Media
-
Julian Bond Was a Great Interview—Funny and Insightful—Reporters and Journalists Say
Civil Rights Icon, 75, Gravitated Toward Media Julian Bond is rightfully being mourned as an iconic civil rights leader, but he also gravitated toward the media. Judging from comments since his death on Saturday from vascular disease at age 75, media members likewise took to him. “He was typically wise, never boring, always eloquent,” Kevin…
-
Dutch Paper Sparks Latest N-Word Debate With Ta-Nehisi Coates Book Review
Atlantic Writer Has Defended Term, but Not Used Like That “On July 31, the Dutch newspaper NRC Handelsblad published a review of several books on race and racism in the United States,” Karen Attiah reported Thursday for the Washington Post. “The series, written by the paper’s Washington correspondent Guus Valk, leads with a review of…
-
Los Angeles Times Editor Looks Back at Paper’s Coverage of 1965 Watts Riots and Asks if It Deserved the Pulitzer
In ’65 Watts Coverage, Race Complexities Eluded L.A. Times “Almost all of them are dead now,” the Los Angeles Times’ Doug Smith began his story Wednesday evaluating his paper’s coverage of the Watts uprising of 1965. “When I joined The Times in 1970, they were the giants of the newsroom, still sharing the glow of…
-
2 Reporters From the Huffington Post and the Washington Post Face Charges for Their Conduct in Ferguson
NABJ, Unity Join Media Outlets in Expressing Outrage “Reporters from The Huffington Post and Washington Post have been charged with trespassing and interfering with a police officer’s performance, a chilling setback for press freedom coming nearly a year after their arrests in Ferguson, Missouri,” Michael Calderone reported Monday for the Huffington Post. “The Huffington Post’s Ryan J.…
-
NABJ Audience Catches Glimpse of Prince for All of 2 Minutes
Busloads Travel to Paisley Park Studio Complex At least 650 members of the National Association of Black Journalists accepted an invitation from Prince to pay $20 apiece to visit the Paisley Park studio complex used by the entertainer outside Minneapolis Saturday night in hopes of seeing the star himself. But the NABJ members — and…
-
Poll: 6 in 10 Black Men Say They’ve Had Bad Experiences With the Police
A Gallup poll released Tuesday shows that Americans’ satisfaction with how blacks are treated in the U.S. has dropped to an all-time low,” Scott Sutton reported Tuesday for the Chicago Sun-Times. The next day, Jesse J. Holland reported for the Associated Press that “A majority of blacks in the United States — more than 3…
-
Media Outlets Look Back on the Year Since Police Shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo.
Media Begin Commemorations of Portentous Shooting As the news media began to commemorate the first anniversary of the fatal police shooting in Ferguson, Mo., that reverberated around the nation, St. Louis County police “agreed as part of two federal court settlements not to seek charges against a pair of journalists who were arrested for allegedly…
-
Media Coverage of Samuel Dubose Shooting Illustrates Why ‘Visuals Matter’
Were Media Really Out to Make Black People Look Bad? “If social media has proved one thing, it’s that visuals matter. A lot,” the Cincinnati Enquirer reported on Friday. “On Wednesday, national news outlets including NBC and CNN juxtaposed an image of murder suspect Ray Tensing in front of a flag with a police mugshot…
-
Ohio Police Officer Ray Tensing’s Indictment for Killing Unarmed Black Man Dominates Prime-Time News
Body-Camera Footage Fuels Viewers’ Outrage Networks Show Video of Fatal Cincinnati Encounter Despite competing news from a heat wave and the discovery of possible debris from the Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 that disappeared last year, the indictment of a University of Cincinnati police officer for fatally shooting an unarmed black man commanded prime real estate on…
-
Report: Percentage of Journalists of Color in Digital and Print Newsrooms Declines Slightly
From ASNE: “Our Industry Isn’t Making Progress” The percentage of journalists of color in newspaper and online newsrooms declined from 13.34 percent to 12.76 percent, the American Society of News Editors reported Tuesday, with the percentages down among Asian Americans, blacks, Hispanics and Native Americans, but a slight increase among those identifying as multiracial [PDF]. “The…