About Journal-isms

Richard Prince's popular column on the news media, published by the Maynard Institute for Journalism Education (www.mije.org).

CAN'T GET ENOUGH?

Richard Prince's popular column on the news media, published by the Maynard Institute for Journalism Education (www.mije.org).

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JOEL'S BLOG ROLL

    Journal-isms: More Illegal Immigrants Die Crossing into the U.S. Than U.S. Troops in Afghanistan

    A Phenomenon That "Figures Little in the Debate"

    "The article was largely buried in most newspapers, if run at all," columnist Edward Schumacher-Matos wrote Thursday for the Washington Post Writers Group.

    "So many bodies of unauthorized migrants are being found in the Arizona desert this month, the Associated Press reported, that the Pima County Medical Examiner was stacking them like boxes of fish in a refrigerated truck.

    "Forty bodies were found in just the first half of the month.

    "Last year, 317 Americans died fighting in Afghanistan. Guess how many migrants, mostly Mexicans searching for work, died crossing illegally into America? The Border Patrol collected 422 in the last fiscal year, part of a rising trend.

    "And most die in the desert. Here is how Luis Alberto Urrea, in his book, 'The Devil's Highway,' described what happens:

    "Dehydration had reduced all your inner streams to sluggish mudholes. . . . Your sweat runs out. . . . Your temperature redlines — you hit 105, 106, 108 degrees. . . . Your muscles, lacking water, feed on themselves. They break down and start to rot. . . . The system closes down in a series. Your kidney, your bladder, your heart.'

    "Yet these deaths figure little in the debate over immigration. There is faint sense of scandal, of tragedy or, certainly, of urgency to agree on a solution. The extremists rule, with one side calling for more enforcement and the other saying enforcement doesn't work.

    "The former has the louder voice today, making it the bigger culprit, but the latter — humanitarian groups, for one — share in the blame. They seem not to find any enforcement policy they like, abandoning responsibility.

    "The Obama administration, like the Bush administration before it, is caught in the middle, a Gulliver tied by Lilliputians and unable to take command of the fight."

    Schumacher-Matos is a former editor and reporter with the New York Times and Wall Street Journal with extensive experience in Florida and Latin America. He writes pieces every other Sunday for the Miami Herald, "taking up issues in the news, answering questions from readers and critiquing how The Miami Herald and El Nuevo Herald handle topics of significance."

    The Associated Press piece he referenced, by Amanda Lee Myers, showed up in only a handful of papers, according to a Nexis search. It did not make the comparison with Afghanistan deaths, as Schumacher-Matos did.

    President Obama hoped that his signing of financial-reform legislation Wednesday would dominate White House news, but the Shirley Sherrod affair eclipsed it. (Credit: Lawrence Jackson/White House)

    Sherrod Affair Provides Fodder for Another News Cycle

    President Obama and his aides made sure to note that the 24-hour news cycle and the failure of the news media to do due diligence was partly to blame for the embarrassing debacle in which black Agriculture Department staffer Shirley Sherrod was unjustly fired over an out-of-context tape excerpt that portrayed her as biased against whites.

    Many in the news media asked themselves whether they had forgotten basic rules of the profession — and then reiterated them.

    Commentators took the occasion to examine how difficult it was for the nation — and the administration headed by the first black president — to talk about race.

    Some did anyway. The Albany (N.Y.) Times Union, for example, paired its editorial on the Sherrod affair with another about racist language used by local officials. The mayor of nearby Cobbleskill resigned, "unable to explain why he might have used one of the most racist words imaginable." The editorial recalled that "James Tuffey's downfall as Albany police chief came as he was accused of saying that a white college student murdered in 2008 'wasn't just some spook.' "

    The National Association of Black Journalists was trying to secure Sherrod for its convention in San Diego next week.

    A longer-than-usual syndicated column by Roland S. Martin, "The Perils of Race in the 21st Century," included this mea culpa: "Was I wrong in assuming that we had the full story of Sherrod at the outset? Yes. Was a snap judgment made based upon that? Yes. Has it happened before? Of course!"

    Friday's edition of the subscription-only tip sheet the Frontrunner attempted to summarize the news coverage of the preceding 24 hours:

    "For a second day, the Shirley Sherrod story dominated national news coverage, with the President personally calling Sherrod and giving a TV interview in which he faulted USDA chief Tom Vilsack's handling of the controversy. Referring to Vilsack, Obama told ABC World News (7/22, story 2, 2:50, Leamy, 8.2M), 'He jumped the gun partly because we now live in this media culture where something goes up on YouTube or a blog and everybody scrambles. And I told my team, and I told my agencies that we have to make sure we're focusing on doing the right thing instead of what looks to be politically necessary at that very moment. We have to take our time and think these issues through.'

    "On TV, the story led ABC News and ran third and fourth respectively on the line-ups of NBC [Nightly] News and the CBS Evening News. The networks also ran follow-up pieces, and devoted a combined total of 12 minutes to the story, up from 11 minutes and 40 seconds the night before. National print outlets, meanwhile, continue to devote headlines (though not on their front pages) to recounting and analyzing the facts. Both on TV and print, the President's call to Sherrod is being generally described in positive terms, but analysts are still calling the story a political loser for the White House, as it distracts public attention from the President's signing of legislation to shore up the economy and instead places the spotlight on the divisive issue of race. . . .

    "The AP (7/23, Jalonick) reports that Sherrod has not shied 'away from telling her story on television. She hopped from network to network' and let 'CNN film part of her call with Obama as she traveled the streets of New York City in a car.' . . .

    "The New York Times (7/23, Stolberg, 1.09M) reports that in the aftermath of the Sherrod flap, Wade Henderson, president and chief executive of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, and Charles J. Ogletree Jr., 'a Harvard law professor who represented [Henry Louis] Gates, suggested the president should now convene a national conference on race relations. Ward Connerly, a black conservative who leads an institute devoted to fighting racial preferences, endorsed the idea.' Axelrod, however, 'threw cold water on the notion, saying Mr. Obama has 'pressing matters that are significant to all Americans,' like the economy."

    "The CBS Evening News (7/22, story 4, 2:15, Couric, 6.1M) reported that 'the Sherrod case has put a spotlight on the USDA's long history of discrimination against black farmers.' . . .

    "Politico (7/23, Vogel, 25K) reports, 'An unrepentant Andrew Breitbart told POLITICO on Thursday that the Obama administration and its allies have manufactured a controversy over the video he posted of...Sherrod's speech to the NAACP as part of an orchestrated effort to take him down.'"

     
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