• CNN Anchor Praises Obama, and Then a Dead Mic

    President’s Eulogy in Charleston Made for Riveting TV In full preacher mode, President Obama delivered riveting television Friday when he eulogized the Rev. Clementa Pinckney, a state senator, rising political star and one of the nine people killed last week at the Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, S.C. “President Barack Obama used his eulogy for…

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  • Lester Holt, 1st Black Solo Network Anchor of a Weeknight News Show, on Race: Less Talk, More Action

    New NBC Anchor Sensitive to Race, Tech, Western Issues Lester Holt says he has “a strong sensitivity” to the story of race and that “It’s a story that, among others, we’ll be going at aggressively” as newly named permanent anchor of “NBC Nightly News.” In a telephone interview as he began his role as the…

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  • SC Media Long Involved in Debate Over Confederate Flag

    The State Out Front; Black Paper Most Hardline South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley’s call for removal of the Confederate battle flag from the state Capitol grounds Monday continues a decades-long fight in which the state’s newspapers have played a role, though it was not always clear whether they were leading or reflecting public opinion. “Two…

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  • Charles Barkley Is Giving Morehouse College $1,000,000

    NBA Hall of Famer Aids Journalism and Sports Program “Basketball legend Charles Barkley recently announced his intention to make a $1 million gift to Morehouse College,” the school announced on Friday. “In that same announcement, he pledged similar support to Auburn University (his alma mater) and the Wounded Warrior Project,” for a total of $3…

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  • Community Engagement Offered as Remedy for Negative Media Coverage of Black, Arab and Latino Boys

    ASNE Offers “Community-Based Engagement” as Remedy Adults who work with children say news media reporting on boys and men of color reinforces negative narratives about them, according to a new survey, but “news organizations increasingly are using community-based engagement to improve the situation,” according to Mike Fancher, speaking to Journal-isms on behalf of the American…

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  • Wow. Here’s What the American Red Cross Did With the Half-Billion Dollars Donated After the Haiti Earthquake

    Red Cross Slammed in NPR-ProPublica Investigation “When a devastating earthquake leveled Haiti in 2010, millions of people donated to the American Red Cross. The charity raised almost half a billion dollars. It was one of its most successful fundraising efforts ever,” Laura Sullivan reported for NPR on Wednesday. “The American Red Cross vowed to help…

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  • Media Outlets Are Taking It Upon Themselves to Track the Number of People Killed by Police 

    Washington Post Counts 385 Fatally Shot This Year At least 385 people were “shot and killed by police nationwide during the first five months of this year, more than two a day, according to a Washington Post analysis,” Kimberly Kindy reported for the Sunday print edition of the Washington Post, along with Julie Tate, Jennifer…

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  • Charnice Milton Was Killed in Community She Loved

    Charnice Milton Slain in D.C. While Used as Human Shield A 27-year-old African American reporter who committed herself to covering the blackest, most neglected portion of the District of Columbia was shot to death Wednesday night when, police said, she was used as a human shield in an exchange of gunfire by two groups of…

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  • Chicago Outlet Debated Publishing Photo Showing 2 Cops Treating a Black Suspect Like a Deer

    Sun-Times Runs a Photo That Police Didn’t Want Seen “Photographs can do a number of things. “They can help frame a news story or put it into better context. “They can convey details and nuances of a story that might otherwise be lost,” Jim Kirk, publisher and editor in chief of the Chicago Sun-Times, wrote…

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  • Univision Buys The Root—Fusing the No. 1 Hispanic and the No. 1 Black News Outlets in the US

    Broadcaster, Black-Themed Site Each See Chance for Growth TheRoot.com has been sold to Univision Communications Inc. for an undisclosed amount, the parties announced Thursday, in a deal that puts a slice of the African American market in the domain of the U.S. company most dominant in Spanish-language broadcasting. “I’m excited,” Donna Byrd, publisher of TheRoot.com,…

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