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Is Race a Part of the Brian Williams Equation?
Some Wonder Whether Double Standard Is at Work The fallout over Brian Williams’ retraction of his years-old story that he was on a helicopter shot down by enemy fire in Iraq might be primarily about credibility and trust, but it is also about celebrity, ratings and, some say, race. “You know…Patricia Smith, Jayson Blair &…
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Whites, Men and Republicans More Likely Than Others to Support Charlie Hebdo’s Prophet Muhammad Cartoons
U.S. Nonwhites Opposed Publishing Muhammad Cartoons A month after the attack on the Paris offices of the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in a three-day jihadist assault that, in all, left 17 people dead, a racial split has emerged over whether the magazine should have published cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad, according to the Pew Research…
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Black Journalists Blast Bill O’Reilly for Linking Al-Jazeera Correspondent to Terrorism
Fox News Pundit Links Al Jazeera Reporters, Terrorism Two veteran journalists have come to the defense of Randall Pinkston, another longtime black journalist, after Fox News Channel’s Bill O’Reilly called out Pinkston, Soledad O’Brien, Joie Chen and John Seigenthaler as workers for Al Jazeera, which O’Reilly called a “propaganda outfit” that supports terrorism. (video) Les…
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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.…
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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…
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Eye Candy From The Root’s Young, Fabulous and Female Event
Some of the women who attended The Root’s Young, Fabulous and Female event at the Long View Gallery in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday were questioning if and when they should quit their jobs and devote themselves full time to a startup idea. Others got super candid and described how they were in the middle of…
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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…
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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…
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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…
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Civil Rights Worker: Selma Is ‘a Fine Film,’ but Eyes on the Prize Is More Accurate
Filmgoers Should Have a Chance to See the Documentary Judy Richardson was a worker for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee in Alabama, Mississippi and Georgia from 1963 to 1966, the time depicted in the movie “Selma.” She began a career in filmmaking as associate producer of “Eyes on the Prize: America’s Civil Rights Years, 1954-1985,”…