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  • Why Weren’t the Murderous Biker Gangs in Texas Dubbed ‘Thugs’ by Mainstream Media?

    Social Media Quick to Comment on Media Coverage “The scene in Waco on Sunday was like something off a TV show,” Dan Solomon wrote Monday for Texas Monthly. “Broad daylight shoot-outs between rival gangs that leave nine dead and eighteen others hospitalized rarely happen in Texas strip malls, but the biker-themed event at the Twin Peaks…

    By





    Richard Prince






    Published

    May 19, 2015
  • Ben Affleck Asked Henry Louis Gates Jr. to Edit Out Slaveowning Ancestor in PBS Series

    Slaver Is Omitted, His Story “Just Wasn’t as Interesting” Actor Ben Affleck asked Henry Louis Gates Jr. to edit out the fact that one of his ancestors owned slaves from Gates’ PBS series “Finding Your Roots,” according to messages in the massive November hacking of emails at Sony’s movie studio. The information did not appear…

    By





    Richard Prince






    Published

    April 19, 2015
  • Witness Who Filmed Walter Scott Shooting: ‘I Knew Right Away I Had Something on My Hands’

    Video Responsible for Quick Firing of S.C. Policeman The news competition was fierce on a day when the suspect in the Boston Marathon bombing trial was found guilty, but “NBC Nightly News” anchor Lester Holt had set up shop Wednesday in North Charleston, S.C. He delivered the goods, snaring the first interview with the bystander…

    By





    Richard Prince






    Published

    April 9, 2015
  • Let’s Pay Homage to the Education Law Designed to Help Students From Low-Income Families

    Voting Rights Act Isn’t Only Great Society Law in Peril Along with the 50th anniversary of the Selma-to-Montgomery March and the Voting Rights Act, this year marks another milestone: 1965 saw passage of the education law designed to help disadvantaged and special-needs children, particularly those of color. The law is up for renewal this year,…

    By





    Richard Prince






    Published

    March 19, 2015
  • Mitzi Miller Steps Down as Ebony Editor After 10 Months

    Mitzi Miller Wants to Create Stories for TV, Film Mitzi Miller, editor-in-chief of Ebony magazine, announced Friday that she is leaving Johnson Publishing Co. She has been Ebony editor for less than a year, assuming that role after spending more than three years as editor of its sister publication Jet, which ended its print edition.…

    By





    Richard Prince






    Published

    February 22, 2015
  • BET, MadameNoire, The Root Among Top Black Sites in 2014

    Pop Culture Still an Attraction for Black Web Visitors BET.com, MadameNoire.com and TheRoot.com were big winners among African American-oriented websites in 2014, according to figures for unique visitors provided to Journal-isms by the comScore, Inc. research company. For the first time, the figures include both desktop and mobile data. Previous figures measured desktop use only.…

    By





    Richard Prince






    Published

    February 1, 2015
  • Journalists Concerned About What Will Become of the New York Times’ Race Beat

    News Outlets Split on Best Ways to Cover the Topic With the New York Times moving Tanzina Vega, the paper’s sole reporter on a national race and ethnicity beat, to cover the Bronx courthouse, a larger question is at play, Chris Ip wrote Wednesday for Columbia Journalism Review. “What happens to her national race and…

    By





    Richard Prince






    Published

    January 29, 2015
  • Charles Blow’s Son on Encounter With Campus Police: Focus on Unreported Police Brutality, Not Me

    Yale U. Concedes Drawing of Handgun Was Questionable “As a noted memoirist and New York Times columnist who writes often about race, Charles Blow has spoken about the police killings of Michael Brown and Eric Garner, deaths that sparked a national debate over how police treat African-American men,” Ashley Fantz reported Monday for CNN. “On…

    By





    Richard Prince






    Published

    January 27, 2015
  • Veteran Chicago Reporter Helps Free Wrongfully Convicted Man

    “Even After I Retired, This Case Still Bothered Me” “After 20 years I was finally able to get a wrongfully convicted man named Tyrone Hood out of prison,” Renee Ferguson, who retired as an investigative reporter for Chicago’s NBC-owned WMAQ-TV in 2008, messaged Journal-isms on Friday. “I figured out that he was innocent during my…

    By





    Richard Prince






    Published

    January 25, 2015
  • Muslim Expert Banned From MSNBC for Saying Bobby Jindal ‘Might Be Trying to Scrub Some of the Brown Off’

    Governor “Might Be Trying to Scrub Some of the Brown Off” MSNBC has banned from its airwaves a Muslim human rights lawyer and commentator who said Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, an Indian American, “might be trying to scrub some of the brown off his skin” by claiming that there are “no-go zones” for non-Muslims in…

    By





    Richard Prince






    Published

    January 22, 2015
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Richard Prince






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