On assignment
Deborah Ramirez Was Classmate at Yale
Trump’s Demagoguery Makes ‘Objectivity’ Obsolete
Namesake of Miss. J-School Wants Name Removed
Deborah Ramirez Was Classmate at Yale
The New Yorker magazine reported Sunday night that a second woman has accused Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh of sexual misconduct, this incident dating to the 1983-84 academic year when both were freshmen at Yale University.
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“The New Yorker said 53-year-old Deborah Ramirez described the incident in an interview after being contacted by the magazine,” Lisa Mascaro and Mary Clare Jalonick reported for the Associated Press. “Ramirez recalled that Kavanaugh exposed himself at a drunken dormitory party, thrust his penis in her face, and caused her to touch it without her consent as she pushed him away, the magazine reported. . . .”
Leigh Ann Caldwell, Carol E. Lee and Heidi Przybyla of NBC News added, “Ramirez, who is now married and lives in Boulder, Colorado, is a volunteer and board member at a nonprofit group that helps victims of domestic violence, Safehouse Progressive Alliance for Nonviolence,” which offers bilingual services.
“Ramirez referred NBC on Saturday to her lawyer, Stanley Garnett, who did not respond to requests for comment through the weekend. . . . ” Garnett was district attorney for Boulder County, Colo., for nearly 10 years.
“The Associated Press tried reaching Ramirez at her home in Boulder. She posted a sign saying she has no comment on her front door,” Lisa Mascaro reported Sunday for the Daily Camera in Boulder. Mascaro also wrote, “While Garnett has provided legal counsel for Ramirez, he is transitioning the case to John Clune, a Boulder attorney known nationally for his work on Title IX litigation. . . .”
In their 3,890-word piece, Ronan Farrow and Jane Mayer reported for the New Yorker that Ramirez studied sociology and psychology at Yale.
Farrow won a Pulitzer Prize for public service in April for his reporting for the New Yorker on the sexual assault allegations brought against Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein. Mayer is co-author with Jill Abramson of 1994’s “Strange Justice: The Selling of Clarence Thomas,” about the sexual harassment charges made by Anita Hill against Thomas at his successful Supreme Court confirmation hearings in 1991. Mayer joined the New Yorker in 1995.
“The New Yorker contacted Ramirez after learning of her possible involvement in an incident involving Kavanaugh,” Farrow and Mayer wrote. “The allegation was conveyed to Democratic senators by a civil-rights lawyer.
“For Ramirez, the sudden attention has been unwelcome, and prompted difficult choices. She was at first hesitant to speak publicly, partly because her memories contained gaps because she had been drinking at the time of the alleged incident. In her initial conversations with The New Yorker, she was reluctant to characterize Kavanaugh’s role in the alleged incident with certainty.
“After six days of carefully assessing her memories and consulting with her attorney, Ramirez said that she felt confident enough of her recollections to say that she remembers Kavanaugh had exposed himself at a drunken dormitory party, thrust his penis in her face, and caused her to touch it without her consent as she pushed him away. Ramirez is now calling for the F.B.I. to investigate Kavanaugh’s role in the incident.
“ ‘I would think an F.B.I. investigation would be warranted,’ she said.
“In a statement, Kavanaugh wrote, ‘This alleged event from 35 years ago did not happen. The people who knew me then know that this did not happen, and have said so. This is a smear, plain and simple. I look forward to testifying on Thursday about the truth, and defending my good name — and the reputation for character and integrity I have spent a lifetime building — against these last-minute allegations.’
“The White House spokesperson Kerri Kupec said the Administration stood by Kavanaugh. . . . ”
Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, called late Sunday for a delay in further consideration of the Kavanaugh nomination, Karoun Demirjian, Amy Gardner and Seung Min Kim reported for the Washington Post.
“I am writing to request an immediate postponement of any further proceedings related to the nomination of Brett Kavanaugh,” Feinstein wrote in a letter to Sen. Charles E. Grassley, the committee’s GOP chairman.
- Greg Jaffe, Washington Post: In the ’80s, boys’ prep schools like Kavanaugh’s could be bastions of misogyny
- Seung Min Kim and Josh Dawsey, Washington Post: ‘Incredibly frustrated’: Inside the GOP effort to save Kavanaugh amid assault allegation
- Clarence Page, Chicago Tribune: Have we learned anything since Anita Hill and Clarence Thomas?
Trump’s Demagoguery Makes ‘Objectivity’ Obsolete
Veteran journalist Marvin Kalb, a onetime host of NBC’s “Meet the Press,” said on that program Sunday that parallels between President Trump and Sen. Joseph McCarthy’s demagogic red-baiting actions in the 1950s should make journalists re-evaluate their notions of objectivity.
Helene Cooper, Pentagon correspondent for the New York Times, agreed that journalists should report with “a point of view.”
Host Chuck Todd read an excerpt from Kalb’s “Enemy of the People: Trump’s War on the Press, the New McCarthyism and the Threat to American Democracy.”
” ‘How stunningly similar,’ you write. ‘Spineless Republicans cowering before McCarthy in the early ’50s and today’s senior Republican leadership turning a blind eye and a deaf ear to Donald Trump’s unsubstantiated accusations. The parallels are powerful and disturbing.’ And we saw the fight of the Justice Department versus the president rile up again this week,” Kalb wrote.
“Yes,” Kalb, 88, replied. “And I think at the heart of it was the role of the press and the role, centrally, of Edward R. Murrow at CBS. Because Murrow was the leader of the pack. He was the best, most well-known journalist of his time.
“And he was afraid that what McCarthy was doing was undermining our democracy. And he decided that he would take on this man. And he was unafraid in the way he did it. Because there was a lot of pressure on him: corporate pressure, different kinds of pressure. But Murrow decided, based on his experience in Germany in the ’30s, that a democracy can be undone. Democracy is a fragile thing. It’s based on ideas. It’s based on people. And if people lose faith in the ideas, the democratic structure itself can be undercut. And Murrow was concerned that McCarthy was doing just that.
“And my gut feeling, at this time, is that President Trump is, essentially, doing the same thing. . . .
“It’s only up to a certain point that the press helps, where it helped McCarthy and is now helping Trump. There is a point at which the heart and soul of the press, in a free society, comes into play. And I think that there are many illustrations right now of the press taking a role and fighting back.
“For 60 years as a reporter, I was quite happy to cover the news and go home and not intrude my opinion into it at all. But I’ve changed my mind now. And I think that, because Trump is essentially taking steps that undermine our democracy, in my view, when he demeans the press and cuts into the press and humiliates the press, he is doing that to the essence of our democracy. And it has to be changed.”
Cooper said during the discussion, “I remember, when I first got a job, I’m not going to say how long ago, with the Wall Street Journal.
“And we were told, at the time, that as a reporter, when you’re presenting your stories, you should have a point of view. You should not have bias. But your stories should actually say something. You’ve reported it out. And now, it’s your turn to speak to the reader and lay out the facts the way you do.
“And I think that that is probably the best way to define what we should be doing right now. I think you can go too far to, on the one hand, this, on the other hand, that. But I think, today, journalists should still have a point of view.”
Namesake of Miss. J-School Wants Name Removed
“Ed Meek has asked University of Mississippi officials to remove his name from the journalism school there after significant backlash to a controversial Facebook post many deemed to be racist that he made earlier in the week,” Bracey Harris reported Saturday for the Clarion Ledger in Jackson, Miss.
“Meek’s decision came the same day that Meek School of Journalism and New Media faculty members asked him to make such a request. . . .”
Ko Bragg quoted from Meek’s Facebook posting Friday in the Jackson Free Press, ” ‘I hesitated until now to publish these pictures but I think it important that our community see what the camera is seeing at 2 a.m. after a ball game,’ he wrote, adding that he saw no police presence despite hearing about fights. ‘Enough, Oxford and Ole Miss leaders, get on top of this before it is too late. A 3 percent decline in enrollment is nothing compared to what we will see if this continues…and real estate values will plummet as will tax revenue. We all share in the responsibility to protect the values we hold dear that have made Oxford and Ole Miss known nationally.’
“Following thousands of comments and public outcry, Meek issued a quasi-apology via Facebook. ‘I apologize to those offended by my post,’ he wrote. ‘My intent was to point out we have a problem in The Grove and on the Oxford Square.’
Bragg added, “Meek is a former assistant vice chancellor for public relations and marketing at the university and the CEO of Oxford Publishing, a national publishing and trade show group, who has recently received the Mississippi Governor’s Distinguished Citizen Award. He is the founder of HottyToddy.com, which stills lists him as the publisher and currently indicates an all-white staff on its website. However, The Clarion-Ledger reported this week that Meek is no longer publisher and that the University of Mississippi just acquired the site within the last week or so.”
In 2009, Meek and his wife donated $5.3 million to the journalism school, and the department became his namesake.
- Sarah Fowler, Clarion Ledger: Ed Meek was ‘big man on campus’ in college for taking ‘revealing,’ ‘racy’ photos of women
- Mahoghany Jordan, Daily Mississippian: Mahoghany Jordan responds to Ed Meek
- Daily Mississippian: A look at how the Ed Meek controversy developed
A Golf Magazine Helped Set an Inmate Free
Sept. 22, 2018
Lawyer: ‘It’s Embarrassing for the Legal System’
Columnist Takes Buyout in Austin Amid Changes
Anita Hill Says the Senate Has Learned Little
Viewers Back TV Reporter Criticized for Natural Hair
Trump Tells Rally That the Media Are at His Mercy
Alice Dunnigan Sculpture Unveiled at Newseum
Boston Globe Urges Vote on Puerto Rican Statehood
Media Outlets Sign Up for Obama Voting Drive
When Did Tribalism Become a Dirty Word?
Half of Women in Media Have Faced Harassment
Jose Vargas, New Author, Doesn’t Have Own Place
Support Journal-ismsLawyer: ‘It’s Embarrassing for the Legal System’
A golf magazine is taking credit for an innocent inmate becoming a free man.
“After 27 years in prison, a man who loves golf walked free today,” Max Adler reported Wednesday for Golf Digest.
“Not only that, he was given back his innocence. Of course, the state can regift innocence about as capably as it can 27 years.
“Nevertheless, the Erie County District Court in Buffalo, N.Y., has vacated the murder conviction of Valentino Dixon, 48, who was serving a 39-years-to-life sentence — the bulk of it in the infamous Attica Correctional Facility — for the 1991 killing of Torriano Jackson. On that hot August night long ago, both were at a loud street party with underage drinking when a fistfight over a girl turned to gunfire.
“But before we dive into what really happened, a quick refresher on why golfers might care extra about Valentino Dixon. Six years ago, Golf Digest profiled this inmate who grinds colored pencils to their nubs drawing meticulously detailed golf-scapes. Although Dixon has never hit a ball or even stepped foot on a course, the game hooked him when a golfing warden brought in a photograph of Augusta National’s 12th hole for the inmate to render as a favor. In the din and darkness of his stone cell, the placid composition of grass, sky, water and trees spoke to Dixon. And the endless permutations of bunkers and contours gave him a subject he could play with.
” ‘The guys can’t understand,’ Dixon has said. ‘They always say I don’t need to be drawing this golf stuff. I know it makes no sense, but for some reason my spirit is attuned to this game.’
“It took about a hundred drawings before Golf Digest noticed, but when we did, we also noticed his conviction seemed flimsy. So we investigated the case and raised the question of his innocence. . . .”
The same day’s edition of the Buffalo News, however, did not credit Golf Digest for the reversal of fortune.
Its story by Aaron Besecker and Phil Fairbanks credited investigators and “Students from the Georgetown University Prisons and Justice Initiative” who “investigated Dixon’s case and made a documentary that many believe helped in getting Dixon freed.”
The Golf Digest story continued, “The case is complicated, but on the surface it involves shoddy police work, zero physical evidence linking Dixon, conflicting testimony of unreliable witnesses, the videotaped confession to the crime by another man, a public defender who didn’t call a witness at trial, and perjury charges against those who said Dixon didn’t do it. All together, a fairly clear instance of local officials hastily railroading a young black man with a prior criminal record into jail. Dixon’s past wasn’t spotless, he had sold some cocaine, but that didn’t make him a murderer.
“Golf Digest’s 2012 article led to further national spotlights on the case by NBC/Golf Channel, CRTV.com, Fox Sports, the Georgetown University Prison Reform Project and others. Alongside this, Dixon’s daughter, Valentina, led a grassroots campaign to raise money for her father’s legal fees by selling his artwork online. Still, the gears of the legal system refused to turn.
“As of Christmas 2017, appeals exhausted, Dixon’s petitions for pardon or clemency drew no response from New York governor Andrew Cuomo’s office.
“But now suddenly, a vacated conviction — which means innocence — a far more lofty legal victory. Why now?
“It rises from a confluence of factors, according to Donald Thompson, who along with Alan Rosenthal, filed Dixon’s latest motion (which included the Golf Digest article) pro bono. ‘Once a case crosses a certain threshold of media attention, it matters, even though it shouldn’t,’ Thompson says. ‘It’s embarrassing for the legal system that for a long time the best presentation of the investigation was from a golf magazine.’
“Thompson says Golf Digest’s work eventually was eclipsed by the recent report filed by the Erie County district attorney’s wrongful convictions unit, which is a new type of department popping up in various districts these days. Their report was helped by the Georgetown University students, a group of undergraduates who have also created documentaries, websites and social-media campaigns around three other individuals thought to be wrongfully imprisoned, as part of a class. ‘They did a great job of speaking to witnesses who could still be located, as well as getting Chris Belling [who prosecuted Dixon] to say things at variance with positions he’s argued in the past.’ . . . ”
- Associated Press: New York man Valentino Dixon walks out of prison after 1991 murder conviction overturned thanks in part to golfing community
- Toni Fitzgerald, Forbes: How A Golf Digest Article Helped Free An Innocent Man From Prison
Columnist Takes Buyout in Austin Amid Changes
A change in ownership, buyout offers and the resignation of the editor and publisher have left the Austin American-Statesman with at least three fewer journalists of color, including longtime editorial writer and columnist Alberta Phillips.
Phillips, who was in her 32nd year at the Central Texas newspaper, left on Sept. 7. Also gone are Ralph Barerra, photographer and videographer, and tech writer Omar L. Gallaga, a “digital savant.”
Publisher Susie Biehle and Editor Debbie Hiott announced Aug. 27 that they were leaving. Biehle has been the newspaper’s publisher since November 2012, and Hiott has been editor since November 2011. The announcement of their departures came five months after GateHouse Media finalized its purchase of the Statesman from Cox Enterprises, which had owned the paper for 41 years.
Phillips was the paper’s most well-known black journalist. She told Journal-isms by telephone this week that her editorials helped establish life without parole in Texas as an alternative to the death penalty, which had been meted out to young people who committed crimes at 16 and 17. She was also the go-to person for community members and was the first black woman in the state capital press corps. Phillips was a reporter before joining the editorial board ion 2000.
“Very few journalists can write with the authority of an Alberta Phillips,” Editorial Page Editor Juan Castillo told Journal-isms by email. “She carefully and passionately honed her expertise over many years covering local and state news for the Statesman, skills she brought with her to the Opinion pages. She rightfully commanded respect for her ability to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable and powerful, if that was the right thing to do. Alberta often thought it was — she wasn’t one to pull punches. I know readers will miss her unmistakable voice.”
Phillips said she would be working on a book project on Austin’s relatively unknown segregated history. The city has a progressive reputation and is sometimes called the “un-Texas.”
Gallaga messaged, “I’m planning to do some freelance writing and Podcasting and occasional writing for the Statesman.”
Barerra had already established a freelance photography business, according to his LinkedIn profile. “I have a freelance business after hours and take work whenever time permits,” he wrote there. “My abilities are first rate photography on deadline from anywhere, but am also inclined to environmental work which requires more setup and planning. . . .”
Michael King wrote for the Austin Chronicle on Sept. 7, “Last week, editor Debbie Hiott (also accepting a buyout) informed her staff of some other editorial colleagues who will be leaving, most at the end of this week. Of the 13 names on the list, many will be long familiar to Statesman readers: editorial writer and board member Alberta Phillips, transportation reporter Ben Wear, PolitiFact honcho Gardner Selby, fitness writer Pamela LeBlanc, sportswriter Kevin Lyttle, photographer Ralph Barrera, tech guru Omar Gallaga. The editorial side list also includes: Ed Allen, Karen Hinojosa, Emily Quigley, Pancho Gomez, Michael Adams, and Jake Harris. . . .”
Phillips said she hoped the newspaper would hire more black journalists. While Andy Alford is a senior editor, there are no metro, features or business reporters who are African American, she said. In last year’s newsroom diversity survey, the paper reported to the American Society of News Editors that its staff was 67.6 percent white, 4.8 percent black, 23.8 percent Hispanic and 3.8 percent Asian.[PDF]
New publisher Patrick Dorsey, most recently publisher of GateHouse’s Sarasota, Fla., Herald-Tribune, was the first-ever winner of GateHouse’s Journalism Advocate of the Year award, which honors publishers who champion their newsrooms, Gary Dinges reported Sept. 4 for the Statesman.
Dinges quoted Dorsey, “ ‘There’s a ton of opportunity for the Statesman. We’re an integral part of this community, and it’s important that we make people realize that. The Statesman has a great reputation on the news side and, on the advertising side, is known for being very experimental.’
“Dorsey’s plans also include more community outreach, he said. . . .”
- Gary Dinges, Austin American-Statesman: Statesman to end Ahora Sí, offer voluntary severance to all employees (Aug. 9)
- Alberta Phillips, Austin American-Statesman: Why East Austin article inflamed, hurt Latinos and African Americans (July 5, 2017)
- Veronica Villafañe, Media Moves: Cox finalizes sale of Mundo Hispánico; René Alegría to lead publication
Anita Hill Says the Senate Has Learned Little
“There is no way to redo 1991, but there are ways to do better,” Anita Hill wrote Tuesday in the New York Times.
“The facts underlying Christine Blasey Ford’s claim of being sexually assaulted by a young Brett Kavanaugh will continue to be revealed as confirmation proceedings unfold. Yet it’s impossible to miss the parallels between the Kavanaugh confirmation hearing of 2018 and the 1991 confirmation hearing for Justice Clarence Thomas. In 1991, the Senate Judiciary Committee had an opportunity to demonstrate its appreciation for both the seriousness of sexual harassment claims and the need for public confidence in the character of a nominee to the Supreme Court. It failed on both counts.
“As that same committee, on which sit some of the same members as nearly three decades ago, now moves forward with the Kavanaugh confirmation proceedings, the integrity of the court, the country’s commitment to addressing sexual violence as a matter of public interest, and the lives of the two principal witnesses who will be testifying hang in the balance.
“Today, the public expects better from our government than we got in 1991, when our representatives performed in ways that gave employers permission to mishandle workplace harassment complaints throughout the following decades. That the Senate Judiciary Committee still lacks a protocol for vetting sexual harassment and assault claims that surface during a confirmation hearing suggests that the committee has learned little from the Thomas hearing, much less the more recent #MeToo movement. . . .”
- Charles M. Blow, New York Times: The Kavanaugh Charade
- Broadcasting & Cable: Demand Progress Pushes to Impeach Kavanaugh
- Mary C. Curtis, Roll Call: Brett Kavanaugh Isn’t Clarence Thomas, but It’s Still About Race
- Renée Graham, Boston Globe: In America, even victimhood is a privilege
- Ruben Navarrette Jr., Washington Post Writers Group: If you’re innocent, Judge Kavanaugh, it’s time for you to holler
- Tony Norman, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: Countdown to a judge’s Judgment Day
- Clarence Page, Chicago Tribune: The irony of Brett Kavanaugh’s predicament
- Richard (Chalyee Éesh) Peterson, indianz.com: Brett Kavanaugh threatens tribal sovereignty (Sept. 10)
- Timothy M. Phelps, Los Angeles Times: I broke the Anita Hill story. Here’s what we need to learn from her treatment
- Joseph A. Wulfsohn, Mediaite: Poll: Only 5% of Minnesota Democrats Say They Believe Keith Ellison’s Accuser
Viewers Back Reporter Criticized for Natural Hair
“Corallys Ortiz just wanted to give her hair a break,” Natasha S. Alford reported Wednesday for theGrio.com.
“Ortiz, a meteorologist and TV reporter at WBBJ 7 in Jackson, TN, decided that instead of her usual straight-haired look, she would wear her natural curls on TV.
“ ‘I’ve been giving my hair a bit of a break from this heat and humidity and not having to straighten it so often. This is only my second round wearing it the 10 months I’ve been in Tennessee,’ Ortiz wrote in a Facebook post.
“Ortiz, who is of Puerto Rican and Dominican descent, initially received a lot of positive feedback from viewers who appreciated her natural look.
“But Ortiz says on Sunday night, she received a voicemail at the station, which blasted her for simply being herself.
“A viewer who goes by Donna felt that my hair wasn’t up to ‘her standards.’ The following video just reflects back to everything I just said about criticism and dealing with what is considered ‘cultural or racial ignorance.’ Racism for short. It is very clear you can hear what she says and it’s something I don’t condone.’
“A creaky woman’s voice can be heard on tape saying,
“ ‘To the weather girl tonight, please don’t wear your hair like that anymore. It just doesn’t look good at all. Change it back to something more normal. Not something that’s all– n*ggery lookin’.’ . . . ”
Ortiz played the recording on her Facebook page and “has received a wide outpouring of support from her fans and viewers,” Alford wrote.
Trump Tells Rally That the Media Are at His Mercy
“President Trump spent most of his campaign-style rally in Las Vegas on Thursday night convincing supporters that everyone loves him — including his harshest critics in the media, who he says are sure to endorse him in 2020,” Allison Quinn wrote Friday for the Daily Beast.
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“Trump, who was in Nevada to stump for Republican Dean Heller ahead of a midterm challenge for his U.S. Senate seat, spent most of his speech praising himself for making America ‘respected again’ by creating economic growth. But he repeatedly interrupted his comments to mock the media.
“ ‘Do you remember the tears from the fake news media when it was obvious that we were going to win [in 2016]? And you know what? They’re still crying,’ he said. ‘They don’t know what the hell happened, but it happened, and that’s why we’re setting all-time records, that’s why we’re doing so well.’
“Describing the media as the ‘great ally’ of the Democratic resistance — which he said consists of ‘left-wing haters, angry mobs, and socialist fanatics’ — the president expressed particular scorn for The New York Times.
“ ‘People don’t read The New York Times because it’s a dishonest newspaper, it’s terrible,’ he said, claiming the paper had been forced to issue an apology for covering the 2016 election ‘so badly.’
“He went on to complain that the media’s overall coverage of his accomplishments has been ‘so unfair’ for failing to cover positive developments.
“Yet it is the media that is at his mercy, and not the other way around, he suggested. . . .”
- Bill Maxwell, Tampa Bay Times: How Trump supporters made me feel like a stranger in Florida (Aug. 31, updated Sept. 3)
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— rolandsmartin (@rolandsmartin) September 21, 2018
Alice Dunnigan Sculpture Unveiled at Newseum
A sculpture of Alice Allison Dunnigan, the first African American woman to receive press credentials to cover the White House and Congress, went on display Friday at the Newseum in Washington as about 200 people celebrated the pioneering journalist who rose to the top of her profession despite racist policies that segregated black journalists and sexist attitudes.
Dunnigan traveled with President Harry S. Truman on his coast-to-coast whistle-stop tour; was the first reporter to question President Dwight D. Eisenhower about civil rights and provided front-page coverage for more than 100 black newspapers of racial issues before federal Washington.
Family members, residents of her rural Russellville, Ky., hometown, journalists and far-flung members of her sorority, Sigma Gamma Rho, gathered in knots around the statue, then reassembled for a panel discussion moderated by Sonya Ross of the Associated Press. Panelists were Carol McCabe Booker, who in 2015 edited Dunnigan’s autobiography, “Alone Atop the Hill,” artist Amanda Matthews, who created the statue, and Dunnigan’s granddaughter Soraya Dunnigan Brandon.
They rebuked anti-press rhetoric and lauded the value of perseverance in those days before the high point of the civil rights movement in the 1960s. Booker noted that the statue depicts Dunnigan holding a copy of the Washington Post at a time before the Post hired black reporters. “I was seeing ‘maybe one day,’ ” Booker said. Her husband, Simeon Booker, became the Post’s first African American reporter in 1952.
Roland Martin, now hosting a digital news show, streamed the ceremony and the panel discussion.
The sculpture is to be on display at the Newseum through Dec. 16. It will then be taken to Dunnigan’s hometown of Russellville and installed on the grounds of the West Kentucky African American Heritage Center as part of a park dedicated to the civil rights movement, the Newseum said.
Boston Globe Urges Vote on Puerto Rican Statehood
“The aftermath of Hurricane Maria, which hit Puerto Rico with devastating force a year ago Thursday, has exposed the cracks and contradictions in the island’s untenable political status,” the Boston Globe editorialized on Tuesday.
“Over the last 364 days, it’s become clearer than ever that the Caribbean US territory of 3.3 million residents lacks the free hand that an independent country would have to rebuild itself — but also the clout in Washington that would come with full statehood. The tragic result: a slow recovery, with only grudging help from the Trump administration, and an unsettled future.
“On the anniversary, it’s right to remember the nearly 3,000 fatalities, renew the commitment to Puerto Rico’s recovery, and continue to aid the many refugee families still struggling on the mainland. (Massachusetts has the second largest number of displaced families, after Florida.) With that pledge, though, should also come a fresh push — in Washington, and in Puerto Rico — to resolve the island’s political identity. The United States acquired Puerto Rico as war booty from Spain more than a century ago, and the island and the mainland have debated what to do ever since. It’s time for Puerto Rico to have the final say on its permanent status.
“ ‘There is an obvious colonial, and hence unacceptable, relationship between Puerto Rico and the United States,’ said Rafael Cox Alomar, a professor of law at the David A. Clarke School of Law in Washington, D.C. ‘The current arrangement is unacceptable.’
“In simple terms, Congress ought to authorize a binding referendum: Should the island become the 51st state, or an independent country? . . .”
- Nicole Acevedo, NBC News: On anniversary of Hurricane Maria, Puerto Ricans mourn, look back
- David Begnaud, CBS News: Puerto Rico: The exodus after Hurricane Maria
- Jarvis DeBerry, NOLA.com | Times-Picayune: The dead tell a more accurate Hurricane Maria story than Donald Trump does
- Gabe Gutierrez, NBC News: Powerless: Puerto Rico’s struggle after Hurricane Maria
- Latino Rebels: Over 130 Lawmakers Condemn Trump Remarks on Hurricane Death Toll in Puerto Rico
- Vann Newkirk II, the Atlantic: The Situation in Puerto Rico Is Untenable
- Nydia Velazquez and Melissa Mark-Viverito, Daily News, New York: One year later, an open wound: How the federal government failed Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria
Media Outlets Sign Up for Obama Voting Drive
“The day before When We All Vote kicks off its National Week of Action the campaign announced new partnerships with major media outlets to help register voters and raise awareness around the importance of voting,” the campaign announced on Friday.
“ELLE, ESSENCE, The Root, Oath along with popular digital sites Hollywoodlife and Baller Alert, have joined When We All Vote’s efforts to create a dialog with Americans to get folks registered, fired up, and ready to vote in the midterm elections and beyond. Our partnership with BET Networks was announced after Co-Chair Michelle Obama appeared in a PSA encouraging women of color to vote during Black Girls Rock!. . . .”
Meanwhile, “A study of Florida’s past two presidential elections finds that mail ballots were 10 times more likely to be rejected than votes cast at early voting sites or on election day,” Steve Bousquet wrote Wednesday for the Miami Herald.
“The study also found that mail ballots cast by youngest voters, blacks and Hispanics were much more likely to be rejected than mail ballots cast by white voters, and that those voters are less likely to cure problems with their ballots when notified by election supervisors than other voters. . . .”
- Editorial, News & Record, Greensboro, N.C.: ICE’s request for voting data isn’t cool
- Carl P. Leubsdorf, Dallas Morning News: Trump is failing to pursue actual voter rights violations
- Rafael Medina, Latino Rebels: This Hispanic Heritage Month, Let’s Leverage Our Huge Potential and Register to Vote
When Did Tribalism Become a Dirty Word?
“Maybe the business about how to use language is just a pet peeve?” Elizabeth Cook-Lynn wrote Thursday for indianz.com.
“Yes, admittedly, but….while we are on the subject, take this as an example of how to use language without knowing what it means or what it is supposed to mean. At lunch the other day, a friend referred to the street calamities in Charlottesville as an example of ‘tribalism.’ All those people behaving badly were just a symptom of tribalism, he said. I was annoyed. What does he think ‘tribalism’ is?
“It goes without saying that when Europeans came to this country, they called the indigenous people they met by various descriptions (you know, good Indians, bad Indians) but everyone described the natives of this continent as ‘tribal people’ and ‘tribal’ individuals and communities. Never Nations. Never nation states.
“The indigenes were called ‘tribes’ and were said to be living out there in the ‘wilderness.’ They weren’t nations or nation states, nor were they organized . . . civilizations. They were Tribes, seemingly wandering, homeless. That term was even used in Treaty Language even though indigenous nations signed many treaties with the invaders, and we all know that Treaties are signed between NATIONS. Not wanderers. Does anyone get Irony any more….or did they ever? . . .”
Half of Women in Media Have Faced Harassment
“More than half of women in media have suffered work-related abuse, threats or physical attacks in the past year,” Sonia Elks wrote Sept. 13 for the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
“Female journalists are facing a ‘relentless’ barrage of attacks and harassment, with nearly a third considering leaving the profession as a result, media support organisations have warned.
“More than half of women in media have suffered work-related abuse, threats or physical attacks in the past year, found a survey by the International Women’s Media Foundation (IWMF) and TrollBusters, which supports reporters being harassed. . . .”
Jose Vargas, New Author, Doesn’t Have Own Place
“This is all my stuff,” (Facebook membership required) Jose Antonio Vargas, who has been called the most famous undocumented immigrant in America, wrote on Facebook. “At least, all the stuff that matters in my life: mementos, papers, clothing, collectible books, cherished photos, etc. They’re all in my grandma’s garage. For the first time since I graduated high school in 2000, I don’t have my own place.
“After Trump’s election, the building manager of the apartment I was living in in downtown Los Angeles told me that it may be best, for him and for me, if I moved out. He wasn’t sure if the building could hide me if ICE showed up. That’s when I started thinking about facing this book, which meant facing myself. . . .
“I had to face what years of lying, passing, and hiding had done to me. The emotional toll. The psychological cost. The trauma. I had to look at myself to make sense of myself, to put myself back together. And that’s what this book is about: my own liberation.”
“Not the part of me that activists complain is not ‘radical enough.’
“Not the projections or expectations or demands that people have of me. . . .”
Vargas, part of the Washington Post team that won a Pulitzer Prize in 2008 for coverage of a massacre at Virginia Tech, was referring to his “Dear America: Notes of an Undocumented Citizen,” which went on sale Tuesday. In a bookstore appearance in Washington Friday, Vargas said he wrote the book on planes and in hotels. He has founded the nonprofit group Define American.
Short Takes
- “During the 151st Opening Convocation, NBC anchor Lester Holt encouraged students at Howard University to engage critical thinking skills, step outside of ideological comfort zones, and tap the brakes on stories too good to be true,” Howard University reported on Friday. ” ‘There are always going to be things that divide us,’ Holt said. ‘Don’t be afraid of a healthy debate. Be smart. Don’t shoot from the hip. Shoot from the brain armed with facts and knowledge.’ . . . ”
- “Facebook told Motherboard it’s currently reviewing its policies on white supremacy, white nationalism, and white separatism after a series of meetings with civil rights leaders, reporting by Motherboard on these policies, and a forceful letter from a civil rights group formed under the direction of President John F. Kennedy,” Joseph Cox and Jason Koebler reported Thursday for Motherboard. “Leaked internal documents show that Facebook’s content moderators are explicitly instructed to allow ‘white separatism’ and ‘white nationalism’ on the platform, but note that ‘white supremacy’ is banned. Facebook makes this distinction because it argues in those documents that white nationalism ‘doesn’t seem to be always associated with racism (at least not explicitly.)’ . . . ”
- Serafin “Fin” Gomez “is joining CBS News as a producer in the White House unit after a 13-year stint at Fox News Channel,” A.J. Katz reported Thursday for TVNewser.
- “[We] were concerned to learn last week that our grantee the American Society of News Editors had to extend the deadline for its 2018 Newsroom Employment Diversity Survey because only 234 out of nearly 1,700 newspapers and digital media outlets have submitted data to this year’s survey,” Tom Glaisyer of the Democracy Fund wrote Thursday. “Together with our colleagues at a wide range of foundations who fund journalism in America we released this statement which has been signed by Farai Chideya, Program Officer, Creativity and Free Expression, Ford Foundation; Molly De Aguiar, Managing Director, News Integrity Initiative; Jim Friedlich, Executive Director & CEO of the Lenfest Institute for Journalism; Tom Glaisyer, Managing Director of the Public Square Program at Democracy Fund; Jonathan Logan, President & CEO Jonathan Logan Family Foundation; Jennifer Preston, Vice President of Journalism at the John S and James L Knight Foundation; and Andres Torres, Program Officer at the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. . . .”
- “As part of its expansion plans into English-language content, Univision’s news division has launched ‘UNews,’ ” Veronica Villafañe reported Thursday for her Media Moves site.
- In New Jersey, “Bergen County Sheriff Michael Saudino resigned on Friday, his 46-year career in law enforcement swept away in a whirlwind of public outrage a day after secretly-recorded racist and homophobic comments that he made following Gov. Phil Murphy’s inauguration in January were made public,” Richard Cowen reported Friday for the North Jersey Record. Cowen also wrote, “Saudino’s sudden crash and burn came a day after a New York radio station, WNYC, published a tape secretly recorded in January in which Saudino is heard chatting with members of his staff hours after Murphy’s inaugural address. On the tape, Saudino references Murphy’s proposal to legalize marijuana, and says that pot legalization would ‘let the blacks come in, do whatever the [expletive] they want, do this do that, don’t worry about it. You know, we’ll tie the hands of cops.’ . . .” The sheriff also insulted his attorney general, Gurbir Grewal, and his lieutenant governor, Sheila Oliver.
- “KORE is back,” Phil Yu reported Monday on his Angry Asian Man site. “The magazine formerly known as KoreAm Journal, recently rebranded as KORE Asian Media, has been rebooted as a full-fledged print magazine. They’ll be publishing ten times a year as the only print publication covering Asian Americans in entertainment and culture. . . . “
- “After UC Berkeley Chancellor Carol Christ announced ambitious plans to increase the school’s Hispanic student population, the Asian American Coalition for Education, or AACE, sent a letter to Christ denouncing this plan Aug. 30,” Mani Sandhu and Julie Madsen wrote Tuesday for the campus’ Daily Californian. They also wrote, “AACE, a national Asian American advocacy group, believes Christ’s plan to be a ‘shameless proclamation of a Hispanic quota,’ according to a press release issued Sept. 5. . . .”
- “The New York Times Co. is suing the Federal Communications Commission for records the newspaper alleges may reveal possible Russian government interference in a public comment period before the commission rolled back Obama-era net neutrality rules,” Jon Reid reported Thursday for Bloomberg Law.
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Adrian C. Louis died Sept. 9, according to the Hamilton Funeral Home in Marshall, Minn. Tim Giago reported Monday for indianz.com, “He was from the Sparks Colony near Reno, Nevada. He was the editor of an urban newspaper based in Los Angeles called the Talking Leaf.” Giago also wrote, “He had worked as a journalist and an editor [of] the Lakota Times on the Pine Ridge Reservation and assisted me in founding the Native American Journalists Association. His novel Skins (1995) was made into a movie of the same title in 2002, directed by Chris Eyre. Louis has also published a collection of short stories. . . . ” Louis was 72.
- On July 12, 1917, a deputized mob of townspeople in Bisbee, Ariz., rousted 1,200 miners from their homes at gunpoint,” Hana DeMent reported Monday for Cronkite News, produced by the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University. “The mob marched the miners — mostly immigrants from Mexico and Eastern Europe who had struck Phelps Douglas seeking safer conditions — to the town’s baseball field before forcing the men into filthy cattle cars and shipping them 200 miles to Tres Hermanas, New Mexico, with little food or water. There, they were taken off the train and told to never return to Bisbee. The documentary ‘Bisbee ’17’ tells the story of Bisbee residents who last year re-enacted the July 12, 1917, deportation. . . . “
- “Native women are 10 times more likely to be murdered than any other ethnicity, and Native women face domestic and sexual violence at disproportionately high levels, while the Department of Justice reports that more than 60 percent of Native victims describe their attackers as white. Yet our safety, justice and healing are not prioritized at the national level,” Deleana OtherBull wrote Tuesday for High Country News. She urged Congress to reauthorize the Violence Against Women Act with new provisions.
- “Monica Rhor has left the Houston Chronicle to join USA Today as a national writer,” Veronica Villafañe reported Monday for her Media Moves site. “She’ll continue to be based in Houston, where she has lived for the past 12 years. . . .” Rhor starts the new job on Tuesday.
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While reporting in 2013 for KNTV-TV, known as NBC Bay Area, Stephanie Chuang shared the story of a social media campaign to help a young woman with cancer. It was the kind of story she loved to tell, Garvin Thomas reported for the station on Tuesday. He continued, “reporting that story in no way prepared Chuang to live it. Which is exactly what she had to do three years later when she was diagnosed with the exact same cancer as the woman in her story. During her chemotherapy treatment, on the rare days she felt well enough to work, Chuang started mapping out, with Post-It notes on the wall, what would turn into OneDavid. OneDavid is a website that, through actual cancer patient stories, gives the newly-diagnosed practical information about they can expect on their cancer journey: the treatments, the drugs, the wigs, and the waiting … all the waiting. . . .”
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“Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick, a Bucks County [Pa.] Republican running in a hotly contested House race, has come out with a misleading TV ad tying his Democratic opponent to a notorious Philadelphia cop killer,” Andrew Seidman reported Wednesday for the Philadelphia Inquirer. Seidman also wrote, “It’s true that [Scott] Wallace’s family foundation has contributed to Democracy Now!, a nonprofit news organization that has given favorable coverage to [Mumia] Abu-Jamal, who has argued that racism led to his conviction. . . .”
- Sahil Chinoy, who started as an intern on the New York Times newsroom graphics team and joined the Opinion section several months later on a short-term basis, has been hired as a graphics editor, the Times announced Wednesday.
- “Lynn Redden, superintendent of the Onalaska Independent School District, was frustrated by the ending of the Houston Texans’ 20-17 loss Sunday to the Tennessee Titans,” the News and Observer in Raleigh, N.C., editorialized on Wednesday. “The Texans’ quarterback, Deshaun Watson, mismanaged the final play. ‘That may have been the most inept quarterback decision I’ve seen in the NFL,’ Redden, who is white, wrote on a Houston Chronicle Facebook page. ‘When you need precision decision making you can’t count on a black quarterback.’ Mr. Redden, we’d like to tell you about two African-American NFL quarterbacks we claim as honorary North Carolinians. They’ve done quite well in the NFL (as have other African-American quarterbacks). . . .”
- New York magazine is launching Intelligencer, “an expanded version of its current Daily Intelligencer section that mainly covers politics and business news and sends a related daily newsletter,” Kali Hays reported Tuesday for wwd.com. Among other hires, Zak Cheney-Rice is joining from Mic as a reporter covering race and identity.
- Greg Moore, “former Denver Post editor of nearly 14 years whose tenure saw the newspaper win four consecutive Pulitzer Prizes from 2010-2013 and achieve finalist status five other times since 2004,” and “Anne Trujillo, Denver7 anchor and Colorado native who, in 34 years at KMGH Denver7, has covered stories from the Columbine and Aurora theater shootings to the 2008 Democratic National Convention,” are among six journalists to be inducted Oct. 12 into the Denver Press Club Hall of Fame.
- A new podcast by The Conversation US called “Heat and Light,” an in-depth look into the more under-reported stories of 1968, hosted by Phillip Martin, senior reporter at WGBH-FM in Boston, debuted this week. It “features initially six (soon to be seven) episodes about one of the most pivotal years of the last century, including a kiss on TV that shocked a country barely coming to terms with interracial relationships, less known details about the uprisings in the city of my birth, Detroit, and the factors that led to the rise of the American Christian Right,” Martin said by email. “We released a new episode last Monday. Here are the first three: Ep 1: http://ow.ly/Ko5230lPoc8 Ep 2: http://ow.ly/QLuu30lPod3 Ep 3: http://ow.ly/Izah30lPodK . . .”
- “The project ‘Soy Periodista, No Criminal’ (I’m a journalist, not a criminal) from Mexican organization CIC Propuesta Cívica, seeks to give visibility to criminalization and judicial harassment of journalists as a form of aggression against freedom of expression in the country,” Carolina de Assis reported Wednesday for the Knight Center for Journalism in the Americas. “The organization provides legal representation to threatened human rights defenders and journalists in Mexico. . . .”
- “Media rights groups are enraged after the jailing of a Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) newspaper editor who alleged a senior official in the sports ministry stole funds meant for the national football team,” Jean Kassongo of the Centre for African Journalists (CAJ) News Africa, “the continent’s premier newswire and press release,” reported on Monday. “Tharcisse Zongia, editor-in-chief of the satirical weekly Grognon, has been sentenced in absentia to one year in jail for defamation following his report [that] Barthelemy Okito, secretary general of the ministry, embezzled the funds.
- In Myanmar, “The anti-media atmosphere precipitated by [civilian leader Aung San] Suu Kyi and her colleagues has prompted local journalists to take extreme caution when reporting sensitive stories,” Jacob Goldberg reported Friday for Columbia Journalism Review. Goldberg also wrote, “Other journalists have decided [to] organize. After the June 2017 arrest of a newspaper editor who published a cartoon that mocked Myanmar’s military, dozens of journalists formed the Protection Committee for Myanmar Journalists. The committee has held a series of ‘black campaigns’ — protests where participants wear black to ‘signify the dark age of media freedom’ in Myanmar. Several of these protests have been direct responses to the arrest of Kyaw Soe Oo and Wa Lone,” two Reuters reporters who exposed a military massacre of 10 Rohingya civilians and on Sept. 3 were sentenced to seven years of hard labor under a law enacted to protect the British Empire from spies. . . .”
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- 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
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- Richard Prince with Charlayne Hunter-Gault,“PBS NewsHour,” “What stagnant diversity means for America’s newsrooms” (Dec. 15, 2015)
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- Book Notes: Books to Ring In the New Year
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- 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
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- ‘Journal-isms’ That Engage and Inform Diverse Audiences (Q&A with Mallary Jean Tenore, Poynter Institute, 2008)Sept. 3)