Balta Says He’s Motivated by Trump’s Attacks
Has Gillum Put Us in Historic Moment?
. . . Garcia Could Make History in Arizona
Relief! Trump’s Newsprint Tariffs Overturned
Black Press Group Seeks Editor of D.C. News Service
Rana Cash Named Sports Editor at Courier-Journal
Miss Black America Pageant Found Wanting
Some Puncture Holes in Media’s Praise for McCain
Students Visit Town Where Ancestors Were Slaves
Series Examines Effects of Exposure to Violence
Support Journal-ismsBalta Says He’s Motivated by Trump’s Attacks
Hugo Balta, who led the National Association of Hispanic Journalists out of the now disbanding Unity: Journalists for Diversity coalition in 2013, declared Wednesday that “now, I think is the right time to start conversations about reunification.”
Balta returned to the NAHJ presidency in June. In a blog post, he cited President Trump’s attacks on the press as a reason for journalists of color groups and the National Lesbian & Gay Journalists Association, now called NLGJA: The Association of LGBTQ Journalists, to renew the coalition.
Balta’s idea was met with caution by Sarah Glover, president of the National Association of Black Journalists, which pulled out of the group in 2011 over financial and governance issues, and by Neal Justin, the last president of the coalition, which voted in February to start the dissolution process.
“There are many ways for the diversity journalism groups to work together to advocate, train members, and fellowship collectively,” Glover messaged. She also said, “Unity closing its doors this year underscores that the Unity convention business model was not the optimal model for success for all groups. Working collaboratively can and should be more than a convention model.”
Justin messaged, in part, “One thing we’ve learned from the past couple years is that it [is] extremely difficult, if not impossible, to raise money and make [a] significant impact without the involvement of all five major diversity groups. Personally, I also think it’s imperative that the work — and there’s a LOT of work — be chiefly handled by people who are not otherwise engaged with loads of other responsibilities to their respective organizations. . . .”
In his blog post, Balta noted, “The organization born Unity: Journalists of Color in 1990 struggled after founding members NABJ and NAHJ seceded for a number of reasons including finances.
“I led the departure of NAHJ during my first term as president by successfully arguing that Unity, as a business proposition, no longer served the best interest of NAHJ. Still, NAHJ leaders and I believe in Unity’s [core] mission of collaboration in championing for the recognition and professional advancement of minorities in the news industry. NAHJ still works on independent projects with diverse journalism groups including another founding Unity member, the Native [American] Journalists Association (NAJA) which participated at this year’s NAHJ conference in Miami.
“Now that Unity no longer exists or any of the constraints which motivated the exit of some of its founding members; now, I think is the right time to start conversations about reunification. In this unprecedented time where the President of the United States is inciting the public by calling journalists the enemy and widening the rift between communities, often exploiting it for political gain — the reuniting of journalists of color is of the utmost importance. In addition, that includes the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association (NLGJA) whose members proudly wave a multicolored flag. . . .”
In its final iteration, Unity: Journalists for Diversity consisted of the Asian American Journalists Association, the Native American Journalists Association and NLGJA: The Association of LGBTQ Journalists.
The coalition originated with the National Association of Black Journalists, the National Association of Hispanic Journalists, AAJA and NAJA, and for most of its life was known as Unity: Journalists of Color.
However, NABJ pulled out in 2011 and NAHJ followed in 2013. The remaining members voted to add NLGJA.
Glover offered these thoughts Wednesday on behalf of NABJ:
“NABJ is unified with the other minority journalism groups and stands solidly on the same footing to advocate for media diversity, inclusion, and the journalistic principles of the free press.
“NABJ pursues partnerships and opportunities for collaboration with minority journalism groups and other like-minded organizations that are in alignment with the NABJ Strategic Plan 2017-2020.
“There are many ways for the diversity journalism groups to work together to advocate, train members, and fellowship collectively. NABJ pursues meaningful and impactful ways to advocate for minorities in journalism, and that advocacy by all groups should be happening beyond a singular convention.
“The previous Unity convention model did not serve all the organizations well, and that fact is well documented, and why NABJ and NAHJ left.
“Further, Unity closing its doors this year underscores that the Unity convention business model was not the optimal model for success for all groups.
“Working collaboratively can and should be more than a convention model. The minority journalism groups can do so throughout the year to improve diversity and inclusion in the media industry. The scale of those efforts [requires] effort and resources now.
“Regional programming and conferences, joint statements, industry meetings and briefings, training and professional development and networking opportunities are all ways that the minority journalism organizations can continue to work together year round. NABJ and its affiliate chapters have spearheaded and participated in some of these opportunities with the other minority journalism groups in recent years. But, all of the groups can do more to organize in this realm. Monetary support and resources are required to further advance media diversity objectives with a collective impact.”
Michelle Ye Hee Lee, incoming national president of the AAJA, said by email, “I can tell you that inclusion and reaching out to all communities of color in the post-UNITY era was a big topic of discussion at our national board meeting at convention. As outlined in AAJA’s 2020 strategic plan, we are committed to being leaders in DEI [diversity, equity and inclusion] issues: AAJA is dedicated not just to our AAPI community but creating opportunities for all journalists of color. For our 2019 AAJA convention, we are returning to the site of the first UNITY convention 25 years ago. We are excited to find opportunities to engage all communities of color in the coming years.”
Bryan Pollard, NAJA president, did not respond to requests for comment. Dillon Lewis of NLGJA referred the question to Justin.
Justin messaged, “I welcome any and all discussion about re-booting UNITY. These conversations really won’t have meat unless ALL the major groups are involved. I had reached out to NAHJ and NABJ early in my term to have some informal talk about re-unification but didn’t have much success in getting the ball rolling. Perhaps it’s time to try again.
“One thing we’ve learned from the past couple years is that it [is] extremely difficult, if not impossible, to raise money and make [a] significant impact without the involvement of all five major diversity groups. Personally, I also think it’s imperative that the work – and there’s a LOT of work – be chiefly handled by people who are not otherwise engaged with loads of other responsibilities to their respective organizations. Perhaps UNITY should be headed by those who aren’t already serving on their group’s boards? (I’m just speaking for myself here, NOT the board).
“For the record, a formal vote on [dissolution] has not taken place yet, but the process is moving quickly.
“Even if we formerly dissolve next month, there is nothing stopping a new effort to take root. I am happy to help in any such effort.
“If Hugo or any other journalists have ideas on moving forward, I am always available to chat.”
- Paul Delaney, Columbia Journalism Review: The death of Unity: Why a collaboration between journalists of color collapsed (March 29)
Andrew Gillum, mayor of Tallahassee, Fla., and Democratic nominee for Florida governor, joins “MTP Daily” on MSNBC Wednesday to respond to his opponent’s claim that he is a socialist. (Credit: YouTube)
Has Gillum Put Us in Historic Moment?
“What we are experiencing right now is absolutely historic,” Shaun King wrote Wednesday for the Intercept. “The United States does not currently have a single black governor — not one. Florida, Georgia, and Maryland have never had a black governor. No black person has ever been the Democratic Party nominee for governor in Florida or Georgia. But that seems poised to change.
“On Tuesday night, Andrew Gillum pulled off a stunning win in Florida’s Democratic primary for governor. He joins Georgia’s Stacey Abrams and Maryland’s Ben Jealous as the third brilliant, successful, and progressive black leader elected to represent the Democratic Party in a gubernatorial race this November. Each of those elections will be a brutal nail-biter, but success is possible.
“I’m sorry if you’ve heard me say this before, but it’s hard to understand a moment in history when you are in it. History is better seen, understood, and valued in retrospect. Still, we can already tell that we’re witnessing something potentially monumental. I won’t go as far as calling this moment the new Reconstruction, but we haven’t seen the possibility of this type of political representation at the state level since the years following the Civil War.
“How did this happen? . . .”
. . . Garcia Could Make History in Arizona
“David Garcia, an Army veteran and education expert, won the Democratic nomination on Tuesday to challenge Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey, giving him a chance to become the state’s first Latino chief executive in more than 40 years,” Kevin Robillard reported for HuffPost.
“Garcia’s main competition in his party’s primary was Steve Farley, a state legislator. But operatives in both parties had long expected Garcia to triumph, and Republican groups have already spent millions of dollars attacking him, mostly on the issue of immigration.
“The general election will pit Ducey’s well-funded re-election bid ― he and the Republican Governors Association have already reserved more than $9 million worth of airtime for the race, and he’s a longtime favorite of the Koch political network ― against grassroots anger over the state’s public schools. . . .”
- Jonathan Capehart, Washington Post: Inside Andrew Gillum’s campaign to become Florida’s first black governor
- Editorial, Miami Herald: DeSantis and Gillum must make the campaign for Florida governor about more than Trump
- Editorial, SunSentinel, Fort Lauderdale, Fla.: Fix Florida’s flawed primary election
- Editorial, Tallahassee Democrat: Andrew Gillum’s victory in Florida primary seismic for Tallahassee
- Editorial, Tampa Bay Times: DeSantis, Gillum are stark choices for governor in Florida
- Eric Lach, New Yorker: Andrew Gillum’s Win, in Florida, Sets Up a Clear Battle Between the New G.O.P. and the New Democrat
- Steven Lemongello, Orlando Sentinel: Who is Andrew Gillum, Florida’s Democratic nominee for governor?
- Steven Lemongello, Orlando Sentinel: Andrew Gillum: His victory and the road ahead
- Media Matters for America: Fox anchor says the network does not condone Ron DeSantis’ racist remarks about Andrew Gillum, does not say what the comments were
- Robert Robb, Arizona Republic: Why did Arizona Democrats reject so many white, male candidates?
- Fabiola Santiago, Miami Herald: Ron DeSantis attacks first black nominee for governor with ‘monkey’ racial slur
- Shadow League: Andrew Gillum, Democratic Candidate For Governor, Thanks FAMU Roots
- Langston Taylor, Tampa Bay Times: How the black vote carried Andrew Gillum to victory
- Blue Telusma, theGrio.com: Andrew Gillum claps back at Donald Trump’s shady tweet after winning Democratic nomination in Florida governor race
Relief! Trump’s Newsprint Tariffs Overturned
“The International Trade Commission (ITC) announced Wednesday that it reversed newsprint tariffs after concluding that Canadian imports of uncoated groundwood paper do not cause material harm to the U.S. paper industry,” Sara Fischer reported for Axios.
“Why it matters: Newspapers were aching under the tariffs, and in many cases were forced to lay off dozens of people due to the burden the tariffs put on their businesses.”
David Chavern, president and CEO of the News Media Alliance, a trade organization of newspaper publishers, said, “Today is a great day for American journalism. The ITC’s decision will help to preserve the vitality of local newspapers and prevent additional job losses in the printing and publishing sectors … The end of these unwarranted tariffs means local newspapers can focus once again on playing a vital role in our democracy by keeping citizens informed and connected to the daily life of their communities.”
Among those feeling the burden of the tariffs was the black press. “The financial sustainability of the Black Press of America is now facing a catastrophic and a possible deadly impact, because of these new tariffs,” Benjamin F. Chavis Jr., president and CEO of the National Newspaper Publishers Association, the trade group for black-press publishers, wrote in a July 9 op-ed.
Black Press Group Seeks Editor of D.C. News Service
The trade group representing black-newspaper publishers is seeking an editor to turn its Washington news operation into a “black Associated Press,” Dorothy R. Leavell, chairman of the National Newspaper Publishers Association, told Journal-isms by telephone on Thursday.
The editor-in-chief must “coordinate and keep the latest news on the wire” and “provide fresh content,” she said. The person “has to have a passion for this” and “be able to bring the freshest news and the greatest coverage.”
The post is vacant with the departure last week of Freddie Allen, a national NNPA correspondent who assumed the top job at the NNPA News Service in 2015 after the late George E. Curry resigned. The NNPA board had voted to cut the salaries of Curry and his two correspondents by 50 percent, pleading financial issues.
Leavell said “the publishers were not happy” with the service, which under Curry was run by a journalist with stature in the industry and numerous contacts among movers and shakers. Curry died in 2016 at age 69.
Leavell, publisher of the Chicago Crusader and Gary (Ind.) Crusader, said she was also looking for a new chairperson of the board’s newswire service committee.
Those interested in the news service position should contact Benjamin F. Chavis Jr., president and CEO of NNPA, at 202-588-8764.
The salary is open, “but we know we are going to have to pay for it to get what we need. Whatever is happening in our communities, we ought to have it first,” Leavell said.
Rana Cash Named Sports Editor at Courier-Journal
Rana Cash, NFL editor at the Star Tribune in Minneapolis, has been named sports editor at the Courier-Journal in Louisville, Ky., the Courier-Journal announced internally, making her a rarity: a black female sports editor at a metropolitan daily.
“I look forward to building on the tremendous work the staff is already doing there covering Louisville, Kentucky, horse racing and preps,” Cash wrote Wednesday on Twitter.
Courier-Journal Editor Richard A. Green wrote staffers Wednesday that Cash “has developed a top-notch reputation for her editing skills and track record for coaching reporters. . . . She’s done sterling work at several other newsrooms, including senior editor at The Sporting News, reporter and editor at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, and sports reporter at the Miami Herald and Dallas Morning News.
“I’ve been discussing the opportunity here in Louisville for two months with her, and I’ve been impressed by her dedication and passion to this business, her commitment to elevating reporters’ work and a tireless work ethic that I’ve observed from afar. She brings digital acumen and high standards to the job (not to mention experience overseeing Super Bowl coverage) and I can’t wait for her arrival. . . .”
When Lisa Wilson joined the Undefeated in 2017 from the Buffalo News, where she was executive sports editor, Wilson and Jewell Walston, sports editor of the Winston-Salem (N.C.) Journal, were the nation’s only two black female sports editors of metropolitan dailies.
Wilson is leaving the Undefeated for the Athletic, another online startup, the Athletic announced last week.
Attend all 50th Anniversary
Miss Black America Pageant Events in Kansas City, Missouri Aug11th-Aug18th #KansasCityMO #ThisIsHowWeDoKansasCity #50YearsOfMissBlackAmerica #StillDope Tickets via https://t.co/ehxPebM1yR @KansasCityFilm @SocialInChicago @heartlandblack pic.twitter.com/LLRzgX65q7— Aleta Anderson (@MissBlackA) July 23, 2018
Miss Black America Pageant Found Wanting
The 50th anniversary of the Miss Black America pageant received favorable media coverage as well as $100,000 from Kansas City to bring the pageant there a year after the NAACP issued an advisory warning black people about the dangers of traveling in Missouri.
But according to some of the participants, the real story hasn’t been told.
“Oh the pageant was a mess!” Lauren Meredith Poteat, who represented Maryland, told Journal-isms by email on Wednesday. “All 23 girls including the winner left disgusted. They treated us horribly and on some days didn’t even properly feed us. That pageant . . . didn’t even have crowns and sashes for the winners. A few girls have taken to Facebook and made live videos on their horrible experience that [cost] $1500, just for registration.”
Poteat is Washington editor for BlackPressUSA, news service of the National Newspaper Publishers Association.
De’Vaughnn Williams, one of the contestants, describes “a hard and trying week” in a video she made for Facebook. She wonders why there were so few community people at the welcome reception, and why the pageant founder was not present. There was no real orientation, she says, and while the contestants were fed plenty of salads, she longed for substantial meals.
On Aug. 17, a Kansas City Star editorial noted that “Mayor Pro Tem Scott Wagner pushed to fund the pageant founded in 1968 by Philadelphia businessman J. Morris Anderson. Wagner said the pageant was the perfect opportunity for young, talented African Americans and others to experience the city.
“The local 12th Street Heritage Development Corporation, an African-American-led nonprofit, helped organize the event. Funding came from the city’s tourism budget. . . .”
However, the Star said, “The pomp and pageantry of this weekend’s event won’t resolve the ongoing issues that compelled the civil rights group to issue the travel advisory, the first of its kind in the nation. . . .”
It concluded, “The travel warning was a setback for Kansas City and Missouri. But having Miss Black America in town was a positive step toward changing the city’s reputation. And local leaders deserve some credit for that. But the pageant was only a start. . . .”
- Shelby Fleig, Des Moines Register: Miss Black America pageant reclaims activist roots in ‘rebirth’ at 50
- Robin Givhan, Washington Post: ‘You can be unapologetically black’: How Miss Black America has endured 50 years
- Sameer Rao, ColorLines: Miss Black America’s Story, From Segregation to Celebration
Sen. John McCain’s children, Doug, Sidney, Jimmy and Jack McCain, greet people who came to pay their respects to their father at the Arizona state capitol. (video) (Credit: David Wallace/Arizona Republic)
Some Puncture Holes in Media’s Praise for McCain
It did not take long for some to have had enough of the unbridled praise for the late Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., the “maverick” war hero and two-time Republican presidential candidate.
“This weekend the news broke that Senator John McCain had passed away after a long battle with brain cancer,” Blue Telusma wrote Wednesday for theGrio.com. “The widely praised war hero was considered a class act who composed himself with a dignity and grace that arguably seems to be foreign in the GOP.
“And while I don’t doubt that the 81-year old was probably a great husband and father, a part of me has been confused this week and left to wonder, ‘Why are BLACK people mourning his death so hard?’
“Now, I’m not going to lie, death is some sobering ish, and when I first heard about the politician’s passing, I admit that my first thought was ‘Wow. His daughter must be devastated.’
“While McCain’s friends and white conservatives as a whole grieve (which is their right), at what point did we as Black Americans suddenly forget that John McCain has never had our backs when it counted? . . .”
Telusma pointed out that McCain staunchly opposed the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday in 1983, later admitting his mistake.
Telusma also wrote, “As if he had learned absolutely nothing from his MLK faux pas, McCain continued to vote in ways that adversely affected and/or blatantly discounted the Black community until the end. . . . ”
More recently, McCain voted to confirm Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, “a woman who is actively attempting to increase the education gap between minority students and their white peers, while also playing around with the idea of using taxpayer dollars (meant for books and materials) to put guns inside the classroom. . . .”
In the Chicago Tribune, the libertarian Steve Chapman wrote, “overall, his time as a Republican presidential nominee exposed a different side of McCain that should not be forgotten, even as the nation mourns his passing. Often his campaign was nasty, dishonest and irresponsible. Worse, it helped turn the Republican Party into a vehicle that could be commandeered by Donald Trump. . . .”
In Politico Magazine on Monday, Jack Shafer wrote, “I’m almost certain that a samizdat chapter of the Associated Press Stylebook exists that prohibits journalists from writing anything praiseful about Republicans — except when one dies or if the Republican’s name is John McCain.
“Sen. McCain, who died Saturday, went to his grave festooned with a bundle of the most radiant tributes from the reporters who covered him. Taking to Twitter, the airwaves and print, journalists choked back tears to gush about how much the man meant to them. . . .”
- Bruce A. Dixon, Black Agenda Report: Mourning the Manufactured McCain
- Roy S. Johnson, al.com: Last words matter: May John McCain’s live on in each of us
- Phillip Morris, Plain Dealer, Cleveland: John McCain, thank you for showing us the way
- Tony Norman, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: Of flags, folly and presidential cynicism
- Leonard Pitts Jr., Miami Herald: McCain was flawed, but he was a man of integrity. Trump should take note, but won’t.
- Joseph A. Wulfsohn, Mediaite: The Media’s Mourning of McCain Doesn’t Erase Their Past Demonization of Him
Students Visit Town Where Ancestors Were Slaves
“Elizabeth Thomas was 23 when she first stepped into the town where her ancestors had been enslaved,” Taylor Blatchford reported Wednesday for the Poynter Institute.
“She’d heard stories about Maringouin, Louisiana, from her mother, grandparents and extended family. But until 2017, she’d never visited the small town of 1,000 people outside Baton Rouge.
“The trip with her mom and cousin came after Thomas learned she was a descendant of slaves sold to Maringouin by Jesuit leaders in 1838 to keep Georgetown University financially afloat. She and her brother, Shepard Thomas, both decided to apply to Georgetown after the university offered descendants of the 272 slaves legacy status for admission.
“This May, Elizabeth traveled back with Shepard and seven journalists from the Hoya, Georgetown’s independent student newspaper. . . .”
Series Examines Effects of Exposure to Violence
“In their work covering crime in New Orleans, Richard Webster and Jonathan Bullington often saw neighborhood kids who’d been witnesses, lost family members and were present at crime scenes,” Kristen Hare reported Wednesday for the Poynter Institute.
“And they wondered — what does that do to kids?
“The two NOLA.com | Times-Picayune reporters spent one school year finding out. Their series, ‘The Children of Central City,’ tells the story of a group of kids, their families and schools, but also the science behind trauma and what it means for all of them.
“The project came out in June. Since then, it has:
- “Led to a unanimous resolution from the New Orleans City Council calling on all schools to address the realities of childhood trauma.
- “Led to another unanimous resolution from the city council to drastically change how childhood trauma is understood, prevented and treated.
- “Inspired a billboard campaign by a local nonprofit that shares the message from the project — kids that experience and witness violence are #sadnotbad.
“The project shows what local journalism can do when it takes time, care and a willingness to think past the limitations. . . .”
The series was produced as a project for the Dennis A. Hunt Fund for Health Journalism, a program of the USC Annenberg Center for Health Journalism.
Short Takes
- “A long-awaited analysis of Hurricane Maria’s deadly sweep through Puerto Rico prompted the government on Tuesday to sharply increase the official death toll,” Sheri Fink reported Tuesday for the New York Times. The government now estimates that 2,975 people died as a result of the disaster and its effects, which unfolded over months. The new assessment is many times greater than the previous official tally of 64. . . .”
- Aretha Franklin’s funeral Friday is limited to invited guests — but the world will be able to watch, Brian McCollum reported Monday for the Detroit Free Press, updated Thursday. “The Friday service will be made available for viewing live online and on television, the Free Press has confirmed.” National broadcasters including HLN and the Word Network plan to air the lengthy funeral in its entirety, though HLN will occasionally break in for headline updates. Franklin’s funeral will also be livestreamed by the Associated Press, which means it’s likely to be picked up by online media outlets around the globe, including here at Freep.com. . . .”
- . . . BET announced on Thursday, “BET Networks will commemorate her life and legacy by broadcasting Aretha Franklin’s funeral service in its entirety beginning Friday, August 31 at 10 AM ET on BET, BET Her and BET.com. BET’s commercial-free, live coverage will be hosted by BET News Correspondent Marc Lamont Hill from our Times Square studio in New York City. Marc will be joined in studio by noted cultural and music critic Emil Wilbekin who will provide additional commentary. . . .”
- “Finally, justice for 15-year-old Jordan Edwards,” the Dallas Morning News editorialized Wednesday. “A Dallas County jury on Tuesday found a former Balch Springs police officer guilty of murder when he indiscriminately fired his rifle into a car full of teenagers leaving a party in April 2017. Nothing will bring that innocent child back, but this verdict has to bring some measure of comfort to Jordan’s family, this community and this country that Jordan’s life mattered. . . .”
- “Prisoners in at least 17 states across the country went on strike this week to declare that the way they’re being treated by guards and prison officials is no longer acceptable,” Barrington M. Salmon wrote Sunday for the National Newspaper Publishers Association. “The strike, which began on August 21 is scheduled to end on Sept 9. The dates are symbolic, marking the death of author and activist George Jackson by prison guards at Soledad Prison in California, and the Attica Prison rebellion. It’s still unclear exactly how many inmates are involved but prison reform advocates say this is the largest protest of its kind in history. . . .”
- “In its first of a series of demonstrations against film studios that have a poor record of Latino employment, the National Hispanic Media Coalition (NHMC) and the National Latino Media Council (NLMC) held a demonstration this morning in front of Paramount Pictures,” the NMHC announced on Monday. “At a press conference last month, NHMC and NLMC revealed Paramount Pictures’ dismal hiring record, and the studio’s refusal to sign a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with the group after its initial meeting in June 2018 with Paramount Pictures COO Andrew Gumpert. The MOU would have detailed Paramount Pictures’ plan in solving their exclusion and lack of Latino talent with the help of NHMC and NLMC. . . .”
- “When a Miami Herald reporter questioned state lawmaker Daphne Campbell after a candidates event, she called 911 to ask for police protection,” David Ovalle reported Tuesday and updated Wednesday for the Herald. ” ‘Can you please send a police for me, please, right now,’ Campbell told the Miami-Dade police dispatcher. ‘My life is threatened.’ Miami-Dade police this week released audio of the call made by Campbell, the Democratic state senator who lost reelection Tuesday. In the call, Campbell never specified that the woman ‘in the colorful dress’ was Miami Herald reporter Sarah Blaskey — or the exact nature of her supposed threats. . . .”
-
By the summer of 1968, more than half the men in Long Binh Jail, on the outskirts of Saigon, South Vietnam, “were locked up on AWOL charges, Absent Without Leave,” Joe Richman reported Wednesday for Radio Diaries, airing on NPR and available by podcast. “Some for there for more serious crimes, others for small stuff, like refusing to get a haircut. The stockade had also become extremely overcrowded. Originally built to house 400 inmates, it became crammed with 700 men, more than half African American. On August 29, 1968, the situation erupted. Fifty years later, we’re bringing you that story. . . .”
- “Rotten Tomatoes, the powerful review aggregation service, substantially revised its criteria for critics on Tuesday in an effort to include more female and minority voices and better reflect podcast and YouTube reviewing,” Brooks Barnes reported Tuesday for the New York Times. Rotten Tomatoes has decided “that broadening its criteria for critics — more than 200 were added to the site on Tuesday — will make its Tomatometer stronger. . . .”
- “More than 20,000 people applied to write for The Edit, a newsletter for college students and recent graduates,” the New York Times Co. reported on Tuesday. “Today, we are thrilled to share the 13 students and recent grads who you’ll hear from in the newsletter. Get to know the 13 contributors here . . .’
- “An auto burglary case that, thanks in part to an SF Chron column, has spurred anger among mostly white anti-crime crusaders comes before a Superior Court judge Friday/31 — and the outcome is far more important than one young man’s future in the criminal justice system,” Tim Redmond and Alex Catsoulis wrote Tuesday for 48hills.org. “The Stop Crime SF group plans to pack the courtroom to put pressure on Judge Christopher Hite not to allow DeShawn Patton to accept a suspended sentence for a series of car break-ins. The politics are potentially ugly: If Hite, who is African American and a former public defender, doesn’t send Patton, who is African American and 21 years old, to prison for his crimes, some fear the outcome could be an attack on the judge and the independence of the local judiciary. The furor started with a column by Heather Knight that portrayed Patton as a violent serial criminal who has somehow managed to escape accountability for his long record of car thefts. . . .”
- “The title of Steve James’s new documentary series, ‘America to Me,’ comes from the Langston Hughes poem ‘Let America Be America Again,’ about the distance between the country’s idealistic vision of itself and the experiences of African Americans who never shared in it . . .,” Scott Tobias reported Friday for the Washington Post. “That passage describes the feeling of being both part of and apart from a great institution, one filled with extraordinary promise yet stymied by racial division. And that is the predicament black students face at Oak Park and River Forest High School (OPRF), the suburban Chicago school chronicled in ‘America to Me.’ ” The series premiered last Sunday at 10 p.m. on Starz.
- “Starting September 14, NPR Politics will launch The Politics Show from NPR, a special nine-part weekly radio show leading up to the 2018 midterm elections,” NPR reported on Aug. 21. Hosts are Scott Detrow, Tamara Keith and Asma Khalid.
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Texas House Speaker Joe Straus has called “for the removal of a plaque from the State Capitol because it claims slavery was not an ‘underlying cause’ for the War Between the States,” the Fort Worth Star-Telegram editorialized Aug. 14, updated Aug. 19. “There are other less deceptive Civil War monuments on the Capitol grounds. But Straus has called for the removal of this one erected by Children of the Confederacy sometime in the 1950’s because he believes the State should not ‘promote falsehoods’ when we know better. We agree. . . .”
- Naomi Johnson taught school in Chicago “for more than 30 years while married to one of the most prominent African American journalists: Robert E. Johnson, executive editor and associate publisher of Jet, a bite-sized, weekly version of its monthly sister publication, Ebony,” Maureen O’Donnell reported Thursday for the Chicago Sun-Times. “Mrs. Johnson, 91, who had cancer, died Friday while in home hospice care in Hyde Park. . . . .Mrs. Johnson and her husband ‘definitely worked as a team,’ said their son Robert E. Johnson III. . . .”
- “Journalist Mary Suh is joining the editorial team at AtlanticLIVE, The Atlantic’s events division, following more than 20 years as a top editor at The New York Times, AtlanticLIVE president Margaret Low announced . . . ,” the Atlantic announced on Aug. 22. “She will be a senior editor working with executive producer Rob Hendin and a team responsible for shaping the content for The Atlantic’s live events journalism, which comes to life across more than 100 annual events on stages around the world. . . .”
- Reporters Without Borders noted Wednesday “that the information provided to the police about last week’s murder of a young journalist in Vehari District, in eastern Pakistan’s Punjab province, clearly indicates that he was killed in connection with his reporting. Abid Hussain, who was badly beaten on 22 August and died of his injuries the next day in a hospital in the neighbouring district of Multan, had written many articles about drug trafficking in Punjab. . . .”
- Reporters Without Borders called on Japanese authorities Tuesday “to shed light on the suspicious fall of a journalist, who is known for his investigation in the supposed links between the prime minister and the mafia, that caused him to be hospitalized. Shunsuke Yamaoka, 59, founder of the Japanese-language investigation website Access Journal, was left unconscious on August 7th after a 20-step fall that gave him a fractured shoulder and 20 stitches in the forehead in the stairs of Tokyo’s Shinjuku subway station. . . . “
- “The two young men of African descent who were accused of murdering journalist Ángel Gahona on April 21 were found guilty by a Nicaraguan judge on the night of Aug. 27, Confidencial reported,” Silvia Higuera wrote Tuesday for the Knight Center for Journalism in the Americas. The Committee to Protect Journalists added, “In a telephone interview from Miami, Florida, where she is now living, Migueliut Sandoval, Gahona’s widow, claimed that the two men were scapegoats. She pointed out that the trial was held in Managua, the stronghold of the Ortega government, rather than in Bluefields,” where the crime took place, “and that relatives, independent media and human rights organizations were barred from the courtroom, according to Confidencial . . .”
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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)