Media

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    Pundits: Romney Sort of Endorsed Obama

    President Obama was judged the winner of Monday night’s final debate of the campaign season, with challenger Mitt Romney leaving pundits debating why he now agreed with the president on so many foreign policy issues. “If this debate had gone on for 30 more minutes, Romney was going to endorse Obama,” Van Jones, the former…

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    Remembering Newsweek's Race Beat

    Four Alumni Reflect on Demise of Print Edition In a 2009 edition of “Mormon Matters,” which describes itself as a “weekly podcast exploring Mormon culture and current events,” Jeff Breinholt recalled: “The July 15, 1968 edition of Newsweek featured the cover story ‘The Angry Black Athlete,‘ which stated: ” ‘It is a mess that extends…

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    Crowley: Not Just White Guys, White Women

    Debate’s Inclusion of Broader Issues Was Intentional After two debates in which domestic concerns of particular interest to people of color were barely mentioned, moderator Candy Crowley of CNN said Tuesday night that she made a deliberate effort to raise such issues as gun control, immigration and long-term unemployment in that evening’s town hall presidential…

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    Sheila Johnson: BET a 'Squandered' Voice

    Sheila Johnson, co-founder of Black Entertainment Television, said over the weekend that the network she left behind “reinforces negative stereotypes of young people, African Americans in particular,” Brittney M. Walker wrote Monday for EURWeb.com. Johnson was the speaker at the “Conversations and Encounters” program at the Carmel Art and Film Festival in Monterey County, Calif.,…

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    What Happened to Our Debate Questions?

    Concerns of Journalists of Color Missing Again The verdict is in on Thursday’s vice presidential debate: Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. and his Republican challenger, Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., both advanced their candidacies, and moderator Martha Raddatz of ABC News “won” the debate, some commentators said, with her forceful but tactful questioning. Nielsen, the…

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    Poor Minority Schools Lack Student Media

    Overall, 33% Have Online Component, Study Finds High schools that don’t have their own student media “are largely poor and have high minority populations, often depriving the students of a vital educational opportunity,” the University of Kansas reported Wednesday. Moreover, “While the Internet has steadily become a larger part of media over the past decade-plus,…

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    Polls: Debate Produced Surge for Romney

    “In the five days since Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney was declared by many the winner of the first presidential debate, political watchers have waited to see if polls would shift in response to his performance. And, they did,” NPR reported on Monday. “Not only has the Gallup tracking poll tightened to a tie —…

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    Unity Closes Its Board Meetings

    Coalition Made Little-Known Decision in April The National Association of Hispanic Journalists reversed itself over the summer after its president ruled that a student journalist could not tweet from its board meetings. But Unity Journalists, the alliance of Hispanic, Asian American, Native American and lesbian and gay journalists, will no longer allowing such a student…

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    Debate Pundits: Where Was Obama?

    If the progressive cable news channel MSNBC represents President Obama’s base, then that base was stunned by the president’s lackluster debate performance in his first face-off with former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney Wednesday night. Competitor CNN’s flash poll of registered voters who watched the debate found that 67 percent said Romney won, while only 25…

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    TJ Holmes: 'I Finally Made It'

    BET launched “Don’t Sleep” Monday night, its news/talk show vehicle for longtime CNN newsman T.J. Holmes. “We are promoting this show on-air, in-market — we have a Don’t Sleep Tour bus that has been to nearly 20 cities including the RNC, DNC and CBC!” spokeswoman Jeanine D. Liburd told Journal-isms by email Monday, referring to…