Time on Music Beat Led Writers to Abuse Charges
Writer Says Sports ‘Rioting’ Brings Races Together
Media Come Prepared for Black History Month
Don Carson Dies, Diversity Leader at U. of Arizona
Anticipation Builds for ‘Black Panther’ Movie
Actresses of Color Say Gatekeeper Preyed on Them
A ‘First’ Credits ‘Collective Brilliance and Generosity’
Support Journal-ismsTime on Music Beat Led Writers to Abuse Charges
The death last Thursday of Dennis Edwards, a lead singer of Motown’s classic singing group the Temptations, saddened many of his fans. But the news the following Tuesday was shocking, and one of the reporters who broke that story says, “It’s a matter of sources trusting you, and also — the documents.”
Erin Heffernan and Denise Hollinshed reported Tuesday in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, “Court documents filed by an adult protective services investigator allege that weeks before the singer’s death, Brenda Edwards abused her husband.
“An investigator with the Healthcare Consortium of Illinois filed the protection order request on behalf of Dennis Edwards Jan. 12 in Chicago, where the couple lived together before Edwards’ death” in a Chicago hospital.
“The documents allege that Brenda Edwards had attempted to suffocate the 74-year-old by holding his head facedown on a bed. The investigator also accused Brenda Edwards of taking her husband’s hearing aids from him, according to a petition for an order of protection. The documents say Edwards was ‘bed bound and immobile.’
“Dennis Edwards was removed from the home because of medical issues, according to the Jan. 12 document.
“An emergency protective order against Brenda Edwards was granted Jan. 18, barring her from contact with Dennis Edwards. A hearing that would have allowed Brenda Edwards to respond to the allegations was scheduled for Friday, but was canceled after her husband’s death the day before.
“The protective order was vacated on Friday, after Dennis Edwards’ death. . . .”
Though Edwards most recently lived in Chicago, he also had lived in St. Louis County, Mo. (video), and in Detroit, where Motown was based.
Kevin C. Johnson, the Post-Dispatch’s pop music critic, had a tagline on the story. He told Journal-isms by email on Thursday, “I believe my getting the information first had everything to do with my having covered Dennis Edwards for the past twenty years here in St. Louis where they lived for a long time, and getting to know him and his wife in doing so.
“The morning after I wrote the obituary, I got an email from his daughter, a family member I had never encountered, and she made me aware of her claims against Dennis’ wife. I also received a second email, from a person who looked to be legal representation, with the court paperwork attached. I forwarded all info to the news desk immediately, to a reporter more experienced in legal ins and outs, and it went on from there.”
Johnson said he has been a reporter for 30 years and pop music writer for 20, but felt that the news side would be best to handle the story. “I helped out where I could,” he said.
Longtime Motown writer Susan Whitall of the Detroit News was also on the story.
“My editor at the News had me do an obit on Dennis,” Whitall told Journal-isms by email. “I’d interviewed him several times over the years, and I’d written a lot about Norman Whitfield and the whole psychedelic soul era of the Tempts. I’d just done a long essay about ‘Papa was a Rollin’ Stone’ and the use of classical musicians at Motown for the Kresge Foundation last year.
“After the obit on Dennis ran, I started hearing from various sources about what might be going on. I reached out to some varied sources, they reached back to me. As usual one thing leads to another, and yeah — quite a lot had been going on.
“It’s a matter of sources trusting you, and also — the documents. So much is in there.”
Whitall wrote a more detailed story with staff writer Oralandar Brand-Williams. In addition to a denial of wrongdoing from Edwards’ wife, carried by both news outlets, Whitall quoted one of Edwards’ daughters, Issa Pointer-Stewart, who was appointed the singer’s power of attorney, saying she never heard his doctors say he had meningitis, the purported cause of death.
“We’d been working on it since Saturday when my colleague Motown beat writer Susan Whitall first had a conversation with an Edwards family member and was ready to go,” Brand-Williams messaged, referring to the story. “Always wanting our reporting to be solid, we just needed the cops statement and Brenda Edwards comments so we went up a few hours later than the STL Post Dispatch.”
Whitall elaborated, “I’ve always liked to put details in stories, where possible. It’s a human being, not just a name on a protection order. And for Detroiters, Motown stars are personal, in many cases they are also from our neighborhoods. I once asked Dennis the usual Detroit question — what were your cross streets? It was Chene and Gratiot, for him. Cass Tech. Eastern High. For years before Motown, he sang in a ‘bucket of blood’ club called Maul’s, on Joy Road. [Singer] Bettye LaVette and [arranger] Paul Riser used to see him there a lot, I believe he met Aretha at that time as well.”
- Kory Grow, Rolling Stone: Temptations Former Lead Singer Dennis Edwards Dead at 74
- Leonard Pitts Jr., Miami Herald: I wanted to be Dennis Edwards, the Temptations’ voice of ‘psychedelic soul’
- Brad Shoup, Billboard: A History of Dennis Edwards’ ‘Don’t Look Any Further’ Through the Countless Songs That Borrow From It
- Susan Whitall, Detroit News: Temptations’ Dennis Edwards had ‘star personality’
- Susan Whitall and Oralandar Brand-Williams, Detroit News: Funeral arrangements set for Motown star Dennis Edwards
Writer Says Sports ‘Rioting’ Brings Races Together
On “the night of the Eagles’ Super Bowl victory, revelers smashed store windows and looted a gas station,” Jonathan Zimmerman, who teaches education and history at the University of Pennsylvania and lives in Philadelphia, wrote Wednesday for the Daily News in New York. “They threw bottles, climbed poles, and brought down an awning at a hotel.
“But only four people have been arrested so far, which has created a new controversy in the blogosphere about America’s oldest dilemma: race. Whereas black people were roundly condemned for rioting after police shootings in Ferguson and Baltimore, critics said, white people rioting after a football victory in Philadelphia got a free pass.
” ‘You can riot if you’re white and your team wins, but if you’re black and being killed, you can’t speak out,’ declared Hawk Newsome, president of Black Lives Matter New York.
“He’s got a point. People here have been sharing video of the Philadelphia mayhem on social media, drawing likes and laughs. How many of these folks giggled when rioters set fires and turned over cars in Ferguson and Baltimore? That was serious, and — for white people — it was scary.
“But while whites certainly represented the majority of the revelers after Super Bowl, there were lots of black people out on the streets as well. And if you don’t think they engaged in the same ugly behaviors as everyone else, watch the videos yourself. You’ll see.
“And that’s what truly marks this moment as different from typical patterns of violence in cities like Philadelphia. Across our history, periodic outbreaks of hostility have pit the races against each other. But sports-related violence puts them on the same side. . . .”
- Jenice Armstrong, Philadelphia Daily News: Philly fans threw an Eagles-themed wedding on Super Bowl Sunday
- Editorial, Philadelphia Inquirer: Our advice to Eagles fans: ‘Act like you’ve been there before’
- Leonard Greene, Daily News, New York: Dodge’s Super Bowl ad distorts MLK’s message of service to sell trucks
- Tony Norman, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: Super Bowl LII — irrational exuberance and a Ram-tough travesty
- Ruben Rosario, Pioneer Press, St. Paul, Minn.: Thinking about bad-apple Philly fans, whether Brady is the best — and company is coming
- Jamil Smith, HuffPost: The Blackest Season In NFL History (Jan. 31)
- Helen Ubiñas, Philadelphia Daily News: Protest while black, get back. ‘Celebrate’ while white, well, all right
Media Come Prepared for Black History Month
Of all the media commemorations of African American history in February, USA Today’s Black History Month 2018 Special Edition is among the most ambitious.
At 120 pages of newsprint and selling for $4.95, its theme is “Martin Luther King Jr.: 50th Anniversary: 1929-1968: Commemorating His Dream.”
It features about 30 writers, according to issue editor Nichelle Smith. “All of the writers are so enthusiastic and passionate about it and it’s a pleasure to work with people who are so motivated to see good work done and who truly bring their A-game every time,” she said by email.
Smith also wrote, “There are about 6-8 of us who take time away from the regular jobs to put this together, production wise, and probably another dozen people in advertising, marketing, circulation and other departments who do their thing. It’s part of a larger group of special publications we do that include sports, travel, veterans and other special interest topics.
“This book is typically one of the largest at 120 pages, nearly half are ads. It’s also among USA TODAY’s top 10 in revenue generation. . . . Also, this year I had about 10 other editors pitch in from around the USA TODAY network to help by assigning some stories at their papers and doing first edits.”
As King personifies the issue’s theme, his role in the civil rights movement is emphasized to the diminution of other civil rights leaders, such as Whitney Young and Vernon Jordan of the National Urban League; James Farmer and Floyd McKissick of the Congress of Racial Equality; Roy Wilkins of the NAACP; Thurgood Marshall of the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund; Stokely Carmichael (later Kwame Ture) and James Forman of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee and Dorothy Height of the National Council of Negro Women, each specializing in different aspects of the movement.
PR Week says, “At the start of Black History Month, this special PRWeek video brings diversity conversations to the forefront. This is what it’s like to be black in PR.”
The Associated Press Race and Ethnicity Team, in coordination with the AP Sports desk, launched “Game Changers,” a project focused on black athlete activism.
“While the most current form of black athlete protest has come from the NFL players kneeling during the national anthem to draw attention to systemic racism, they are part of a long tradition of men and women who have used the platform of sports to contribute in the struggle for racial progress,” Errin Haines Whack, AP’s race and ethnicity writer, said by email on Friday.
“Game Changers launched Thursday with an exclusive survey of 56 of the 59 black players in last weekend’s Pro Bowl. All responded that they or someone they know has directly experienced racial profiling by police. The series has also highlighted the contrasting approaches of former 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick and Cavaliers player LeBron James, as well as an explanation of why black athletes have never simply ‘stuck to sports.’
“The series will continue through February and will look at a century of activism by black athletes.”
NBCBLK inaugurated a #BLKHistory theme with a special feature that included thoughts from some of NBC’s anchors, correspondents and contributors on what being African American means today, along with the importance of Black History Month. Some spoke about their African/Caribbean immigrant ties.
At the local level, “Weigel Broadcasting’s independent WCIU Chicago . . . and Chicago hip-hop artist Che ‘Rhymefest’ Smith are again collaborating for Black History Month with a special broadcast, Black History: The Movement,” Mark K. Miller reported Jan. 30 for TVNewsCheck.
The half-hour special was to premiere on Sunday, with WCIU’s weekday morning show, “The Jam,” airing portions of the special every Thursday in February.
“Included are a series of in-depth interviews between Che and leaders from Ghanaian, Mexican, Haitian and local black communities spotlighting the individual struggle for independence in their native lands, and its correlation to the continued fight for freedom as an American. . . .
“ ‘This project was community driven,’ said Che. ‘Whether it’s the Ghanaian community or the Haitian community who fought for their independence hundreds of years ago, if we broaden our definition of blackness, we can learn a lot from people who already won the struggles that we’re currently going through. It’s about opening up that conversation and adding to collective numbers here in America to build stronger communities.
“Steve Bailey, WCIU’s head of local programming and creative, said: ‘We’re taking a non-traditional approach to celebrating Black History Month this year, showcasing the different walks of life and perspectives of the community. Our goal is to create a forum where we can all learn, understand and move forward as one.’ ”
- Bounce TV: Bounce’s Black History Month Tribute in February Includes: Premiere of Star-Studded 2018 Bounce Trumpet Awards; Ed Gordon “Am I Black Enough?” Special; New Short-Form Series Your Story Matters Featuring Pam Grier, Lou Gossett, Jr., Others; Movies, Documentaries & More (Jan. 31)
- ESPN: The Undefeated Presents: Dear Black Athlete Special on February 11 (Jan. 31)
- Taryn Finley, HuffPost: This Black History Month, We Celebrate The Glory Within Us (Feb. 1)
- Lakshmi Gandhi, NBCBLK: Authors bring untold stories of Black America to the forefront
- Hannah Grabenstein, PBS NewsHour: Inside Mississippi’s notorious Parchman prison (Jan. 29)
- Renée Graham, Boston Globe: The danger of forgetting that the Civil War was caused by slavery
- Michael H. Hodges, Detroit News: Pioneering Detroit black-affairs TV show turns 50
- James Jeffrey, Al Jazeera: Black photographers and the civil rights struggle
- LeMoyne-Owen College: The home [of civil rights photographer] Ernest C. Withers will be dedicated as a historic site Feb. 10. [PDF]
- Mary Mitchell, Chicago Sun-Times: Black History Month time to reflect on the real meaning
- Jamie Ross, Daily Beast: DNA Tests on an Ancient Skeleton Reveal the First Briton Was Black, Not White
- TVOne: TV One Premieres Black History Month Campaign and Programming Slate to “Represent the Dream”
Don Carson Dies, Diversity Leader at U. of Arizona
“Donald W. Carson, a revered professor in the University of Arizona journalism program and one of the early leaders in helping diversify the nation’s newsrooms, died in Tucson on Feb. 1,” the university reported on Jan. 31. “He was 85.
“Carson, a 1954 UA journalism graduate, reported for the Arizona Daily Star and The Associated Press in Phoenix and Washington, D.C., before returning in 1966 to join the faculty. He was director of the school from 1978-1985 and retired in January 1997.
The university also wrote, “In 1980, Carson helped [launch] the Editing Program for Minority Journalists at UA with Frank Sotomayor, a 1966 graduate of the school. The summer program, sponsored by the Robert C. Maynard Institute for Journalism Education, trained hundreds of minority editors from across the country, using UA students as reporters.
“For nearly 20 years, Carson also drove UA minority journalism students to the California Chicano News Media Association’s annual job opportunities conference in Los Angeles. In 1995, he received a plaque from the association that read: ‘Professor Don Carson, University of Arizona. You have gone the extra mile for diversity. We need more people like you. Gracias.’ Many former students obtained their first summer jobs through the conference.
“Carson, a three-time Fulbright professor, was honored for his diversity efforts by the National Association of Hispanic Journalists, the National Conference of Editorial Writers and the Institute for Journalism Education. . . .”
Anticipation Builds for ‘Black Panther’ Movie
“Fatima Barrie has never watched a superhero movie and rarely goes to the cinema at all, but for ‘Black Panther,’ she bought a ticket a month in advance (paywall) ,” John Jurgensen and Ben Fritz wrote Tuesday for the Wall Street Journal.
“Her reasons boil down to this: ‘It was exciting to see all those black people,’ says the 25-year-old teacher and writer in South Brunswick, N.J. ‘People who look like me.’
“The Marvel film, opening next Friday, features one of the first black superheroes in comic books, and its resonance for African-American moviegoers is transforming a typical action-movie rollout into a full-blown cultural event. Disney, which owns Marvel, hopes to translate that into the first international blockbuster whose cast and crew are mostly black.
“Chadwick Boseman plays the title role in ‘Black Panther,’ an heir to the throne of the fictional African nation of Wakanda who possesses uncanny senses, strength and speed. With help from a female special-forces squadron, he protects his isolated, wealthy and technologically advanced kingdom from threats, including a villain played by Michael B. Jordan.
“Prerelease surveys indicate ‘Black Panther’ could open to $150 million or higher in the U.S. and Canada over the four-day Presidents Day weekend. In advance sales, ‘Black Panther’ is the top-selling superhero movie this far ahead of its release on the Fandango ticketing site. . . .”
Jesse J. Holland, Associated Press race relations reporter and comic book aficionado, published “Black Panther: Who Is The Black Panther?,” his first full-length adult novel, in November. He is scheduled to participate in at least one panel discussion on the movie.
- Anne Branigin, The Root: Journalists Offered Reward to Ask Trump About US-Wakanda Relations (Jan. 15)
- Todd Steven Burroughs, The Root: Marvel Made a Black Panther Movie Partly Because Reginald Hudlin Put the ‘Black’ in Panther (book excerpt)
- Karu F. Daniels, Daily News, New York: Black actresses make history as stars of sci-fi and beyond
- Renée Graham, Boston Globe: We’re allowed to enjoy a movie
- Leonard Greene, Daily News, New York: Funds raised for ‘Black Panther’ Harlem kids screening could serve a greater purpose (Jan. 10)
- Ricardo A. Hazell, Shadow League: Black Superheroes Are Second To None, But It Wasn’t Always That Way (Jan. 16)
- Clarkisha Kent, Huffington Post: ‘Black Panther’ Is Ready To Take Dark-Skinned Actresses (And Colorism) Seriously
- Ira Madison III, Daily Beast: Marvel’s ‘Black Panther’: A Dazzling, Superpowered Love Letter to Black People
- Frank Pallotta, CNNMoney: ‘Black Panther’ is outselling every previous superhero film in advance ticket sales
- Rochelle Riley, Detroit Free Press: Jemele Hill tweet will send 200 Detroit students to see ‘Black Panther’
- Jamil Smith, Time: The Revolutionary Power Of Black Panther
Actresses of Color Say Gatekeeper Preyed on Them
Journalists of color have been noticeably absent from the investigative reporting that is uncovering sexual misdeeds of high-profile men and jump started the #MeToo movement, but Tracy Jan of the Washington Post, who is Asian American, has broken through.
Jan reported Friday for the Post:
“Lamison said she had been introduced to Cirrincione the previous night by one of his clients at the Tony Awards dinner. Soon after her arrival at the hotel, Cirrincione’s phone rang. It was Berry. He put the famous actress on speaker as Lamison listened in silently, in awe — thinking that perhaps Cirrincione could steer her own acting career to Hollywood success in an industry with few leading roles for African American actresses like her.
“When the call ended, Lamison began reciting a poem she had written. Midway through her performance, she said, Cirrincione grabbed her and started kissing her, sticking his tongue in her mouth. . . .
“Lamison is among nine women — eight African Americans and one Asian American — who have told The Washington Post that Cirrincione made unwanted sexual advances toward them over a period of two decades. Several said they viewed Cirrincione, who is white, as an important gatekeeper for black actresses in an industry notoriously difficult to break into — one whose path is even more narrow for minorities. They said he took advantage of that dynamic to prey upon young women of color seeking an entry into Hollywood. . . .”
- Katti Gray, thecrimereport.org: ‘Invisible No More:’ The Other Women #MeToo Should Defend (Jan. 30)
- Leonard Pitts Jr., Miami Herald: Women are running for their lives — and for ours (Jan. 30)
- Brenda Salinas, Poynter Institute: Protect your magic: A survival guide for journalists of color (Jan. 31)
A ‘First’ Credits ‘Collective Brilliance and Generosity’
“Over the years The New York Times has been criticized for failing to diversify the gender and race of its staff and leadership,” Kelly Virella wrote Monday for the New York Times Insider. She was interviewing Monica Drake, who was promoted in December to assistant managing editor, overseeing special digital projects across the newsroom.
“In recent years, it has made significant strides in both areas,” Virella continued. “You are the first black woman to be appointed to the print masthead of The Times. How does that feel?”
Drake replied, “Any barrier being broken is a signal that society and institutions have progressed, so I celebrate that.
“I also need to point out that this promotion — and the career that I’ve had — is a result of the collective support of the people who have guided me throughout my life and career.
“They include my maternal grandfather, a former sharecropper and auto factory worker; my grandmother, a former domestic worker; my mother, who raised three kids while putting herself through medical school; my twin brother, a scientist who has been a constant companion and nurturer; Dana Canedy, the former senior editor without whose guidance and mentorship I simply wouldn’t be here; Janet Elder, the recently deceased deputy managing editor and the fiercest advocate anybody could hope for; Dean Baquet, our executive editor, who wears a million hats, including stealth mentor; and Greg Winter, the deputy international editor, a great journalistic mind who happens to be my husband.
“So yes, this milestone feels great, especially because it’s a reflection of the collective brilliance and generosity of these people and countless others.”
Short Takes
- Patrick Soon-Shiong, expected to become the new owner of the Los Angeles Times, San Diego Union-Tribune and California News Group, wrote staff members Wednesday, “I want to assure you — everyone from the press room to the newsroom — that I will work to ensure that you have the tools and resources to produce the high-quality journalism that our readers need and rely upon.” He also wrote, “As someone who grew up in apartheid South Africa, I understand the role that journalism needs to play in a free society. . . . “
- Referring to historically black colleges and universities, the National Association of Black Owned Broadcasters Telecommunications Education and Management Foundation launched an “Adopt a HBCU” public service campaign on Monday. The goal is to “encourage NABOB members to engage and cultivate the next generation of Dream Makers and Media Industry Influencers through internships and other activities.” It wants to “expose students to careers in broadcast media; and to deepen the involvement of our stations in their local communities. . . .”
- William Douglas of the McClatchy Washington Bureau is producing his “Majority Minority” columns and podcasts from the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. Topics have included the Jamaican bobsled team, diversity in the broadcast booth, the games’ having the largest contingent of black athletes and coaches in Winter Games history, an American member of the unified South and North Korea women’s hockey team, an African American alternate on the U.S. women’s bobsled team and the first African American female Olympic long track speedskater.”Majority Minority,” a partnership with McClatchy White House correspondent Franco Ordoñez, usually features “powerful conversations with people of color changing the face of Washington.”
- Poet Elizabeth Alexander, recently director of creativity and free expression at the Ford Foundation, will become the first female president of the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the country’s largest humanities philanthropy, Robin Pogrebin reported Wednesday for the New York Times.
- “Howard’s the one who needed help,” John Annese reported Tuesday for the Daily News in New York. “A Bronx mechanic attacked the star of PIX11’s ‘Help Me Howard’ consumer-rights segment with a baseball bat after the TV reporter tried to expose him as a deadbeat, police said. Jose Lebron-Pimentel, 36, came out swinging when Howard Thompson, 60, confronted him at his Belmont auto shop shortly after 12:15 p.m., Tuesday, cops said. . . .” Byron Smith and Stephen Rex Brown followed up Wednesday, reporting, “The Bronx mechanic accused of attacking the star of PIX11’s ‘Help Me Howard’ now needs his own help — with $5,000 bail.”
- “Russian trolls posed as black activists on Tumblr and generated hundreds of thousands of interactions for content that ranged from calling Hillary Clinton a ‘monster’ to supporting Bernie Sanders and decrying racial injustice and police violence in the US, according to new findings from researcher Jonathan Albright and BuzzFeed News,” Craig Silverman reported Tuesday for BuzzFeed.
- “For the first time in league history, NBA All-Star Media day will be open to the public,” Colin Ward-Henninger reported Wednesday for CBS Sports. “Tickets for the Feb. 17 event in Los Angeles are priced at $10, with all proceeds going to nonprofit journalism organizations.” The NBA said those organizations would be “selected by the NBA in consultation with the Association for Women in Sports Media (AWSM), the National Association of Black Journalists Sports Task Force (NABJ) and the Professional Basketball Writers Association (PBWA).”
- “I Spent Two Years Trying to Fix the Gender Imbalance in My Stories” reads the headline over an essay Tuesday in the Atlantic by Ed Yong. “Here’s what I’ve learned, and why I did it.” Yong wrote, “Crucially, I tracked how I was doing in a simple spreadsheet. . . . Four months after I started, the proportion of women who have a voice in my stories hit 50 percent, and has stayed roughly there ever since, varying between 42 and 61 percent from month to month. . . .”
- Analyzing coverage of the Jan. 29 killings of six people in a Quebec City mosque, in which prosecutors have charged far-right white supremacist Alexandre Bissonnette, Jim Naureckas of Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting concluded Sunday, “Corporate media in the United States have a strong predisposition to identify ‘terrorism’ as politically motivated violence committed by Muslims — even though such crimes are a small percentage of US political violence. This association, of course, leads them to cover violence perpetrated by Muslims more heavily, reinforcing the misleading connection between terror and Islam — and leaving stories that might encourage the public to reconsider the issue, like the Quebec mosque attack, to fade away out of the media spotlight.”
- Six members of Baltimore’s Gun Trace Task Force have pleaded guilty to federal charges that include racketeering, robbery and firearms violations, and Sherrilyn Ifill, president and director-counsel of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, believes the case is not receiving enough national media attention. Ifill said Wednesday on “Democracy Now!,” “the national media descended on Baltimore when the unrest was happening . . . But now, when we get this really important piece of the puzzle to explain what really was happening in these communities, the national media is not in Baltimore. They’re not there to get the answer. . . .” Host Amy Goodman said, “According to prosecutors, the officers stole hundreds of thousands of dollars from city residents. . . .”
-
“Teen Vogue has named Samhita Mukhopadhyay its first executive editor. She will oversee the brand’s editorial team and work on brand strategy, reporting to Chief Content Officer Phillip Picardi,” Sara Guaglione reported Monday for MediaPost.”Mukhopadhyay was previously the senior editorial director of culture and identities at millennial-focused Mic. Her experience leading the site’s coverage on topics like Standing Rock, Islamophobia, the Black Lives Matter movement, trans issues and college sexual assault is a logical fit for Teen Vogue. . . .”
- “I had not yet poured my first cup of coffee Sunday morning. Suddenly I was jerked alert by the sound of a C-SPAN radio discussion of whether I, ‘Clarence Page,’ might be indicted,” the syndicated Chicago Tribune columnist wrote Tuesday. “As it turned out, the talk show host had slipped. He meant to say ‘Carter Page‘ but accidentally said my name instead.” Carter Page is “a key figure at the center of the Nunes memorandum, the contentious four-page document written by aides to Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif., the chairman of the House intelligence committee. . . .”
- “The United States promised American Indian tribal governments in solemn treaties (or as the Constitution puts it, ‘the Supreme Law of the land,’) that membership in Congress would be a part of the deal,” Mark Trahant, Shoshone-Bannock, wrote Sunday for the Los Angeles Review of Books. “The 1830 Treaty of Dancing Rabbit with the Choctaw explicitly includes a ‘Delegate to the Congress.’. . . the treaty promise to tribes? We’re back to zero. . . .” Trahant added, “In a way, Native Americans are a metaphor for the unrepresentative nature of American democracy, the lack of effective political discussion.”
- In Guatemala, “The bodies of a journalist and a publicist were found on Feb. 1 in a cane plantation in Santo Domingo Suchitepéquez, southwest of the Guatemalan capital, according to the public prosecutor,” Paola Nalvarte reported Friday for the Knight Center for Journalism in the Americas. “According to the experts report from the public ministry, the bodies of Laurent Ángel Castillo Cifuentes, 28-year-old reporter from newspaper Nuestro Diario in Coatepeque, Quetzaltenango, and Luis Alfredo de León Miranda, 20-year-old working in advertising for Radio Coaltepec, were found with their hands and feet tied, and with bullet wounds to the head, according to Prensa Libre. The public prosecutor also reported that they were strangled. . . .”
- “Raúl Velázquez, Cuban executive director of the Cuban Institute for Freedom of Expression and of the Press (ICLEP, for its initials in Spanish), has been missing for six days,” Teresa Mioli reported Tuesday for the Knight Center for Journalism in the Americas. She also wrote, “Late last year, the Political Police searched Velázquez’ home and he was kept in detention from Nov. 30 to Dec. 4. During that time, he was submitted to interrogations, according to ICLEP. He was released ‘under police investigation for the alleged crimes of spreading false news, receiving money from the U.S. government, clandestine printing and incitement to not attend elections for delegates to the municipal assemblies of the Popular Power,’ ICLEP said. . . .”
- “In what journalists fear could be a taste of things to come, Venezuela’s new anti-hate law was enforced for the first time against a news organization on January 30, when Yndira Lugo, the editor of Diario Región was called before government agents for questioning,” John Otis wrote Tuesday for the Committee to Protect Journalists. He also wrote, “Written by the Communist Party of Venezuela, the column warns that a severe economic meltdown has put the country on the brink of a social explosion. . . .”
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