For Amber Ruffin, Joke Is on the Reporters Who Dumped Her
Center for Public Integrity Closes After 36 years
Democrats Push Back on FCC Chair’s DEI Probe
Clemency for Carlos Watson Tied to Prison Reform Activist
New Roles for Chicago Sun-Times, WBEZ Leaders
Abused Cuban Journalist in U.S. Fears Deportation
Jornalista cubano abusado nos EUA teme deportação [En Espanol]
Homepage photo: Amber Ruffin (Credit: NBCU)
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Amber Ruffin responded with sarcasm to the notion that her routine should play to both sides, citing President Trump’s line that there were “very fine people on both sides” in the 2017 Charlottesville, Va., white supremacist demonstrations. (Credit: YouTube)
For Ruffin, Joke Is on the Reporters Who Dumped Her
“The comedian canceled by the White House Correspondents’ Association for refusing to roast both sides at their annual dinner offered the organization a scathing rebuke Monday,” Michael Boyle reported for the Daily Beast.
“Amber Ruffin, a longtime writer and recurring guest on Late Night with Seth Meyers, appeared on the show while Meyers was addressing the news in his monologue.
” ‘I just want to take a moment to say that I’m a big fan of Amber Ruffin, and I would have loved to hear what she had to say,’ Meyers said.
“Ruffin was fired from the dinner shortly after she appeared on The Daily Beast Podcast Thursday. She explained how she saw the people in the Trump administration as ‘kind of a bunch of murderers,’ and argued that playing to both sides ‘makes them feel like human beings, but they shouldn’t get to feel that way, ‘cause they’re not.’
“After a round of online outrage from right-wing pundits over her comments on the podcast, WHCA President Eugene Daniels announced on Saturday that she’d no longer be performing. . . .
“As Meyers continued with his monologue, Ruffin herself interrupted, offering a sarcastic response to the WHCA board members who canceled her speech.
“ ‘If there’s one thing I learned from this weekend, it’s you have to be fair to both sides,’ Ruffin said, mockingly.
“ ‘Amber, when people are objectively terrible, we should be able to point it out on television,’ Meyers replied.
“ ‘I thought that, too,” Ruffin said. ‘On Friday. But today is Monday, and Monday’s Amber Ruffin knows that when bad people do bad things, you have to treat them fairly and respectfully. . . .
“In Ruffin’s first TV appearance since the news broke, she offered no apology to her critics.
“She deadpanned, ‘I thought, when people take away your rights, erase your history, and deport your friends, you’re supposed to call it out. But I was wrong.’
“Ruffin added, ‘Glad to find that out now, because if they had let me give that speech, ooh, baby! I would have been so terrifically mean.’
“She concluded by taking a thinly veiled dig at the Correspondents’ Association, beginning her joke by claiming she had to return the dress she had bought for the event.
“Even though she had already removed the tags, she said: ‘I’m just going to say they blew off in the wind.’
“ ‘But that’s lying, Amber, that’s wrong,’ Meyers retorted.
“ ‘Ah, ah, ah, you can’t say that, that’s journalism,’ Ruffin said, winking at the camera.”
- Eric Deggans, Substack: White House Correspondents, Amber Ruffin and Trump: Why the WHCA struggles with a made-for-TV presidency (April 2)
- Angela Fu, Poynter Institute: As Trump attacks the press, many Americans aren’t hearing about it
- April Ryan, Daily Beast: Why Canceling the Comedian Got White House Correspondents Nothing EXCEPT HUMILATION
- Brian Stelter, CNN: White House Correspondents Association says Trump administration is trying to pressure reporters
Center for Public Integrity Closes After 36 years
“The Center for Public Integrity, a thirty-six-year-old nonprofit newsroom in Washington, DC, that won acclaim for its investigations but has endured financial and organizational turmoil for much of the past decade, has ceased publishing and is in talks to turn over its archives to the Project on Government Oversight (POGO), an anti-corruption watchdog group,” Sewell Chan reported Monday for Columbia Journalism Review.
In its final years, the center focused on inequality. In 2022, it described itself as “a Pulitzer Prize-winning nonprofit news organization dedicated to investigating systems and circumstances that contribute to inequality in the United States. Areas of focus include equity in employment, housing, education, health care and access to democracy.”
Chan continued, “CPI is focused on the best ways forward to honor the organization’s journalistic legacy,” the newsroom said in a statement on Monday evening. Its last major piece, ‘Forty Acres and a Lie,’ was copublished in June of 2024 with Mother Jones and the Center for Investigative Reporting’s Reveal.
“The project scoured Reconstruction-era documents to tell the story of formerly enslaved people who were given land toward the end of the Civil War, only for the government to seize it back a year and a half later. The project was lauded for, among other qualities, its effective use of artificial intelligence; it won several awards.
“But over the past year, CPI has essentially collapsed.
In February of 2024, Paul Cheung (pictured), its chief executive, and Matt DeRienzo, its editor in chief, both left. The New York Times reported that, the previous year, the newsroom had fallen 2.5 million dollars short of its six-million-dollar budget goal. CPI explored a merger with another nonprofit newsroom, The Markup, but The Markup instead decided to join forces with CalMatters, a statewide newsroom based in Sacramento.
“At the start of 2024, CPI had a staff of around twenty-five people; as of November 30, it has none. James A. Kiernan III, the longtime chair, left in June at the end of his term, along with board members George Alvarez-Correa, Bruce A. Finzen, Richard M. Lobo and Gilbert Omenn. They were not replaced. Amid the chaos of the past year, major grants fell through, and the newsroom entered a death spiral.
“For the past year, CPI’s current board chair, the investigative journalist and author Wesley J. Lowery (pictured),” has been “pursuing efforts to revive CPI or, at the least, would allow its digital archive to remain available to the public. He did so while holding a full-time job leading the Investigative Reporting Workshop, which is part of American University’s School of Communications.
“On Monday, Lowery — one of the . . . editors on the ‘Forty Acres and a Lie’ project — resigned from the CPI board, following reports in CJR and the Washington Post about Title IX complaints that had been made against him by IRW colleagues and students. . . .”
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Democrats Push Back on FCC Chair’s DEI Probe
“Three congressional Democrats sought documents on Monday from the head of the Federal Communications Commission as part of a probe into what they called ‘sham’ investigations into media outlets including CBS, NBC and ABC launched by the agency under President Donald Trump to try to intimidate the news media,” David Shepardson reported for Reuters.
“The probe was announced by House of Representatives members Frank Pallone (pictured), Doris Matsui and Yvette Clarke, who asked FCC chair Brendan Carr to turn over records related to travel with Trump and to the Republican president’s Florida residence, and to answer other questions.
“Pallone is the top Democrat on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, while Matsui and Clarke are the ranking Democrats on two of its subcommittees. In a letter to Carr, they accused him of launching the investigations into media entities disfavored by Trump and his billionaire adviser Elon Musk, seeking ‘to target and intimidate news organizations.’
” ‘You have weaponized the agency against news outlets,’ the three Democrats wrote. ‘Your pursuit of these actions is clearly intended to punish and burden broadcasters and other media companies by inflicting incalculable reputational harm and excessive costs to defend themselves.’ . . .
“Last week, Carr said he was opening an investigation into the diversity practices of Walt Disney (DIS.N), and its ABC unit, saying they may violate U.S. equal employment opportunity regulations. Conservatives have argued that workplace diversity practices discriminate against majority groups including white people. . . .”
Update from Oliver Darcy’s Status:
Status Scoop | Carr’s Drive-By Claims: Donald Trump’s FCC chair, Brendan Carr, lashed out Tuesday at Democrats for launching a probe into his series of eyebrow-raising investigations targeting media companies. In a statement to Status, Carr accused Democrats of “weaponizing” the country’s communications laws against Republicans. He offered little evidence, of course, but leaned on a familiar grievance playbook: “If your last name was Soros, you got special, streamlined treatment on an expedited basis,” Carr said. “If your last name was Musk, then you got millions of dollars worth of awards revoked for partisan political reasons. If you were a conservative outlet, then your FCC licenses and distribution deals were held up or subject to government-backed cancel campaigns.” Carr—who has recently pursued high-profile complaints against companies like Comcast, CBS, Disney, and others—dismissed the reality that he is the one politicizing the FCC. “For those that have benefited from the two-tiered system of justice that prevailed during the Biden years, even-handedness may feel like discrimination,” Carr told Status. “But that does not make it so.” It’s a great soundbite for Fox News. It’s just not tethered to reality. |
► A spokesperson for Democrats on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, who opened the probe into his behavior, fired back: “Chairman Carr is a fraud, a phony, and a liar. His statement about Trump’s FCC being fair is ludicrous. It’s clear he’s far more interested in protecting Elon Musk and his profits than the American people.” |
- Alana Frank, the Maroon, Loyola University New Orleans: Diversity in Journalism: Leaders unite to tackle media bias and future challenges (March 30)
Clemency for Watson Tied to Prison Reform Activist
Under the enticing headline, “Secret Svengali Behind Trump’s Most Bizarre Pardon Yet Revealed,” the Daily Beast reported Monday, updated Tuesday, that President Trump’s clemency [not pardon] to Ozy co-founder Carlos Watson “was facilitated by Dr. Topeka Sam (pictured), a prison reform activist, who was introduced to Watson by his spokesperson Juda Engelmayer.”
“Sam is perhaps best known for bringing attention to the case of Alice Marie Johnson (pictured), a mother of five who was then serving a life sentence for a nonviolent drug offense, ultimately inspiring Kim Kardashian to lobby the first Trump administration on her behalf.
“Johnson’s sentence was commuted in 2018 and she was granted a full pardon two years later. She currently serves as the Trump administration’s ‘pardon czar.’
Sam’s primary role is as founder and executive director of The Ladies of Hope Ministries. according to her website.
The Daily Beast story is the work of Susie Banikarim, who co-authored a podcast on Watson’s trial for Columbia Journalism Review.
She offers few details about Sam’s role in the clemency, instead focusing heavily on portraying Watson (pictured) as “a man who has always been able to talk his way into and out of anything.”
Banikarim adds, “Other Black entrepreneurs have not rallied in his support, rejecting his racial framing of the charges. The most vocal, Roland Martin, called him ‘OJ two point oh’ and said of Watson’s troubles ‘If you’re doing some illegal s—, don’t be trying to all of a sudden cloak yourself in blackness.’ And it’s worth noting that U.S. Attorney Breon Peace who brought the charges against Watson is himself a Black man.”
She also wrote, “dodging 10 years in federal prison might not even be the final twist in the plot. I’m told by a source close to Watson that a full pardon is still being explored and may come next.”
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution explains, “While a pardon deletes a conviction, a commutation keeps the conviction but deletes or lowers the punishment. The conviction stays on the record, and the person who receives the commutation does not have any rights restored.”

From left, Tracy Brown, Jenn Kho and Gilbert Bailon (Credit: Chicago Sun-Times)
New Roles for Chicago Sun-Times, WBEZ Leaders
“Melissa Bell, the CEO of Chicago Public Media, on Monday announced major leadership changes atop the organization that runs the Chicago Sun-Times and public radio station WBEZ,” the Sun-Times reported.
“Tracy Brown has been named chief partnerships officer, Bell said. Brown joined WBEZ in 2019 and later became chief content officer, where she has overseen the merger of the newspaper and radio station. Bell said Brown ‘will lead our efforts to develop creative, collaborative approaches that extend our editorial impact.’ Her duties will include building partnerships with other newsrooms, corporate sponsors and community organizations, ‘as well as cultivating new relationships with supporters of independent journalism,’ she said.
“Jenn Kho, the Sun-Times executive editor since 2022, will serve as interim editor-in-chief for Chicago Public Media, a new role overseeing the content produced by both the Sun-Times and WBEZ. There will be a full search for the permanent editor-in-chief position. Kho is expected to be a candidate for the permanent post. . . .
“Meanwhile, Gilbert Bailon, who joined WBEZ as executive editor in the fall of 2023, will take on a new role as executive editor, news platforms.
“The role, Bell said, will ensure ‘our journalism reaches the right audiences on the right platforms across print, radio and digital. Bailon ‘knows the ins and outs of making a print paper and running a radio newsroom and has some of the best news judgment in any room he’s in,’ Bell said. . . .”
(In Spanish) Javier Diaz reports on Lázaro Yuri Valle Roca’s arrival in the United States for Univision 23 Miami on June 6, 2024. Valle Roca’s first statements were about the moments he lived in a Cuban prison for almost three years. (Credit: YouTube)
Abused Cuban Journalist in U.S. Fears Deportation
Lázaro Yuri Valle Roca, a Cuban independent journalist who had been released from a Cuban prison last year only on the condition that he leave the island for exile in the United States, has been told that he faces deportation back to Cuba because of more restrictive immigration measures imposed by the Trump administration.
“‘Well, brothers, friends, and supporters, how sadistic life can be at times,” Valle Roca, who now lives in Lancaster, Pa., wrote on Facebook. “They want to send us back to death, but we have FAITH in God, our father, and in all our brothers and friends. If they return me to my beloved Homeland, I will enter as always shouting #DownWithTheCubanDictatorship.”
Valle Roca and his wife, Eralidis Frómeta, were among Cuba natives receiving a letter from the Department of Homeland Security saying they must leave by April 25 or risk deportation. The Committee to Protect Journalists said it was alarmed and called on U.S. authorities to rescind the letter, which it posted Saturday on X.
Valle Roca and Frómeta were admitted to the United States under humanitarian parole, “a program that allows the temporary entry of immigrants into the U.S. for humanitarian reasons. It was implemented by the administration of Joe Biden for citizens of Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela. However, President Donald Trump, through Executive Order 14165, decided to revoke these programs, arguing that they do not meet the immigration and border policy goals of his administration,” the website CiberCuba explained.
The program affects more than 530,000 migrants, including Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans as well as Cubans.
Additionally, Valle Roca’s employment authorization related to his immigration status has been revoked.
Despite the warnings Valle Roca receivved, Cuban American journalist Javier Diaz (pictured), who arrived in the United States in 2016 and works at the Univisión 23 television network in Miami, urged Cuban exiles not to be frightened. “Don’t let an email scare you into leaving!” Díaz emphasized on social media.
“I spoke with Lázaro after he arrived in Miami, even though he was unwell. Remember, these are automated emails, sent by a computer system. If you’re Cuban, apply for residency a year and a day after arriving, and don’t go back to a country without freedom,” Díaz said.
As the Committee to Protect Journalists reported, “Cuban law prohibits the establishment of independent media organizations outside the country’s socialist state system. Journalism is not one of the legally permitted professions under Cuba’s 2021 legalization of private business activity. Cuba’s updated ‘Social Communication Law,’ approved by Cuba’s National Assembly on May 26, 2023, prohibits the dissemination of information that aims to ‘subvert the constitutional order and destabilize the socialist State of law and social justice.’ ”
The Madrid-based Prisoners Defenders lists five independent journalists imprisoned in Cuba: Jorge Bello Domínguez, José Gabriel Barrenechea Chávez, Yeris Curbelo Aguilera, Luis Ángel Cuza Alonso and Humberto Paz Gutiérrez.
When Valle Roca was released from Cuba last June, he had been imprisoned since 2021 because of his reporting. “ ‘There has been a lot of torture that they have done to me,’ he said then, apologizing to reporters for the state of confusion in which he found himself after leaving the Combinado del Este in Havana, the largest Cuban prison,” the website CiberCuba reported.
“ ‘They have a lot of hatred against me,” he said.
CiberCuba reported separately Saturday, “The Cuban activist Anamely Ramos González raised her voice once again to denounce the situation of more than 700 political prisoners who, according to human rights organizations, remain incarcerated in Cuba.
“Through a video shared on social media, the art teacher stated that the country’s prisons have become ‘centers of death,’ where constant human rights violations are reported, including deaths due to lack of medical assistance, mistreatment, prolonged isolation, and arbitrary transfers. . . .”
- Alvaro Alba, Marti Noticias: Film about Cuban exiles’ exploits in Africa acclaimed at FIU (VIDEO)
- CiberCuba: Cuban regime “weeps” over the restoration of funding to independent media (April 2)
- Iván León, CiberCuba: The “real” Cuba and the “virtual”: Díaz-Canel’s failed attempt to silence digital activism and independent media
Not Even the ‘Blacksonian’ Is Safe from Trump
March 30, 2025
President Says Smithsonian Portrays U.S. as Flawed
Comedian Dropped From Correspondents’ Dinner
FCC Chairman Targets Disney Over DEI
SNCC Says: ‘It’s Dark, But It’s Not Midnight’
Short Takes: Black teen as ‘human shield’ in West Bank; low arrest rate in Chicago shootings; meeting on elimination of Philadelphia Inquirer Communities desk; Tyler Perry seeks next wave of filmmakers; San Antonio reporter Jaime Peluffo; return of LZ Granderson; Patrick Soon-Shiong; L. Brent Bozell III; Tracie Powell; Journalist Safety Urgent Care Helpline.
From March 28: Trump Frees Ozy Co-Founder Carlos Watson
In 2017, a year after the opening of the National Museum of African American History and Culture, General Motors invited a group of Black journalists to drive a new Buick from Philadelphia to Washington, D.C. There, they took a private tour of the museum and discussed the meaning of the museum to them, in a talk moderated by Ed Gordon. (Credit: YouTube)
President Says Smithsonian Portrays U.S. as Flawed
“President Donald Trump’s order accusing the Smithsonian Institution of not reflecting American history notes correctly that the country’s Founding Fathers declared that ‘all men are created equal,‘ ” Bill Barrow wrote from Atlanta Saturday for the Associated Press.
“But it doesn’t mention that the founders enshrined slavery into the U.S. Constitution and declared enslaved persons as three-fifths of a person for the purpose of the Census.
“Civil rights advocates, historians and Black political leaders sharply rebuked Trump on Friday for his order, entitled ‘Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History.’ They argued that his executive order targeting the Smithsonian Institution is his administration’s latest move to downplay how race, racism and Black Americans themselves have shaped the nation’s story.”
Black journalists won’t be too far behind. When their convention took place in Washington in 2016, members of the National Association of Black Journalists toured what would become the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture, then still under construction.
Spokesperson Fleur Paysour had messaged Journal-isms earlier in the year, “Out of a commitment to tell the compelling story of the black press in America, the new museum has collected a wide range of objects including photos by Teeney Harris and a printing press from The Chicago Defender.”
Megastar Oprah Winfrey, whose career began as a local television journalist, contributed more than $20 million to the sponsorship of the museum and has its theater named after her. Book signings and other gatherings populated by Black journalists have found a home there. The space provides inspiration to tell the stories many wish their own news organizations would pursue and has motivated some to tell them by other means, such as in books.
“ ‘It seems like we’re headed in the direction where there’s even an attempt to deny that the institution of slavery even existed, or that Jim Crow laws and segregation and racial violence against Black communities, Black families, Black individuals even occurred,’ said historian Clarissa Myrick-Harris, a professor at Morehouse College, the historically Black campus in Atlanta,” the AP’s Barrow continued.
“The Thursday executive order cites the National Museum of African American History and Culture by name and argues that the Smithsonian as a whole is engaging in a ‘concerted and widespread effort to rewrite our Nation’s history.’
CBS News reported in 2022, “Four million images that are considered to be the most valuable documentation of 20th century African American history will soon have a new home,” the Smithsonian prominent among the recipients. “The winning bid for the images, which were taken for ‘Ebony’ and ‘Jet’ magazines, came in at $30 million at a private auction.” CBS News correspondent Adriana Diaz provided details. (Credit: CBS/YouTube)
‘Instead of celebrating an ‘unparalleled legacy of advancing liberty, individual rights, and human happiness,’ the order argues that a ‘corrosive … divisive, race-centered ideology’ has ‘reconstructed the nation ‘as inherently racist, sexist, oppressive, or otherwise irredeemably flawed.’
“It empowers Vice President JD Vance to review all properties, programs and presentations to prohibit programs that ‘degrade shared American values’ or ‘divide Americans based on race.’
“Trump also ordered Interior Secretary Doug Burgum to determine if any monuments since January 2020 ‘have been removed or changed to perpetuate a false reconstruction of American history’ or ‘inappropriately minimize the value of certain historical events or figures.’ Trump has long criticized the removal of Confederate monuments, a movement that gained steam after the May 2020 murder of George Floyd.
“Critics argued the order is the latest move by the Trump administration to quash recognition of Black Americans’ contributions to the nation and to gloss over the legal, political, social and economic obstacles they have faced.
“Trump’s approach is ‘a literal attack on Black America itself,’ Ibram X. Kendi, the race historian and bestselling author, said. ‘The Black Smithsonian, as it is affectionately called, is indeed one of the heartbeats of Black America,’ Kendi argued, and ‘also one of the heartbeats’ of the nation at large.
“Congressional Black Caucus Chair Yvette Clarke, D-N.Y., suggested that Trump wants to distort the national narrative to racist ends. . . .”
Would the purging stop with the Smithsonian? No, says Kendi.
“Kendi noted that many museums and educational centers across the country — such as San Francisco’s Museum of the African Diaspora, The Legacy Museum: From Enslavement to Mass Incarceration in Montgomery, Alabama, and the International African American Museum in Charleston, South Carolina — exist with little to no federal or other governmental funding sources. Some already are struggling to keep their doors open,” Barrow wrote.
“ ‘To me, that’s part of the plan, to starve these institutions that are already starving of resources so that the only institutions that are telling America’s history are actually only telling political propaganda,’ Kendi said. . . .”
- Associated Press: President Obama, Oprah, Will Smith Celebrate Opening of Smithsonian African-American History Museum (Sept. 25, 2016)
- Stacy M. Brown, National Newspaper Publishers Association: Trump Orders Purge of Black History from Smithsonian, Targets African American Museum“
- National Museum of African American History and Culture: Consortium Forms Advisory Council, Announces Plans to Preserve Historic Ebony and Jet Photographic Archive (March 11, 2020)
- Manuel Roig-Franzia, Kyle Swenson, Emma Uber and Gaya Gupta, Washington Post: Trump order launches Smithsonian and its visitors into confusion, dismay
- Emma Uber and Gaya Gupta, Washington Post: Trump’s executive order targeted this museum. Many visitors question why.
I am outraged! pic.twitter.com/yHsiBe4YAg
— AprilDRyan (@AprilDRyan) March 29, 2025
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Comedian Dropped From Correspondents’ Dinner
“The comedian who was set to perform at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner was fired from the gig Saturday — after the Trump administration took offense at what she said on The Daily Beast Podcast,” Liam Archacki reported for the Daily Beast.
“ “On Thursday, Amber Ruffin (pictured) had sparked MAGA rage when she said that she wouldn’t try to make sure that her jokes targeted both sides of the political spectrum during her set, as she had been instructed to do by the White House Correspondents Association (WHCA).
“She told hosts comedian Samantha Bee and Beast Chief Content Officer Joanna Coles that the Trump administration are ‘kind of a bunch of murderers,’ adding that playing to both sides ‘makes them feel like human beings, but they shouldn’t get to feel that way, ‘cause they’re not.’
“A Saturday letter from Eugene Daniels (pictured), the president of the WHCA, to its members announced that he had been ‘re-envisioning’ the April 26 dinner ‘for the past couple of weeks.’ The WHCA is independent from the White House.
“ ‘As a first step, I wanted to share that the WHCA board has unanimously decided we are no longer featuring a comedic performance this year,’ wrote Daniels, who is also a political correspondent for MSNBC. ‘At this consequential moment for journalism, I want to ensure the focus is not on the politics of division but entirely on awarding our colleagues for their outstanding work and providing scholarship and mentorship to the next generation of journalists.’ . . .
“On Friday, White House Deputy Chief of Staff Taylor Budowich lashed out at Ruffin over her comments on the Beast’s podcast, calling her a ‘2nd rate comedian.’”’
“ ‘What kind of responsible, sensible journalist would attend something like this?’ he wrote. ‘More importantly, what kind of company would sponsor such [a] hate-filled and violence-inspiring event?’ . . .
“Neither Trump nor Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt will attend this year’s correspondents’ dinner. Right now, the administration is reportedly in the process of creating its own event to rival the WHCA’s event, according to Politico. . . .”
-
- Mike Allen, Axios: Scoop: White House to take charge of briefing-room seating chart
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- Erkki Forster, Daily Beast: How Amber Ruffin Is Preparing — and Pre-Gaming — For the White House Correspondents’ Dinner (March 28, updated March 29)
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- Journal-isms: Irate White House Reporters Focus on Daniels (March 11)

NABJ said of the academy, “Participants undergo a high-level leadership training process that includes workshops led by news and media industry executives and modules focusing on hiring and retention, business acumen, character, personal and professional branding, and leadership development. Participants are also paired with national news and media leaders to receive mentorship throughout the program.” (Credit: NABJ)
FCC Chairman Targets Disney Over DEI
“After launching investigations into the diversity, equity and inclusion policies and practices of Comcast and Verizon, the Federal Communications Commission is setting its sights on Disney next,” Lucas Manfredi reported Thursday for The Wrap.
FCC chairman Brendan Carr told Punchbowl News he’s putting the ‘finishing touches’ on a letter to the ABC parent company. He declined to reveal which specific DEI initiatives he was concerned with, but said the letter would outline similar concerns raised with Comcast and Verizon and ‘whether they’re engaged in any of this sort of DEI discrimination that could run afoul of our EEO rules or potentially our public interest standard.’
“ ‘We’re going to get to the bottom of everything that is ongoing here and stay tuned on that one,’ he added.
Todd Spangler added Friday for Variety: “ ‘I have asked the @FCC’s Enforcement Bureau to open an investigation into Disney & ABC,’ he wrote in a post on X Friday. ‘While Disney started as an iconic American company, it recently went all in on DEI. I am concerned that their DEI practices may violate FCC prohibitions on invidious forms of discrimination.’
“Disney last month scaled back its DEI policies — as other companies also have done in the wake of the Trump administration’s aggressive push to eliminate DEI in government and the private sector. In Disney’s case, the company announced that it was ending ‘Reimagine Tomorrow,’ an initiative intended to promote stories from underrepresented communities. . . .”
Punchbowl also reported, “The FCC also reinstated a ‘news distortion’ complaint against ABC affiliate WPVI-TV over the network’s fact-checking of Donald Trump during a presidential debate.”
The National Association of Black Journalists announced in August the launch of a four-year commitment from Disney and ABC News Group to invest in and partner with its NABJ Leadership Academy.
“The investment will provide NABJ with financial support for the next four years to build on and enhance the programming and training opportunities provided to participants. The partnership will begin for the upcoming 2024-2025 cycle.
“Now in its third year, the academy trains NABJ members working in broadcast, print, and digital who are current news and media managers — or interested in transitioning to leadership — to ascend to the executive suite. Training takes place during the Convention and year-round, with discipline-specific modules and career development training,” the announcement said.
Meanwhile, the University of Michigan announced cuts to campus-wide diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives Thursday, effective immediately, and Tyler Falk reported Tuesday for Current, which covers public broadcasting, that “New guidance from the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has neutralized a diversity provision in NPR’s collective bargaining agreement with the Screen Actors Guild–American Federation of Television and Radio Artists union.
“The agreement had required that at least 30% of external candidates interviewed for open bargaining unit positions be from underrepresented groups “who would advance NPR’s diversity, equity, and inclusion priorities, including but not limited to persons of color, women, members of the LGBTQ+ community, people with disabilities, and military veterans.”
As individual columnists weighed in on the continuing attack on DEI, Perry Bacon Jr. (pictured) of the Washington Post wrote, “What Native Americans, women and other groups who have often experienced discrimination in America really need is not DEI, but PFJ — power, freedom and justice.”
Bacon also wrote provocatively, “diversity often falls prey to what the Georgetown University philosophy professor Olúfémi O. Táíwò refers to as ‘elite capture’ — the individuals who get the spoils from a focus on diversity often don’t share the interests of the broader group.
“For example, there are more African Americans than ever in top roles in the Democratic Party. But I don’t know how useful it was to the average Black person last year to have a Black presidential nominee (Kamala Harris) and House Minority Leader (Hakeem Jeffries of New York) who spoke more passionately about defending Israel than issues that affect Black people in the United States.”
In the Boston Globe, Renee Graham (pictured) wrote March 23 that “Recent news that several major sponsors are withdrawing financial support from San Francisco’s Pride parade in June is less of a surprise than it is more evidence of corporate America’s gutlessness in the insidious anti-LGBTQ Elon Musk/President Trump era.”
With their sponsorships, Graham said the corporations gained brand loyalty, “But loving LGBTQ spending power is not the same as loving the LGBTQ community. I’m reminded of a comment once made by comedian Jon Stewart of ‘The Daily Show’: ‘If you don’t stick to your values when they’re being tested, they’re not values. They’re hobbies.’
“As Trump demands total capitulation, some of corporate America is proving that its values aren’t even hobbies — people defend their hobbies. We should remember that generally speaking, what a corporation values most is its bottom line. And anything viewed as a threat to that is expendable, including the fight for human rights.”
[March 31 update: “Three House Democrats launched an investigation Monday into FCC chair Brendan Carr,” Oliver Darcy reported for his Status newsletter. “Reps. Frank Pallone, Doris Matsui and Yvette Clarke announced the probe in a letter to Carr, accusing the Donald Trump appointee of launching ‘sham investigations into entities disfavored by President Trump, Elon Musk, and the Republican Party to censor journalists and news coverage.’ The Democrats added, ‘In the absence of actual agency authority and any real evidence of wrongdoing, your pursuit of these actions is clearly intended to punish and burden broadcasters and other media companies by inflicting incalculable reputational harm and excessive costs to defend themselves’” Carr, oddly, did not respond to our request for comment. But earlier in the day he threatened ABC’s broadcast license during a Fox News interview.”]
- Johanna Alonso, Inside Higher Ed: A Historical View of Trump’s Anti-DEI Crusade
- Anne D’Innocenzio, Associated Press: Founders of Black-owned brands adapt their hopes and business plans for a post-DEI era
- Jarvis DeBerry, MSNBC: Donald Trump’s anti-DEI madness erases Black service members, living and dead (March 23)
- Solomon Jones, Philadelphia Inquirer: The targets of Trump’s DEI attacks must unite — because no one else is coming to our rescue
- Roy S. Johnson, al.com: Trump wants to Make America (Jim) Crow Again
- Liam Knox, Inside Higher Ed: DOJ Admissions Probe Targets California Colleges
- Tashi McQueen, Afro: Women Join Newsrooms in Growing Numbers, but Few Rise to Leadership
- Jack Stripling, Chronicle of Higher Education: Disappearing White Students (March 11)

Walt Carr, 92, presents old-school solutions to the nation’s current predicament.
SNCC Says: ‘It’s Dark, But It’s Not Midnight’
The SNCC Legacy Project released this statement Wednesday:
We are living in dark times. Every day, with every news cycle, we sink deeper and deeper into what seems like an abyss. But the night is getting shorter. There is a need to resist despair. We are not powerless. We have never had the luxury of waiting around for those who we expect to represent our interests to do the heavy lifting. In fact, their inaction should be expected if we knew our history. It has always been us.
When left without any recourse in the early days of organizing in Mississippi, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) working alongside the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party (MFDP) created a new vision for the state, and eventually the country, with the determination to fight for one person one vote. Without that radical assertion, the second half of 20th century America would have looked much different. It has always been us. We have always had the wherewithal within our own moral universe to shape the new political agenda to escape the darkness that is enveloping us.
It is only dark right now. We have been fighting for a long time for the light. But human history is long. It takes a long time to imagine that everything must and can change. And then live it. We have been fighting for a long time for the light. It still shines within us. It still shines within everyone who has greeted this moment with anger. It still shines within everyone who has greeted this moment with some resolve. It even still shines within everyone who has greeted this moment with that shrug off, “what did you expect?”
It is in the darkness where we can begin to see that a world without racist and sexist oppression is possible. A world where there are no empires, where we study war no more. A world that allows children to live and be protected. Where healthcare is not a corporate game. Where our food systems feed everyone and work alongside the environment rather than against it. Where we can teach the truth in our educational institutions without fear of reprisal. Where we can affirm how each person sees themselves.
We all deserve a world where we might live our truths.
But, most importantly it still shines within everyone who has greeted this moment with a recommitment to do the work: To think and organize together for more just systems. To think and work toward shared and equitable power. To think and organize to enhance our capacities to change. (Photo: Frank Smith, left, Bob Moses and Willie (Wazir) Peacock in Greenwood, Miss., in 1963., credit: Danny Lyon)
And to those who have made it their duty to act, these lights still shine. We must act and we must organize. We must find where our neighbors, classmates, communities, and loved ones are. We must meet them. We must act together. We must translate the reasons for the despair and the harm that we witness in the media spotlight into opportunities for radical actions. We must organize. And sometimes that means disobey. To create a new life for our people, we must have the courage to know the difference between an unjust law and justice.
We will break through the darkness.
And with our renewed commitment to ourselves and our peoples, we will greet a new morning, ready and willing to make human history respond to our imperative, to make freedom — real freedom — our only agenda. This is what movement taught us. It has always been us.
The message closed with a request for donations.
Short Takes
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- It’s rare to see Black people as part of the West Bank- Gaza story, but CBS News’ Debora Patta told viewers Wednesday that in the West Bank, “CBS News met 14-year-old Omri Salem, a studious kid who dreams of being an engineer. His family has been in the area for generations. He told CBS News that, along with his nine-year old cousin, he was ordered by the IDF [Israeli Defense Forces] to search a four-story apartment building. He didn’t want to do it. ‘I was so scared,’ he said. ”Then they started beating us.’ Omri remains deeply emotionally scarred by the soldiers, whom he says forced him at gun point to be their human shield.” The young man tells his story at 2:48 in the video.
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- “New guidance from the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has neutralized a diversity provision in NPR’s collective bargaining agreement with the Screen Actors Guild–American Federation of Television and Radio Artists union,” Tyler Falk reported Tuesday for Current. “The agreement had required that at least 30% of external candidates interviewed for open bargaining unit positions be from underrepresented groups “who would advance NPR’s diversity, equity, and inclusion priorities, including but not limited to persons of color, women, members of the LGBTQ+ community, people with disabilities, and military veterans.”
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- “A new Chicago Sun-Times investigation shows that the department made arrests in just 6 percent of the city’s twenty-three hundred nonfatal shootings last year,” the Columbia Journalism Review reports, awarding it one of its “laurels” Friday. “Around half of these investigations are ‘suspended’ — meaning officers have stopped investigating them — within a month after the shooting. And at least 80 percent of them are suspended each year. . . .”
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- “You want to be in the room on April 2, 2025, as Inquirer Editor Gabriel Escobar talks about the paper’s decision to lay off its entire Communities & Engagement Desk, all of whose journalists were Black or people of color,” the Philadelphia chapter of the National Association of Black Journalists announced Friday on LinkedIn. “Among the total newsroom cuts, Black or people of color represent more than half of the positions being eliminated.” RSVP for meeting: nabjphilly (at) gmail.com. Attend via Zoom.
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- “Tyler Perry Studios is set to kick off the Dream Collective, a program designed to identify and cultivate the next wave of filmmakers, particularly with underrecognized and underrepresented voices,” Denise Petski reported Thursday for Deadline. “The program will revolve around the process of making a Short Film, ‘giving filmmakers unprecedented access to industry experts, hands-on training and tailored support, empowering them to tell their stories and build toward career sustainability,’ according to Perry. . . . Applications open on April 17.”

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- Univision 41 TV reporter Jaime Peluffo, 53, died Thursday in San Antonio after a battle with cancer, Peggy O’Hare reported for the San Antonio Express-News. “He was a news reporter for the Spanish-language networks Univision and Telemundo for more than 20 years.” Univision added that Peluffo, who was Colombian and Panamanian and a married father of two. received 10 Emmy Awards. At Univision 14 in San Francisco, Peluffo worked as a reporter and video journalist. He also anchored the 10 p.m. newscast.
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Los Angeles Times columnist LZ Granderson (pictured) is back at the newspaper after having been away since November for hip replacement surgery and recuperation. “I’m also on a once a week publication schedule like my other colleagues,” Granderson told Journal-isms. The publication frequency of the “left-leaning” columnists was reduced as part of owner Patrick Soon-Shiong’s effort to move the paper to the right. Granderson said last month that he was not affected by that decision, saying, “As you know, it’s illegal for my employer to reduce my workload or pressure me to take a buyout while I’m on sick leave or to do so upon my return.” He declined to explain why his column is running once a week after all. Granderson’s work reappeared on March 7.
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- “Los Angeles Times owner Patrick Soon-Shiong defended his decision to pull back his editorial board’s planned endorsement of former Vice President Kamala Harris in an interview on far-right host Tucker Carlson’s podcast,” Gregory Svirnovskiy reported Wednesday for Politico. “The decision to pull back the endorsement led to the resignation of the paper’s editorials editor, triggered mass turnover on the editorial board and pushed thousands of readers to cancel their subscriptions. ‘We lost a lot of viewers,’ Soon-Shiong said to Carlson.’ ‘Thousands of people unsubscribed. But I don’t think it’s right that we should be this canceling society.’ ”
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“President Trump plans to nominate L. Brent Bozell III (pictured), a conservative media critic and fierce defender of Israel, to be the U.S. ambassador to South Africa, according to the Congressional website,” John Eligon reported from South Africa Tuesday for the New York Times. “Mr. Bozell, who must be confirmed by the Senate, would be stepping into the role at a time when the relationship between South Africa and the United States is at its worst in recent memory. The Trump administration recently expelled South Africa’s ambassador to the United States after he criticized Mr. Trump during a webinar.” Bozell wrote a letter on behalf of his son, a convicted Jan. 6 rioter, Zoë Richards reported in January for NBC News. “Bozell’s son, L. Brent Bozell IV, was sentenced to 45 months in prison for assaulting law enforcement, destroying government property, and other charges related to his conduct on Jan. 6, 2021.”
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“Black-owned media should be thinking about adjusting their approach to funding — but not in ways that compromise their mission, values, or voice,” Tracie Powell (pictured), founder of the Pivot Fund, told John Celestand of the Local Media Association, Powell reported Wednesday. “The environment is shifting. The post-2020 surge of interest in racial equity is fading, and philanthropic priorities are changing. That means we must be even more strategic, nimble, and clear about our value. That doesn’t mean diluting our purpose — it means finding creative ways to make our mission resonate in a climate that demands results, metrics, and alignment with evolving priorities. . . .” The Pivot Fund “centers and invests in BIPOC-led, community news organizations.”

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- “In response to escalating threats against press freedom in the US, the Journalist Safety Urgent Care Helpline will remain available through the first 100 days of the Trump administration, extending through the end of April,” PEN America reported Monday. . . .Through a collaboration among leading journalist safety organizations and experts, the Helpline offers one-on-one and newsroom-wide support in the face of doxing, threats, arrests, legal intimidation, and other security concerns. U.S. journalists and newsrooms can access these consultations by emailing urgentcare (at) electionsos.org with the word ‘SAFETY’ in the subject line.” A Knight-funded pilot project, the Helpline is a collaboration among PEN America, Committee to Protect Journalists, International Women’s Media Foundation, Freedom of the Press Foundation, Reporters Committee for the Freedom of the Press, “and the Aegis Safety Alliance — alongside four leading safety advisors, Yemile Bucay, Jeje Mohamed, Ramy Ghaly, and Viktorya Vilk. . . .”
Trump Frees Ozy Co-Founder Carlos Watson
March 28, 2025
A Commutation Hours Before Sentence Was to Begin
Comedian Dropped From Correspondents’ Dinner (March 29)
CNBC reports news of the commutation. (Credit: CNBC/YouTube)
A Commutation Hours Before Sentence Was to Begin
President Trump commuted the sentence of Ozy Media co-founder Carlos Watson (pictured, below) Friday, just hours before Watson was due to report to prison for a nearly 10-year sentence in a financial conspiracy case. Watson, who is Black, had called the case a “modern lynching” and praised Trump profusely ror setting him free.
“His decision reflects his unwavering commitment to fairness and justice for those who have been wrongfully targeted,” Watson said, failing to mention Trump’s continued refusal to apologize for his 1989 call for the execution of the Black and Latino New York teenagers first known as the Central Park Five, then the “Exonerated Five” after they were proved innocent.
Separately, “Trump granted a pardon on Tuesday to Devon Archer, a felon convicted for his involvement in a scheme that defrauded over $60 million in tribal bonds from the business arm of the Oglala Sioux Tribe,” Levi Rickert reported Thursday for Native News Online..
“A former business associate of Hunter Biden, the son of former President Joe Biden, Archer was convicted in 2018 for his role in fraudulently issuing tribal bonds,” Rickert continued.
“Watson was arrested in February 2023 after two of the company’s top executives pleaded guilty to fraud charges,” Chris Megerian reported for the Associated Press.
“Prosecutors said Watson deceived investors and lenders by inflating revenue numbers and suggesting deals were final when they were not. At one point, Watson’s co-founder pretended to be a YouTube executive on a phone call with potential investors, according to prosecutors.
“After Watson’s sentencing, then-Brooklyn U.S. Attorney Breon Peace said the jury had determined that ‘Watson was a con man who told lie upon lie upon lie to deceive investors into buying stock in his company.’
“Ozy Media ‘collapsed under the weight of Watson’s dishonest schemes,’ Peace said.
Statement on Today’s Commutation of @OZY Media and @CarlosWatson by @RealDonaldTrump. pic.twitter.com/so8qCgGpUj
— Glenn E. Martin 🐐 (@glennEmartin) March 29, 2025
Posted Friday night on X. (If no image appears, please consider using another browser.)
“But Watson, who is Black, called the case ‘a modern lynching” and argued that he was the victim of ‘selective prosecution.’
“ ‘I made mistakes. I’m very, very sorry that people are hurt, myself included,’ Watson said, but ‘I don’t think it’s fair.’
“U.S. District Judge Eric Komitee said during sentencing that the ‘quantum of dishonesty in this case is exceptional.’ “
Megerian also reported, “Trump has aggressively used his presidential power to commute sentences and issue pardons for people who he believes were treated unfairly by the justice system. The president himself was convicted last year in a case involving hush money payments, part of what he has described as a politically motivated witch hunt against him.
“Watson’s commutation was among a string of other acts of clemency revealed by the White House on Friday. They included Trevor Milton, the founder of electric vehicle company Nikola, who had been sentenced to four years for fraudulently exaggerating the potential of his technology and was pardoned; and three entrepreneurs who founded and helped run the cryptocurrency exchange BITMEX, which was ordered to pay a $100 million fine earlier this year after prosecutors said it ‘willfully flouted U.S. anti-money laundering laws to boost revenue’.
“They had been sentenced to probation and were also pardoned. . . .”
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- Susie Banikarim and Josh Hersh, Columbia Journalism Review: The Unraveling of Ozy Media (podcast, Dec. 9, 2024)
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- Bridget Bowman and Ben Kamisar, NBC News: Focus group: Black men who backed Trump approve of his presidency — but raise some concerns about DOGE
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- Josh Hersh, Columbia Journalism Review: Trump Commutes Prison Sentence of Ozy Media Founder Carlos Watson
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- Journal-isms: A Belated Apology for Notorious Crime Coverage (Sept. 5, 2023)