Media

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    St. Louis Post-Dispatch Editor Reflects on Lessons From Ferguson Coverage

    “Many Leaped to Conclusions Often Abetted by Social Media” Gilbert Bailon, editor of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, was chosen for the Benjamin C. Bradlee Editor of the Year Award last month by the National Press Foundation for leading the newspaper through the tumultuous events in Ferguson, Mo., last year and their aftermath. In this previously…

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    Journalists Worldwide Condemn Deadly Attack at French Newspaper Charlie Hebdo

    Death of 12 Seen as Attack on Press Freedom News organizations worldwide faced a dilemma about how to portray cartoons of Muhammad by the satirical French newspaper Charlie Hebdo after a deadly attack on its offices Wednesday. Some chose to respond by censoring or cropping out photos of the cartoons themselves, Rosie Gray and Ellie…

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    Outpouring of Affection for Stuart Scott Mirrors His Impact 

    “Obviously Black” ESPN Trailblazer Dies of Cancer at 49 “Stuart Scott’s impact can be measured in Sunday’s outpouring of affection for him after news of his death, at 49 from cancer, broke,” Sean Gregory wrote Sunday for Time magazine. “It cut across all sports, all silos of American culture, from LeBron James to Tiger Woods…

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    President Lyndon Johnson’s Black Adviser: MLK and Voting-Rights Talk Were Welcomed 

    Clifford Alexander Says Film Gets One Thing Wrong Clifford L. Alexander Jr. says nobody from the news media has asked him, but that anyone who says that President Lyndon B. Johnson was at odds with Martin Luther King Jr. and other civil rights leaders over the 1964 Civil Rights Act and the 1965 Voting Rights…

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    10 Ways That News Outlets Have Had to Contend With Race and Diversity in 2014

    A year in the quest for news media that look like America: 1. Ferguson 2. Cosby Found Guilty in Court of Public Opinion 3. Online Media, New Frontier, Take Heat on Diversity 4. The Numbers and the Layoffs 5. A Breakthrough in Minority Broadcast Ownership 6. MSNBC Chief Promises Change for Latinos 7. Dean Baquet…

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    Cosby: CNN’s Upcoming Special About Beverly Johnson’s Accusations Is Not Balanced

    Beverly Johnson Charges Surface Talk of Lies, Death Threats CNN replied Monday to a scathing letter from Bill Cosby’s lawyer accusing the network of unethical reporting tactics with a scathing letter of its own. The network’s lawyer ripped into the character of a former boyfriend of supermodel Beverly Johnson, who, following accusations by other women,…

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    Civil Rights Leaders Confront Sony Over Racially Insensitive Emails

    Pullback of Movie Demonstrates “All Films Are Political” “Black leaders, angered by racially insensitive emails sent by Amy Pascal, the movie chief at Sony Pictures Entertainment, emerged from a meeting with her on Thursday saying they had reached an understanding about how to move forward,” Brooks Barnes reported for the New York Times. “Ms. Pascal,…

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    Diversity Is Taking a Hit at the NY Times Amid Buyouts, Layoffs 

    N.Y. Times Departures Further Whiten Culture Section The New York Times is laying off two black female reporters and leaving its Culture section devoid of journeymen black journalists as it continues to implement plans to reduce its newsroom staff by 100 via buyouts and layoffs, staffers told Journal-isms on Wednesday. Departing are Metro reporter Kia Gregory,…

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    Bill Cosby: Black Freelancer Misled Me

    Cosby Says Black-Press Freelancer Duped Him Bill Cosby’s attorney John P. Schmitt issued a statement Monday criticizing journalist Stacy M. Brown, who interviewed the comedian for a story published online Saturday in the New York Post and the Washington Informer. “Schmitt alleges his client was unaware the conversation was being recorded and would wind up in the Post,” Travis Reilly reported…

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    Award-Winning Photographer Michel du Cille Dies Suddenly in Liberia

    Three-Time Pulitzer Winner, of Washington Post, Was 58 “Michel du Cille, a Washington Post photojournalist who was a three-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize for his dramatic images of human struggle and triumph, and who recently chronicled the plight of Ebola patients and the people who cared for them, died Thursday while on assignment for…