Media
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James J. Kilpatrick's Racist Past Not Easily Forgotten
James J. Kilpatrick, the conservative commentator known to television viewers as a commentator on the “Point/Counterpoint” segment of “60 Minutes,” or as a panelist on the old “Agronsky and Co.,” died in Washington Sunday at age 89, his family said on Monday. To some African Americans, however, the Virginian’s support of Massive Resistance to school…
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Surge in Blacks Using Broadband
African Americans Showed Year’s Highest Growth Rate Over the last year, the broadband-adoption gap between blacks and whites has been cut nearly in half,” according to a new survey by the Pew Internet & American Life Project. Broadband is generally defined as high-speed Internet access. “Broadband adoption by African Americans now stands at 56%, up…
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Internet Venture Funding Eludes Blacks
Blacks Just 1% of Financed Internet Start-ups So Far in 2010 Before presenting its charts, CB Insights reported, ‘When we ask venture capitalists what gets them excited about the young, emerging and unproven companies in which they invest, we never hear about deals and dollars. Rather the first answer is frequently ‘the team’ or ‘the…
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Steele Cancels Appearance Before Black Journalists
GOP Chairman Was Sure to Be Questioned About Breitbart The advance team for Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele told the National Association of Black Journalists on Friday that Steele was canceling the panel discussion scheduled later in the day at its convention in San Diego because of food poisoning, NABJ announced. An RNC statement…
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Journal-isms: More Illegal Immigrants Die Crossing into the U.S. Than U.S. Troops in Afghanistan
“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…
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Sherrod Debacle: Will Media Feel Backlash?
The firing of Agriculture Department staffer Shirley Sherrod — over racial remarks that were taken out of context — raises judgment questions not only about the Obama administration and the NAACP, whose president is a former journalist, but about the news media. “This whole saga confirms, as if it needed confirmation,” veteran journalist Paul Delaney…
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Is the New Black Panther Party Case Getting Fair Coverage?
It’s not every day that commentators Clarence Page of the Chicago Tribune, Juan Williams of Fox News and NPR, Errol Louis of the New York Daily News, Roland Martin of CNN and TV One, and the editorial pages of the Philadelphia Inquirer, Los Angeles Times and Pittsburgh Post-Gazette are in agreement. And that such agreement…
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Why the Media Aren't Giving Obama Credit
Even Journalists Raise Questions After Latest Victory “I’ve been scratching my head over this for the past year: Does President Obama get credit for the things he does right?” media writer Howard Kurtz wrote for the Washington Post on Friday. “We all know about the things he does wrong, because the media have made that…
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Johnson Publishing President Steps Down
Six weeks after the arrival of former White House social secretary Desiree Rogers, and two weeks after the naming of a new editor-in-chief for Ebony, Johnson Publishing Co. Monday announced the resignation of Anne Sempowski Ward, its president and chief operating officer. Ward was on maternity leave. Rogers, a longtime friend of Chairman and CEO…
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What LeBron's Big Move Means to Journalism
The decision by LeBron James to leave the Cleveland Cavaliers for the Miami Heat made for television with through-the-roof ratings, the Nielsen Co. announced, even if journalists panned as over-the-top the ESPN production during which James made the announcement. The NBA superstar’s move had a less-noticed side benefit: On James’ new home turf, he’ll be…