Chicago is Da World

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Archive for black news media

Where is the news about African-Americans? Where’s the news about everyone else as well?

We were talking about the stories that could be written about North Lawndale and Isaac Lewis reeled off one idea after another.

Stories about health and the economy and what’s happened to the community. Stories about now and then. Stories that lift people up and stories that give you a sense of what needs to be done.

Shameka Robinson, our intern with Isaac’s North Lawndale Community News, wanted to do all of them too.

I thought about brainstorming with Isaac when I came across this discouraging report on the mainstream news media’s coverage of African-Americans.

The report by the Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism reached this conclusion after a long term study:

“As a group, African Americans attracted relatively little attention in the U.S. mainstream news media during the first year of Barack Obama’s presidency — and what coverage there was tended to focus more on specific episodes than on examining how broader issues and trends affected the lives of blacks generally”

http://pewresearch.org/pubs/1676/media-coverage-african-american-issues-first-year-obama-presidency

It explains further:

The study finds that 9% of the coverage of the nation’s first black president and his administration during Obama’s first year in office had some race angle to it. Here, too, this coverage was largely tied to specific incidents or controversies rather than to broader issues and themes.

These findings come from an examination of more than 67,000 national news stories that appeared between Feb. 16, 2009 and Feb. 15, 2010 in different mainstream media outlets, including newspapers, cable and network television, radio, and news websites.

Just 643 of those stories, 1.9% of the total newshole examined by the study, related in a significant way to African Americans in the U.S.1 (To be considered a “significant” part of a given story, 25% of the content of that story must be about a demographic group and its race/ethnicity). However, this was more coverage than was given in the s same time period to two other minority groups — Hispanics (1.3%) and Asian Americans (0.2%). As a percentage African Americans make up 12.9% of the U.S. population.

This has been a difficult and complex year for many black Americans. The economy has swallowed millions of jobs and taken away thousands of homes, virtually the only source of wealth for many blacks. Crime consumes a large part of the worries in many black communities. And so do concerns whether the schools that serve black children will collapse under the weight of shrunken budgets.

Where were these stories?

Apparently, they didn’t show up in the mainstream media.

“The storylines that generated the most press attention on African Americans were driven primarily by black figures who made news. In its coverage of race, in other words, the press largely responded to breaking news during the year studied rather than exploring the state of African Americans or developing African-American angles around events or issues in the news.”

So what does that mean?

That we live in separate worlds as ever before? That the black news media has to work harder to tell the story it knows so well. But if it does, if it churns out compelling, important news, will it matter if it is only read by its audience?

What do you think? Talk to me.

Steve@newstips.org

This Must Stop – The Chicago Defender

The front page catches your eye and brings you straight to the editorial page. Here, it reads:

‘We have to formulate a way to make sure that criminals in our midst know that they are not welcome, that they are not safe, that there is no harbor for them…The only way that kind of criminal excess can be avoided is if we take responsibility, take control and stop letting criminals have their way, even if that means making a call to the police, or even putting a criminal out of your house.

This has to stop!”

Read the whole editorial from this week’s Defender and you appreciate what power comes into the hands of a newspaper when it stands up and says this is what we need to do in our community. Strong words. An unflinching dedication to a bound unbroken.

This is when the ethnic media is maybe one of the strongest tools we to have making a difference.

Read the editorial and you know it is talking eye to eye, heart to heart.

And here’s a story that accompanies the editorial.

http://www.chicagodefender.com/article-8325-residents-violent-weeks-in-neighborhood-just-before-officer-fatally-shot-there.html

Why you should be listening to WVON

So you are driving  or flipping the dial. You click on WVON and this is what you hear: black Chicago talking, thinking, laughing, wondering, sharing. Black Chicago alive as can be.

It’s what ethnic radio does so well. It connects, translates, and transforms.

Here’s is a piece about it from In These Times. Read the whole story and you will appreciate what ethnic radio can and should do.

On Air With Black America

Chicago’s only black-owned talk radio station gives voice to a complex people still struggling to be heard.

By Salim Muwakkil

Callers’ mistrust of white America is deep; some of it can be attributed to many listeners’ familial links to the South and its tradition of overt and and brutal racism.

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Good evening, you’re talking to Salim Muwakkil on 1690 WVON. What’s on your mind?” I ask.

“The election of Barack Obama is the worst thing to ever happen to black people in America,” the caller snarls. “He’s a perfect Trojan Horse for American imperialism and corporate control. What do you think?”

That kind of question is typical fare on The Salim Muwakkil Show, broadcast every Saturday night by Chicago’s only black-owned radio station. These days, one year after the nation’s first black president took office, callers make it clear that African-Americans are divided sharply on Obama’s performance.

http://www.inthesetimes.com/article/5443/

Also, thanks to the Garfield-Lawndale Voice I know that the Regal Theatre is open again. And thanks too to Lou Ransom for his column in the Defender for his take on what happened with the election for the Cook County President’s job.

If you come across other stories that you want to pass on like these, let me know.

Stephen