ Years, the University ‘Broke My Heart’
Students and alumni are rallying behind Carol Y. Dudley, who has helped guide the careers of communications students at Howard University for more than 40 years and wrote on social media Friday that she was leaving the university “due to financial reasons.”
“Today Howard University broke my heart,” Dudley wrote.
Dudley, director of the Office of Career Development at Howard University’s Cathy Hughes School of Communications, has said that in her years at the university, she has helped change the lives of more than 6,000 young people. “It’s an honor to be rewarded for something I consider my life’s obligation,” (video) she said in accepting a “beauty of diversity” award in 2016.
Asked in a 2015 interview what she does for students in her current position, Dudley replied, “I do everything [for] students! From providing full service career counseling to writing recommendations for graduate and law school. I serve as an advisor to student council, buy them lunch, sew buttons on their jackets when they come off — everything!”
Her initial Facebook notice had gathered 560 reactions, 437 comments and 187 shares by 8 a.m. Saturday.
In a typical response, one alumna wrote, “Howard University School of Communications Alum: Please send letter to the President of Howard University in support of Carol Dudley. She has been the backbone, the rib cage, the upper body strength, the heart, the lungs of the School of C for decades, and she has announced today that they are CUTTING HER JOB!!!! NO~ NO! NO!”
On Twitter, supporters started a #BringBackMsDudley hashtag.
Later Friday, Dudley wrote that the outpouring was noticed.
“Dear alumni and students: I want to thank all of you for your overwhelming kind and passionate support that you showed me today,” she messaged. “President [Wayne] Frederick called me a little while ago and I will be meeting with him on Monday. YOU PAID IT FORWARD AND MY HEART IS FULL!”
School officials have not commented publicly.
In announcing that she was receiving the 2012 Distinguished Service in Local Journalism Award, the DC Pro Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists said, “During her decades of service at Howard, Dudley has served as mentor, coach, adviser and enforcer for scores of communications students who have graduated from Howard and gone on to pursue careers in our field of work.
“In the process, Dudley has almost single-handedly taken a small college jobs fair at Howard and over the years turned it into one of the nation’s major career conferences.
“Today, on the strength of her dedication and persistence, dozens of recruiters converge on the Howard campus each fall to meet hundreds of job seekers — students and early-career professionals — from as far as Texas, Oklahoma and Missouri.
“Dudley’s work has provided employers an opportunity to feed their talent pipeline consistently, and has given students an opportunity to learn face-to-face what employers have to offer and what they are demanding. Dudley’s year-after-year success is legendary.”
Dudley is a 1976 speech-language pathology graduate of what is now the Cathy Hughes School of Communications. “I actually never left,” she said in the 2015 interview. “I started working with a professor on his training grants, then I got hired full time after I graduated.”
Fired for Sharing an Article
August 24, 2018
Reporter Posted Piece on ‘White Women’s Tears’
“Lisa Benson Cooper was already in an uncomfortable position when she shared an article on her private Facebook page about a phenomenon known as ‘white women’s tears.’ ” Toriano Porter, editorial writer and columnist for the Kansas City Star, wrote Wednesday.
“The longtime reporter for KSHB Channel 41 was suing her employer for racial discrimination. Then, when she posted a story online about racial tensions in the workplace, it cost Cooper her job.
“Journalists understand the pitfalls of expressing personal opinions on social media. But firing a reporter for sharing an article — without comment — to a private account sets a dangerous precedent.
“Cooper told Ruby Hamad, the Arab-born author of the white tears article that appeared in The Guardian, that she was ousted from KSHB for making what management called ‘broad, unfair characterizations of white women as a group based on their race and gender.’
“Never mind that Cooper made no such sweeping characterizations by simply posting an article to her Facebook page.
“The incident was the latest in a string of dustups between Cooper and the station. Cooper, who is known on air as Lisa Benson, claims in court documents that she was subjected to unfair treatment in retaliation for a discrimination lawsuit she filed in 2016.
“She filed suit after being passed up for promotions. Suspensions and eventually, termination followed. She amended the original suit to include retaliation. Cooper’s case is scheduled for trial next year in federal court.
“Cooper and her attorney Dennis Egan declined comment when reached by The Star.
“KSHB News Director Carrie Hofmann would only say the station stands by its commitment to diversity and inclusion.
“In the May 7 article headlined ‘How white women use strategic tears to silence women of colour,’ Hamad argues that white women play the role of victim when women of color assert themselves . . . ”
- Matt Campbell and Aaron Randle, Kansas City Star: KSHB reporter says she was ‘suspended’ for sharing Guardian story on white privilege
- Matt Campbell, Kansas City Star: KSHB faces second race discrimination suit in 2 years, this one from sports reporter (June 7)
Cristhian Bahena Rivera is charged with first-degree murder in the death of Mollie Tibbetts, 20, who disappeared from her Iowa hometown on July 18. (video) (Credit: Des Moines Register)
Paper Urges Restraint as Trump Bashes Immigrant
The Des Moines Register warned Wednesday that the killing of University of Iowa student Mollie Tibbetts “is not an opportunity to demonize undocumented immigrants and Latinos in general as dangerous, violent criminals,” but President Trump, Fox News and Republican operatives seized on the case as an example of the need to tighten restrictions on immigration.
Meanwhile, Allan Richards, “the attorney for Cristhian Bahena Rivera, the 24-year-old who is accused of killing Mollie Tibbetts, . . . reiterated his insistence that authorities and the public have jumped to several unsubstantiated conclusions,” Stephen Gruber-Miller reported Thursday for the Register.
Tibbetts quickly became “Trump’s new rallying cry,” Politico’s Natasha Korecki reported Wednesday.
Axios reported that day, “Former Speaker Newt Gingrich emailed Axios’ Mike Allen to make sure that we’d be covering this story, which Fox News led with on air and online Tuesday evening, ahead of the Cohen-Manafort news.” On Tuesday, Michael D. Cohen, the president’s former lawyer, implicated Trump in payoffs to two women before the 2016 election, and former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort was convicted of eight felonies.
“His take: ‘If Mollie Tibbetts is a household name by October, Democrats will be in deep trouble. If we can be blocked by Manafort-Cohen, etc., then GOP could lose [the House] badly.’ ”
The Register editorial said of the suspect, “Regardless of his immigration status or whatever statements police say he made, he is entitled to due process and the right to a defense. This is a time to show restraint and wait for the facts before rushing to judgment. That goes for the media outlets reporting and commenting on the story as well.
“It’s an important reminder that there are still hundreds of other Iowa children who are listed as missing. They have not had the same media spotlight that Tibbetts’ family was able to ignite. We should examine reasons for that while we resolve to ensure that every one of these children matters just as much as she did. . . . ”
“There are also many ways we, in the glare of the national media, can misinterpret this infuriating event in a way that harms our people and our state:
“This is not an opportunity to demonize undocumented immigrants and Latinos in general as dangerous, violent criminals. A relative clearly didn’t want her death to become a cause for racism. A Facebook post from Billie Jo Calderwood reads:
“Please remember, Evil comes in EVERY color. Our family has been blessed to be surrounded by love, friendship and support throughout this entire ordeal by friends from all different nations and races. From the bottom of our hearts, thank you.
“People who enter the country illegally are no more prone to crime than people who were born here, research has shown. . . .”
While insisting that Tibbetts “should not become another poster child for those who want to reinstate the death penalty,” the Register conceded that the “drum beat has already begun, even before an autopsy had determined a cause of death. . . .”
- Peter Beinart, the Atlantic: Why Trump Supporters Believe He Is Not Corrupt
- Paul Farhi, Washington Post: Colorado murders signal a return of the news media’s ‘damsels in distress’ trope
- Latino Rebels: The Double Standard of How Media Outlets Cover Murders and Why They’ll Always Fear-Monger Myth of ‘Criminal’ Immigrant
- Dara Lind, vox.com: Mollie Tibbetts’s family doesn’t want her death politicized. Trump is doing it anyway.
- Amy Russo, Mediaite: Fox News’ Geraldo Rivera Criticizes Network for Immigration ‘Spin’ on Mollie Tibbetts Murder
Daughter Denies Key Quote in New Till Case
“Timothy Tyson’s book on Emmett Till became a bestseller thanks to the bombshell quote he attributed to Carolyn Bryant Donham — that she lied when she testified about Till accosting her,” Jerry Mitchell reported Tuesday for the Clarion-Ledger in Jackson, Miss.
“Donham’s daughter-in-law, Marsha Bryant, who was present for the two tape-recorded interviews Tyson did with Donham, said her mother-in-law ‘never recanted.’
“Adding to the intrigue is the fact [that] the quote Tyson attributed to Donham isn’t on the recordings.
“Bryant said people unfortunately believe the 84-year-old played a role in Till’s murder when ‘she had nothing to do with it. They think she should die or go to jail forever. They think what happened to Emmett Till should happen to her.’ . . .”
In March, Mitchell reported that “The FBI is once again investigating the 1955 killing of Emmett Till. . . . The case is being examined again because Carolyn Bryant Donham has admitted she lied when she testified in 1955 that Till touched her. . . .”
Fearful Cuban Journalist Seeks Asylum in U.S.
“A Cuban journalist who says he was accused of spreading propaganda and working as a paid agent of the American government is being detained in Texas while he pleads with federal officials to grant him asylum in the United States,” Franco Ordoñez reported Monday for the McClatchy Washington Bureau.
“Serafín Morán Santiago, 40, a freelance journalist who has worked for Univision 23, Telemundo and Cubanet.com, arrived at the U.S. border in April after, he says, being targeted for his political writings and criticism of the Cuban government.
“ ‘In Cuba, they see the opposition as worse than criminals,’ Morán told asylum officers in his first interviewing seeking protection in the United States, according to a copy of the transcript obtained by McClatchy.
“Morán’s case reflects the challenges Cubans now face seeking refuge in the United States. Less than two years ago, Moran simply could have arrived at the border and he would have been welcomed.
“Now, he is being held at a Texas detention center with thousands of Central Americans and other foreign nationals who are also trying to convince federal authorities to allow them to remain in the United States. . . .”
- Jeff Gammage, Philadelphia Inquirer: Immigrant advocates afraid U.S. will no longer a beacon for refugees
- James Goodman, the Progressive: New York Case Shows Cruelty of ICE Toward the Mentally Disabled (Aug. 7)
- Juan Luis Garcia Hernandez, Texas Tribune; Pia Flores, Nomada; and David Yaffe-Bellany and Jay Root, Texas Tribune: “Where is my son?”: A migrant father was deported in May. His son is still in a Texas shelter.
- Andrés Oppenheimer, Miami Herald: Cuba’s new constitution is worse than the old one (Aug. 11)
Garcia to Receive Diversity Leadership Award
“Manny Garcia, Ethics & Standards Editor for the USA TODAY Network, is the winner of the 16th annual Robert G. McGruder Award for Diversity Leadership from the Associated Press Media Editors and the American Society of News Editors,” ASNE and APME announced on Wednesday.
“The McGruder Award for Diversity Leadership is given annually to individuals, newsrooms or teams of journalists who embody the spirit of McGruder, a former executive editor of the Detroit Free Press, managing editor of The Plain Dealer in Cleveland and a graduate of Kent State University.
“McGruder died of cancer in April 2002. A past president of APME and former member of the ASNE Board of Directors, McGruder was a relentless diversity champion. . . .”
Garcia is a former editor of the Naples Daily News. He spent 23 years as a reporter and editor at the Miami Herald and el Nuevo Herald, is mentoring a newly formed Diversity Committee at USA Today, is a board member of ASNE and chair of the ASNE Leadership Committee, and has spent countless hours volunteering to coach and mentor managers of color in the ASNE Emerging Leaders Institute, the news release said.
Last week, Garcia joined the Boston Globe’s call for a coordinated media response to President Trump’s efforts to discredit journalists. “Journalism is mission work, an honest cause beyond our eyes,” Garcia wrote. “Like nursing, teaching and police work, it’s built on a foundation of accuracy, trust, wisdom and character.”
He then shared some of his background, saying his family fled communist Cuba in the early 1960s and that his career has included both loading trucks for UPS and persuading a stoned drug dealer not to shoot him.
Aretha Services to Be Streamed, Televised
The Aug. 31 “celebration of life” for Aretha Franklin is expected to be streamed and televised worldwide, her publicist told Journal-isms Friday.
Gwendolyn Quinn said those arrangements are not complete, however, nor are those for media coverage.
Cheryl Corley, an NPR reporter, announced on Facebook Wednesday that she had been invited to report from Detroit’s Greater Grace Temple, but Quinn said not everyone in the media seeking admission to the private service can be accommodated.
“I just received an email from Aretha Franklin’s publicist inviting me to the funeral,” Corley wrote. “I was heading there anyway! I’ll be covering the memorial events before and the funeral itself along with another NPR colleague (Debbie Elliott). I’ve covered floods, tornadoes and all kinds of death…I’ve listened to Aretha’s music all my life so covering the Queen’s funeral and celebration will be both an honor and a challenge.”
Meanwhile, Quinn announced Friday, “Former President William Jefferson Clinton; Eric Holder, former U.S. Attorney General; pastor of The Potter’s House, Bishop T.D. Jakes; Operation Rainbow P.U.S.H. founder Rev. Jesse Jackson; National Action Network founder Rev. Al Sharpton, Motown legend Smokey Robinson, Sony Music Entertainment Chief Creative Officer Clive Davis, and Academy Award-nominated actress Cicely Tyson are among the distinguished speakers confirmed. . . .”
Quinn announced on Thursday, “Stevie Wonder, Faith Hill, Ronald Isley, Chaka Khan, Fantasia, Jennifer Hudson, Yolanda Adams, Pastor Shirley Caesar, The Clark Sisters, Jennifer Holliday, Tasha Cobbs-Leonard, Bishop Marvin Sapp, The Williams Brothers, Vanessa Bell Armstrong, classical artist Audrey DuBois Harris, soprano Alice McAllister Tillman, Franklin’s son Edward Franklin, the Aretha Franklin Orchestra and the Aretha Franklin Celebration Choir are among the notable artists expected to perform . . . .”
In addition, “To honor the Queen of Soul at her Aug. 31 funeral, pink Cadillac owners have been called to line their rosy vehicles along Seven Mile near Greater Grace Temple in Detroit,” Melody Baetens reported Wednesday for the Detroit News. “More than 100 pink Caddies are expected to file in outside the church at 8:30 a.m., and owners will be permitted to attend the private funeral, the church’s first lady Crisette Ellis said. . . .”
Franklin died of pancreatic cancer on Aug. 16. She was 76.
- Michael Eric Dyson, New York Times: The Church of Aretha Franklin (Aug 16)
Threats Prompt April Ryan to Hire Bodyguard
“Few reporters have lived the Trump administration’s war against the press more vividly than April Ryan, a 21-year veteran of the White House press corps who has seen her national profile grow along with concerns about her physical safety,” Jeremy Barr reported Tuesday for the Hollywood Reporter.
” ‘They’ve put a target on my head…. I’ve had death threats. I’ve had craziness,’ said Ryan, who revealed to The Hollywood Reporter that she recently hired a bodyguard to protect her.
‘All I’m going to say for my safety is: I have a team.’ (She said the White House should pay for her protection.)
“On Sept. 1, Rowman & Littlefield will publish her new book, Under Fire: Reporting From the Front Lines of the Trump White House (former Today show co-host Tamron Hall wrote the book’s forward). Ryan is scheduled to promote the book on The Daily Show With Trevor Noah, This Week with George Stephanopoulos and across CNN, the network that employs her as a contributor. (Her main gig is covering the White House and Washington for American Urban Radio Networks.)
“She spoke to THR about her contentious relationship with White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders, her public split from ex-friend Omarosa Manigault Newman, and the overall climate of hostility toward the press that President Trump has fostered.
“Ryan alleged that Manigault Newman teased and then promoted a revelation about a tape of Trump saying the N-word because she wanted to distract attention away from Aretha Franklin’s failing health and passing as an act of retribution. ‘She did it because Aretha Franklin didn’t want her at her birthday party,’ Ryan said. ‘That’s how vindictive Omarosa is.’ . . .”
- Editorial, St. Louis Post-Dispatch: Trump is leading America toward an abyss. Patriots, don’t follow him.
- Paul Greeley, TVNewsCheck: A Few Stations That Stood Up To Anti-Press Rhetoric
- Indira Lakshmanan and Rick Edmonds, Poynter Institute: Finally some good news: Trust in news is up, especially for local media
- Askia Muhammad, Washington Informer: Omarosa Gets Her Pass Revoked
- Margaret Sullivan, Washington Post: This is the moment all of Trump’s anti-media rhetoric has been working toward
CNN Suspends Trump Surrogate After Revelation
“A conservative commentator who was lauded by President Trump this week as ‘wonderful’ and who has argued that past sexual indiscretions should have no bearing on Trump’s presidency was fired from Arizona State University four years ago for making sexually explicit comments and gestures toward women, according to documents and a university official,” Aaron C. Davis reported Wednesday for the Washington Post.
“An internal investigation by the university concluded that Paris Dennard, a surrogate during the campaign and now a member of the President’s Commission on White House Fellowships, told a recent college graduate who worked for him that he wanted to have sex with her. He ‘pretended to unzip his pants in her presence, tried to get her to sit on his lap, and made masturbatory gestures,’ according to a university report obtained by The Washington Post.
“According to the 2014 report, Dennard did not dispute those claims but said he committed the acts jokingly. The investigation began after the woman and a second female employee told superiors Dennard’s actions went too far and had made them uncomfortable.
“Dennard, a CNN political commentator, opinion contributor to the Hill, and regular guest on NPR’s ‘Here & Now,’ was working at the time as events director for ASU’s McCain Institute for International Leadership. . . .
“Shortly after The Post published this article Wednesday night, a CNN spokeswoman said the network was suspending Dennard while it reviews the allegations.
“In an email exchange with The Post, Dennard declined to answer specific questions about the investigation or his departure from the McCain Institute. He said he had not seen the full report and ‘was led to believe’ it was ‘sealed and proprietary.’
“ ‘I cannot comment on items I have never seen regarding allegations I still believe to be false,’ Dennard wrote. ‘This is sadly another politically motivated attempt to besmirch my character, and shame me into silence for my support of President Trump and the GOP.’ . . . ”
- Nick Fernandez, Media Matters for America: Paris Dennard’s history of commentary on sexual misconduct on CNN
- Damon Young, verysmartbrothas.com/theroot.com: Why Do Black Republicans Usually Have Such Bad Haircuts? An Important Exposé
N. C. Papers Praise Students’ Takedown of Statue
“On Monday night, students at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill toppled ‘Silent Sam,’ the statue of a Confederate soldier that has stood on the campus for over a century,” Nicole Hemmer wrote Wednesday for CNN.
Their actions were condemned as unlawful by university officials, but in an unusual development, the state’s three largest newspapers applauded the students.
“Silent Sam came down Monday night in Chapel Hill, long after he should have and no thanks to the people who should have done it,” the News & Observer in Raleigh, the state’s second largest newspaper, editorialized Tuesday.
The Charlotte Observer, the News & Observer’s sister paper and the state’s largest, asked, “What if Rosa Parks had adhered to the rule of law and given up her seat on the bus that day in Montgomery? How much slower would change have come? What if Martin Luther King hadn’t led the bus boycott? How much longer would it have taken for Alabama to end segregated seating?
“What if the Greensboro Four had followed the rule of law and not sat down at that Woolworth’s lunch counter? How much longer would segregation have persisted without that brave act of civil disobedience? What if the crowds had not crossed the Edmund Pettus Bridge and endured Bloody Sunday? How much slower would civil rights progress be without that insistence on equality? . . .”
The News & Record in Greensboro wrote Tuesday, “It is, of course, true that Monday’s protesters violated the law and damaged public property. It also is true that their actions were dangerous and could have turned much uglier. But their cause was just, if not their methods. And it’s easy to understand their mounting frustration and anger.
“Anger that the Republican-led legislature not only rebuffed calls to remove Confederate monuments but appointed itself as their protector, passing a law in 2015 that forbids their removal without lawmakers’ consent.
“Anger that the UNC Board of Governors refused even to discuss Silent Sam at last week’s meeting after promising to address it. . . .
“Blame ‘mob rule’ if you will. But it was poor leadership in Chapel Hill and Raleigh that ultimately led to Monday night.”
- Hampton Dellinger, Herald-Sun, Durham, N.C.: If Silent Sam’s fall was illegal, so too was its standing
- Kali Holloway, Make It Right Project, Independent Media Institute: Notorious ‘Silent Sam’ Statue Toppled in North Carolina — What Are the Next Steps?
38 J-Students Travel Nation to Document Hate
“Behind the anonymity of white faces illuminated by tiki torches, beyond the bloodied fists of street brawls, there are communities of young men who gather on weekends to camp and fish and train in combat sports,” Rosanna Cooney reported Thursday for News21.
“The face of hate is changing in America, and the new right is a ‘millennial male phenomenon,’ said Heidi Beirich, director of the Intelligence Project at the Southern Poverty Law Center in Montgomery, Alabama, an advocacy group that tracks hate and bigotry toward marginalized communities.
“Brewing among some young men is an intolerance and hatred that’s bringing bias-motivated violence to the streets and white-nationalist politics to the political forefront. . . .”
The report “is part of the ‘Hate in America’ project produced by the Carnegie-Knight News21 initiative, a national investigative reporting project by top college journalism students and recent graduates from across the country and headquartered at the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University,” the project explains.
“Each year, students selected into the program report in-depth on a single topic of national importance.
“This year, 38 journalism students from 19 universities traveled to 36 states, including a 7,000-mile road trip around the country. They conducted hundreds of interviews, reviewed thousands of pages of federal-court documents, FBI data and state and federal statutes. Reporters interviewed nearly 300 people. They also produced a documentary and a five-episode podcast following the [life cycle] of hate.
“The students’ work began in January 2018 with a video seminar that included reporting and research. In May, they started working in a newsroom at the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University’s downtown Phoenix campus.
“This year’s team also partnered with ProPublica’s ‘Documenting Hate’ project, which collects, researches and report incidents. . . .”
Chicago Photographers Recall ’68 DNC Riots
“In the wake of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination and amid protests of the Vietnam War, Democrats came to Chicago for their national convention in August 1968,” the Chicago Tribune says in a recollection narrated by retired photojournalists Bob Black of the Chicago Sun-Times and Walter Kale and Val Mazzenga of the Chicago Tribune.
“Inside the convention hall, demonstrations erupted and angry words were traded among attendees. Outside the convention hall, rioting by ‘hippie’ protesters took over Chicago and images of police beating the demonstrators were broadcast around the world.”
Black says in the video, “I did get myself whacked across the back with a billy club, and it was not a pleasant experience.” However, he adds, “after that, I could cover anything that was thrown at me. . . . It made me know that this is how things are in the real world.”
According to The HistoryMakers, “As a member of the National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ), Black was one of the founders of the Visual Task Force, an organization of still and video photographers within the NABJ. He is also a founding member of the Chicago Alliance of African American Photographers (CAAAP), established in 1999 to bring together local African American photographers to promote their work and educate future generations. . . .”
Short Takes
- “In the year of ‘Black Panther,’ and in the summer of ‘Sorry to Bother You’ and ‘BlacKkKlansman,’ many black entertainment reporters say they have had enough,” Jenna Marotta wrote Thursday for indiewire, in one of the more comprehensive pieces on the topic. “In multiple interviews with IndieWire, these journalists describe being consistently marginalized by Hollywood, overlooked for everything from screenings and set visits to log-ins for studio and network media centers. . . .”
- “African American consumers not only watch more linear television compared to all audiences, but they also stream content at a higher percentage than all other consumers, according to a new report from Horowitz Research,” R. Thomas Umstead reported Thursday for Multichannel News. “Nearly three quarters (74%) of black TV viewers report streaming at least some of their TV content, compared to 68% of all television viewers, according to Horowitz’s FOCUS Black: The Media Landscape report. Further, 65% of African-American streamers say they watch more TV content than they did five years ago. . . .”
- “Fox News’ Tucker Carlson is standing by his South Africa commentary after President Donald Trump amplified the host’s words in post-segment tweet Wednesday night,” Tamar Auber reported Thursday for Mediaite. ” ‘South African Government is now seizing land from white farmers,’ Trump tweeted out, citing Carlson and Fox News, prompting outrage that he was echoing white nationalist talking points. Yet returning to the theme on Thursday, Carlson defended his words from Wednesday’s show and mocked the media response. . . .” From Erik Wemple in the Washington Post: Tucker Carlson walks back bogus South Africa scaremongering
- “Native America will be a four-part series from [Gary] Glassman’s production company, Providence Pictures, that will premiere at 9pm EST on Tuesday, October 23, and run through November 13. (Check local listings for details),” Kevin Abourezk reported Wednesday for indianz.com. “The [PBS] series was produced with the active participation of Native communities and filmed across two continents. The documentary focuses on recent discoveries and oral histories of Native people that demonstrate a belief system shared through social networks by indigenous people. . .”
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Maurita Coley Flippin, acting president and CEO of the Multicultural Media, Telecom and Internet Council since December [PDF], has been named president and CEO, the organization announced Thursday. MMTC advocates for diversity and inclusion in the media, telecom and tech sectors, most notably issues before the Federal Communications Commission.
- Lisa Wilson, who joined the Undefeated in March 2017 as its senior editor for sports, messaged Journal-isms on Saturday, “I’ll be moving back to Buffalo because I can work remotely in my new position.” She is leaving Washington for the sports startup the Athletic, where she will be NFL managing editor. Wilson was the executive sports editor at the Buffalo News when she joined the Undefeated.
- Terry Allen defeated incumbent Tanzi West Barbour by one vote in a revote by the National Association of Black Journalists, performed after both received the same number of votes during the initial election, which finished on Aug. 3, NABJ announced on Monday. Allen becomes media-related representative on the board of directors. A CEO/executive at 1016 Media/FedEx in Dallas, Allen received 37 votes to 36 for West Barbour, chief communications officer at the Wayfinder Foundation in Washington. Some 433 members were eligible to vote.
- “Turner Classic Movies (TCM) and the African American Film Critics Association (AAFCA) have partnered during the month of September to bring viewers The Black Experience on Film, showcasing portrayals of African Americans throughout cinematic history,” Turner Classic Movies has announced. “The series will be hosted by 13 different members of the AAFCA, who will sit in pairs each night to discuss a variety of films and their attempts to portray the Black Experience, providing a wide-ranging retrospective from the 1920s through the 1990s.” The announcement lists the 13 participants.
- Morris Clay, 67, was fatally shot last Friday afternoon as he sat on the front porch of his home in Kansas City, Glenn E. Rice and Robert A. Cronkleton reported Tuesday for the Kansas City Star. “Earlier in life, Clay had served as the sports director at KPRS-FM radio. He was instrumental in connecting the urban music station to local high school, college and professional sports. . . .” Marshall Celestine, 66, a convicted felon, has been charged with second-degree murder, armed criminal action and unlawful possession of a firearm, Makenzie Koch reported Thursday for WDAF-TV.
- “The Crazy Rich Asians gang is getting back together,” Rebecca Sun and Rebecca Ford reported Wednesday for the Hollywood Reporter. “Jon M. Chu, who helmed the groundbreaking film that ruled the box office with a $35.3 million five-day opening, is planning to return for the sequel. Warner Bros.’ is moving forward with development on the follow-up, with plans to reunite the first movie’s original team, including producers Nina Jacobson and Brad Simpson of Color Force and John Penotti of Ivanhoe. . . .”
- Reveal, the multiplatform publishing arm of the Center for Investigative Reporting, “has chosen the first two cities for Reveal Local Labs, a two-year effort to help regional and local watchdog journalism by facilitating collaboration among local newsrooms,” Laura Hazard Owen reported Wednesday for Nieman Labs. “Today’s two cities are New Orleans and San Jose; the other two cities will be announced later. The initiative is funded by a $500,000 grant from the Knight Foundation. . . .”
- “The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press is partnering with the Fund for Investigative Journalism (FIJ) to offer legal support to FIJ grantees completing investigative reporting projects across the country . . .” the committee reported Tuesday. “Reporters Committee attorneys have already begun working with six grantees as part of a pilot program with FIJ to review drafts of stories for libel and other legal concerns before they are published, and to provide other pro bono legal assistance related to newsgathering and First Amendment issues. . . .”
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“Granite Media welcomes Eric Ortiz as senior editor of its forthcoming Stadium Talk site, which will cover ongoing conversations and stories in the world of sports. Stadium Talk, which will launch in September, will be Granite’s fourth vertical, joining Work + Money, Far & Wide and FamilyMinded in its growing portfolio. Stadium Talk will publish stories about athletes, teams and fans, covering the thrill and anguish of both playing and watching sports at all levels. . . . Eric is a former editor at ESPN.com, the founding editor of NESN.com for New England Sports Network and, most recently, managing editor of Truthdig. . . .”
- “Rolando Arrieta has been officially promoted to Deputy Director of News Operations at NPR,” Veronica Villafañe reported Tuesday for her Media Moves column. “He had been performing the duties of the role without the official title since April. . . .”
- “Noticias Telemundo today announced it has named Romina Rosado as Senior Vice President of Digital News, effective immediately,” the company said Wednesday. It also said, “Rosado will lead the development and execution of all digital programs across Noticias Telemundo and Digital News. . . .”
- “An American reporter for [BuzzFeed] News has become the latest foreign journalist to be forced from China, which has a history of retaliating against news organizations and individual journalists for critical coverage,” Austin Ramzy and Edward Wong reported Thursday for the New York Times. “Megha Rajagopalan, who was [BuzzFeed] News’s China bureau chief, said it was not clear why China’s Foreign Ministry declined to issue her a new journalist visa. . . .”
- “When I visited Kakuma, a large refugee camp in Kenya, in late 2016, it had been over six months since Kanere had published an issue — and nearly as long since rain had fallen on the camp’s cracked soil,” Ruairi Casey reported Tuesday for Columbia Journalism Review. Qaabata Boru is Kanere’s founding editor and a refugee himself. Casey also wrote, “Kanere, which Boru began publishing in Kakuma in 2008, says its mission is to ‘create a more open society in refugee camps and to develop a platform for fair public debate on refugee affairs.’ Primarily a source of news for camp residents, it also strives to be a beacon to the wider world, using refugees’ own words to reflect the reality of life in Kakuma. A number of academics, lawyers, and aid workers from around the world have also contributed to the project as writers. . . .”
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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)