News & Views
 
April 30, 2008

How Did You Learn to Deal With the Police?

On Friday, we're going to have a conversation about what you need to know -- both about your legal rights and generally how to act when approached by the police. It's an issue that can be critical for many African Americans, and has increasingly become part of the instructions that black children get from parents and mentors.

Now, my mother is the kind of woman who gave my sister and me some very specific instructions on how to live our lives -- dress, comportment, learning, and more. But I don't ever remember getting any specifics on how to deal with the police. I think that's because we were girls. One of the profound differences within the African-American experience can be the way the legal system treats boys vs. girls, men vs. women. It's not that girls and women don't ever get profiled, but the preponderance of scrutiny is targeted at black boys and men.

So: how did you learn to deal with the police? Who taught you? And WHAT did you learn? We'd love to know. And we'll share wisdom from experts including a black police officer on Friday.

 

Bloggers' Roundtable: Racist Cartoons Reemerge

Here's an issue we'll be discussing on today's bloggers' roundtable (should time permit): racist cartoons from the 1940s that have been circulating on the Web.

Cartoons like this one:

The New York Times has more:

Among the millions of clips on the video-sharing Web site YouTube are 11 racially offensive Warner Brothers cartoons that have not been shown in an authorized release since 1968.

The cartoons, known as the 'Censored 11,' have been unavailable to the public for 40 years.

... These cartoons were controversial when first released; the N.A.A.C.P. unsuccessfully protested "Coal Black" before it was shown in 1943. Richard McIntire, the director of communications for the N.A.A.C.P., wrote in an e-mail message that 'the cartoons are despicable. We encourage the films' owners to maintain them as they are -- that is, locked away in their vaults.'"

What do you think? Should the clips be removed and "locked away in their vaults"? Or are they culturally and historically relevant -- no matter how racially insensitive?

 
April 29, 2008

Rev. Wright: Pariah or Prince?

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For this latest installment of "Speak Your Mind," we have two submissions about Rev. Jeremiah Wright's reemergence in the media and political landscape. First up: graduate student Jarrod Loadholt, then we hear from columnist Mary C. Curtis.

Reverend Wright's full-throated defense of the Black Protestant Experience and the historic exploration of the roots of the Prophetic Tradition was illuminating and, at times, downright impressive.

Wright provided not only much-needed contextualizing of his most controversial comments but also a more balanced depiction of the tremendous work that Trinity United Church of Christ does in Chicago's Southside. It is my hope that at least some of the working press infers from Wright's depiction of his congregation a definitive answer to "20-year question" that has often been posed to Senator Obama.

Jarrod Loadholt

Jarrod Loadholt

Clearly, a man working as a community organizer would define the scope of and find value in a community-based organization on the scale of Trinity far beyond that of the occasional divisive rhetoric of its former pastor.

Despite Reverend Wright's impressive chronicling of the Black Church experience, I was profoundly troubled by what was, essentially, a respondent mischaracterization to the media's gross mischaracterization of Wright.

To depict the media's response on Wright as a wholesale assault on the Black Church is premised on a questionable assumption. Responsible commentators were not usually making stylistic critiques of Wright's sermons, and despite their de-contextualized and often ill-informed perspectives, their critiques were nonetheless substantive and not stylistic.

Further, the crux of Wright's argument assumes that the Black Liberation Theology and the Prophetic Tradition is the Black Church, when in fact they remain but particular schools of though within the Black Religious Tradition.

Oddly, Wright himself comments on the "multi-layered and rich tapestry of the black religious experience" and yet puts forth a unitary conception of the black church as predominantly one informed by Black Liberation Theology.

The "prosperity gospel", Black Liberation Theology and Black Evangelicism all occupy spaces within the multi-layered tapestry that Wright alludes to but oddly departs from.

Jarrod Loadholt, a native of Orangeburg, S.C., is a joint degree student in law and public policy at New York University's School of Law and Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government.


Memo to the Rev. Jeremiah Wright: You need to stop talking -- now.

I know that's a tough thing to ask. When you've seen your service to your faith and your community ignored, and your life reduced to an inflammatory 30-second sound bite, you want to tell your story.

When you are called unpatriotic and un-American after years in the military, you want to challenge everything people think they know about you.
Mary C. Curtis

Mary C. Curtis

But although Barack Obama is the one running for president, you, Reverend Wright are the story.

For now, you have lost control of your message. It is not about the work your church does for the hungry and poor, for senior citizens and those with HIV-AIDS.

Every time you speak -- to Bill Moyers, the Detroit NAACP or the National Press Club -- news shows will rerun incendiary clips that have come to define you and threaten to define Obama, making him just what America fears -- an angry black man.

It's not fair, but it is America in 2008, progressing -- ever so slowly -- on issues of race and difference.

Hillary Clinton, John McCain and commentators will pile on and who can blame them. This is politics.

Lost are issues of health care, jobs and the economy.

Many of those in your pews have sons and daughters in Iraq and Afghanistan. Yet your place center stage crowds out discussion of these issues you care about.

You seemed to dismiss Obama's condemnation of your fiery moments in the pulpit by calling him a politician. That showed far less loyalty to him than he showed to you when he refused to renounce you, his former pastor.

Now Obama is defending your right to talk about what you really believe in.

He won't tell you to go away for a time. I will.

This is a historic moment, but it doesn't belong to you. It doesn't belong to the black church.

You say you hope this controversy sparks a dialogue. That may be. But you are not the person to lead it.

Mary C. Curtis is a columnist for The Charlotte Observer. Curtis was a 2006 Nieman Fellow at Harvard University. In addition to writing her twice-weekly column, which is syndicated nationally on the McClatchy Newspapers wire, Curtis contributes to the Nieman Watchdog blog and offers occasional commentary on National Public Radio.


If you have a "Speak Your Mind" submission, leave us a comment and we'll contact you. Remember -- the range of topics is totally unrestricted. But all submissions have to adhere to our guidelines.

 

Morning Headlines: Rev. Wright Press Tour Analysis

Rev. Wright

The cover of the 'New York Post' on April 29, 2008.

Here's just a sample of what some of the nation's papers and editorial writers have to say about Rev. Jeremiah Wright's recent media blitz:

New York Post: Fiery Rev. O's Cross to Bear -- "Barack Obama's worst nightmare ... delivered his most brutal wallop to his pal's campaign ..."

Chicago Tribune: Wright's Curious Mission -- "By the end of Wright's performance, you had to wonder if he was trying to torpedo Obama's bid for the Democratic presidential nomination."

Chicago Sun-Times: Wright's Words Could Leave Obama's Campaign in Pieces -- "Instead of dousing the flames, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright Jr. has rekindled the fire ..."

Bob Herbert: The Pastor Casts a Shadow -- "The Rev. Jeremiah Wright went to Washington on Monday not to praise Barack Obama, but to bury him."

Washington Post: The Audacity of Rev. Wright -- "...it is the Rev. Wright, not Mr. Obama, who yesterday chose to further discredit himself."

Eugene Robinson: Where Wright Goes Wrong -- "This media tour he's conducting is doing a disservice that goes beyond any impact it might have on Obama's presidential campaign."

George Will: A Pastor at Center Stage -- "[Wright] is a demagogue with whom Obama has had a voluntary 20-year relationship."

How do you think this situation play out? What's your impression of Rev. Wright? Is he intentionally trying to throw Obama's campaign off the rails?

 
April 28, 2008

Planned Parenthood Accused of Targeting Blacks

Allegations of racism have been dogging the reproductive advocacy group Planned Parenthood lately, spurred by bloggers and a string of YouTube videos. [It was even mentioned (briefly) today by one of our bloggers' roundtable guests.]

At issue: claims that the group targets black babies for abortions.

The Christian Post has what seems to be the most objective reporting available:

"A pro-life student group at UCLA has released a series of shocking videos over the past few weeks that it claims proves that Planned Parenthood, the nation's largest provider of surgical abortions, is racist and deliberately targets minority groups for abortions.

According to the student group, which calls itself The Advocate, during telephone conversations with representatives at Planned Parenthood facilities in Idaho, Oklahoma, Ohio, New Mexico, and three other soon-to-be-disclosed states, UCLA students posed as racists who railed against affirmative action and requested to make donations to "abort black babies," because of what they described as "the less black kids out there the better."

None of the callers, according to The Advocate, were turned down.

... Planned Parenthood, however, has been quick to deny the "authenticity" of what they called "edited" tapes, and argued that their organization was one that "denounces racial bias" and "helps all individuals -- regardless of gender, race, or sexual orientation."

... According to the student group, 14 million African-American babies have been aborted since 1973, constituting the largest source of African-American deaths, exceeding that of terrorism, cancer, AIDS, and heart disease combined."

Related: Black Pastors Protest Planned Parenthood

UPDATE (5/5/08): Planned Parenthood has provided us with written statements, regarding the April protest and the allegations on the YouTube video. Read both in their entirety after the jump.

Continue reading "Planned Parenthood Accused of Targeting Blacks" »

 

Black is the New Black

"It's an open secret in the fashion industry: black models rarely get jobs on catwalks, in magazines and on billboards. According to executives, they do not inspire women to spend money.

... Now a counterattack to the racism of the fashion industry is coming from an unlikely source: Vogue Italia. The July issue of the fearsomely cutting-edge quarterly will feature black models almost exclusively, shot by the photographer Steven Meisel."

Read the rest. Will it sell?

 

Wright Back in the Spotlight: For Better or Worse?

Rev. Wright

Rev. Jeremiah Wright addresses the National Press Club on April 28, 2008.

Chip Somodevilla, Getty Images

Rev. Wright went on a weekend media tour -- appearing on PBS Friday, a televised event for the NAACP on Sunday, and speaking before the National Press Club today.

We dissected the impact on today's show. Listen and continue the conversation here. Why is Wright speaking out now? What's your reaction to his defense? How will it impact the race for the White House?

For more, USA Today has audio excerpts of Wright's comments to the National Press Club and a wrap-up of some of the resulting press coverage.

Related Links:
Karl Rove on Rev. Wright's Latest Comments
McCain Tries to Have It Both Ways on Rev. Wright
Rev. Wright Breaks Silence--and Obama's Campaign?

 

4 Years in the White House, 40 Years on the Face

McCain, Obama or Clinton ... whoever wins is going to age somethin' SERIOUS in those four years. The folks at PopPhoto peer into the future. Here's more via The Huffington Post. Check it out.

 

No Unrest, Uproar in Sean Bell Trial Fallout

Sean Bell Protest

Supporters of Sean Bell demonstrate in the streets of New York City after the verdict was announced in the Bell shooting trial.

Spencer Platt, Getty Images

The New York Times describes the response to the Sean Bell verdict this way:

"Unlike some previous verdicts in police shootings, the acquittals in the Bell case have so far been largely met with a muted response. Thousands of protesters did not fill the streets, no unrest ensued."

What was your reaction to the acquittals? To what do you attribute the reaction as mentioned above?

We took a closer look at this case -- and the fallout -- on today's bloggers' roundtable segment. Listen, and tell us what you think.

Related Links:
Sharpton Vows to 'Close This City' After Officer Acquittals
In Case of Sean Bell, Where Did the Prosecution Go Wrong?
Text of the Judge's Comments in Sean Bell Case

 
April 25, 2008

Happy Weekend ... and Music

It's been a great week for us musically. For upcoming shows, we taped interviews with Malian artist Habib Koite and R&B-with-a-twist-er Lyfe Jennings. Stay tuned for those.

There's been plenty of hard news for us to cover this week, including the verdict in the Sean Bell case. But I also ALWAYS enjoy our tour through pop culture with Allison Samuels. We talked about "BeyonceJay"'s wedding, Star Jones' divorce, and more.

But it's about that time to r-e-l-a-x.

So, do that ... and enjoy the video of Youssou N'Dour playing at World Malaria Day at the UN.

 
April 24, 2008

Scientists Under Fire for Sewage Sludge Study

Scientists, conducting federally funded research, spread fertilizer made from human and industrial wastes on the lawns of poor, black Baltimore families.

The researchers say the fertilizer was harmless. But the story still raises questions about informed consent -- whether people really understood what they were getting into -- and how to work within the context of communities that may be suspicious of the motives of scientists.

Today, we got two sides of the story from Associated Press reporter John Heilprin, who recently co-authored a major article on the sludge study. We spoke with Dr. Michael Klag, dean of the Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University, which was one of the organizations affiliated with the sludge study.

Was it good science or bad policy?
Take a listen and let us know what you think.

 

Florida's License to Believe

Florida may allow its drivers to purchase this specialty license plate:

License

Here's more from the Associated Press:

Rep. Edward Bullard, the plate's sponsor, said people who "believe in their college or university" or "believe in their football team" already have license plates they can buy. The new design is a chance for others to put a tag on their cars with "something they believe in," he said.

If the plate is approved, Florida would become the first state to have a license plate featuring a religious symbol that's not part of a college logo. Approval would almost certainly face a court challenge.

The problem with the state manufacturing the plate is that it "sends a message that Florida is essentially a Christian state" and, second, gives the "appearance that the state is endorsing a particular religious preference," said Howard Simon, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida.

What do you think?

 
April 23, 2008

Hillary Wins PA; Democratic Fight Continues

Hillary Clinton

Hillary Clinton and her husband, former president Bill Clinton, embrace at a celebration on the night of the Pennsylvania primary.

Robyn Beck, AFP/Getty Images

Hillary Clinton scored a much-needed win in Pennsylvania's hotly contested Democratic primary. CNN has more analysis:

"Clinton's 10-point margin of victory was larger than recent polls had shown; all had her winning but some of them showed only 4 or 5 percentage points between the candidates. But because Democratic delegates are allotted proportionally according to the vote, Clinton's Pennsylvania win does little to cut into Obama's lead among pledged delegates or his advantage in the popular vote count."

Did race play a role in Obama's loss? At least one blogger thinks so:

"And the exit polls show, again, that one in four Clinton voters claim they would not vote for Obama in November -- for whatever reason. And she got 70% of the white, blue-collar vote in most regions, including the area of central Pennsylvania where I spent a lot of time growing up and heard many a racist remark.

Here's the money quote from a New York Times analysis of the exit polls: 'Sixteen percent of white voters said race mattered in deciding who they voted for, and just 54 percent of those voters said they would support Mr. Obama in a general election; 27 percent of them said they would vote for Mr. McCain if Mr. Obama was the Democratic nominee, and 16 percent said they would not vote at all.'"

What do you think about the results and what it means for the Democrats heading forward?

Reaction from Our Regular Bloggers:
The Field Negro: The Bill and Hillary Show Continues
Cobb: "It's not over til it's over..."
All About Race: "Barack Obama made it too easy for her ..."
Three Brothers and a Sister: "[Obama] needs to take a long hard look at the numbers ... they point to major deficiencies ..."
Jack and Jill Politics: "Don't believe the MSM lie ..."

Related Links:
Reuters: McCain Content to Let Democrats Keep Fighting
Washington Post: Decisive Win Can't Forestall A Daunting Task
Politico: Why Clinton Won Pennsylvania
New York Times: The Low Road to Victory
Politico: Obama Can't Shake Off Clinton

 
April 22, 2008

Should John McCain Court Black Voters?

John McCain

Sen. John McCain speaks during the Associated Press Annual Meeting on April 14, 2008.

Alex Wong, Getty Images

Presumptive Republican presidential nominee John McCain kicked off a tour of the nation's "forgotten places" -- as the Democrats are still working out who will face him in the fall.

The New York Times has more:

"... in a speech delivered against the backdrop of one of the great symbols of the civil rights movement, the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Ala., Mr. McCain, the presumptive Republican nominee, promised to hear voters concerns and be 'the president of all the people,' including those who supported his competitors.

Mr. McCain was framed in camera shots by the bridge where white police officers beat black demonstrators trying to march to Montgomery in 1965, and where Senators Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama converged last year to commemorate the marchers. ...

Mr. McCain's advisers devised the weeklong trip as an effort to show that a Republican can appeal to some traditional Democratic voters, or at least to get Mr. McCain credit for trying. The trip is also an attempt to attract a fraction of attention to Mr. McCain's campaign during a week when the political center of the world is Pennsylvania's Democratic primary showdown between Mrs. Clinton and Mr. Obama."

Republicans caught the ire of many black bloggers for skipping a debate on minority issues some months ago.

Now some bloggers are criticizing McCain for making the trip to Alabama, considering his vote against MLK Day in 1983.

What do you think?

 

Insert the Caption

Consider this "a very special" Insert the Caption -- Pennsylvania primary style. Here, Barack Obama and his wife, Michelle, eat breakfast at Pamela's Diner in Pittsburgh today, as polls opened in Pennsylvania.

Barack and Michelle
Emmanuel Dunand, AFP/Getty Images

What's really going on here? And while we're on the topic ... what do you think will be the outcome of today's voting?

 

Just When You've Had Enough of Public Transit ...

Consider that it could be far worse. Like this:

 

How Green Are You?

If you haven't heard, today is Earth Day.

Thanks, in part, to Al Gore, "going green" has gone mainstream, but that doesn't mean it's easy ... or cheap.

What do you do, if anything, to be environmentally friendly?

Related: Going Green on the Cheap

 

The Family That Fights Together, Stays Together ...

If ever there were an award for the most shameful story of the week ...

Police arrested a high school student and her mother on battery and other charges after the girl's teacher was brutally attacked. Atlanta police charged Georgia Thornton and her daughter, Sequita, with attacking Felicia Williams, a teacher at Southside High School.

The AJC has the rest.

 
April 21, 2008

Fighting Violence, Promoting Political Engagement

Jamira Burley

Jamira Burley, a 19-year-old freshman in the Fox School of Business, works to end violence in Philadelphia.

Photo by Kelly & Massa

Today, as part of our conversation about the primary in Pennsylvania, we got a chance to talk to Jamira Burley.

She almost didn't agree to come on the show because she was concerned she'd be late for class. And while some other students might LOVE an excuse to get out of class, Jamira isn't just any student.

Jamira is one of her parents' 17 children.She's also the first person in her family to finish high school, and the first to go to college.

Her brother was shot to death during her sophomore year. She co-founded a group called Panther Peace Core which trains Philly high school students in conflict resolution. She even got a $50,000 grant from the state to expand the program.

Jamira is 19, and this is the first election in which she's eligible to vote. Not only is she planning to vote, she's also gotten some of her older siblings who've NEVER voted -- and who thought voting was meaningless -- to sign up and get on board.

 

Clinton, Obama Trade Last-Minute Barbs in PA

We're counting down to tomorrow's crucial Democratic primary in Pennsylvania.

If these latest ads are any indication, Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama are certainly feeling the heat. Take a look and tell us what you think ...

Clinton's New Ad: "Kitchen"

Obama's New Ad: "He Has What It Takes"

 

Black Colleges Need More Alumni Support

Graduation

iStockphoto.com

We're back from our weeklong trip to Atlanta! As you may know, we spent part of the week broadcasting from Clark Atlanta University. CAU is part of the historically black Atlanta University Center, which also includes Morehouse and Spelman Colleges.

HBCUs have a storied history of pumping out black professionals, but more and more alumni aren't giving back.

AOL Black Voices has more:

In one example, administrators plan computer network upgrades allowing for more targeted online giving at Atlanta's prestigious Morehouse College, where alumni contributions dipped from about 3.1 million dollars in 2006 to 1.3 million dollars last year. ... Meanwhile, predominantly white universities are pushing harder to attract high-achieving black students. Often, it's with the type of scholarships alumni dollars fund.

Did you attend an HBCU? If so, when was the last time you sent your school a check? And how should alumni affairs staffers appeal to graduates for support?

 
April 17, 2008

What Did You Think of ABC's Democratic Debate?

Did you see last night's Democratic debate, hosted by ABC News? In the morning-after analysis, it's getting panned by most ...

Here's a sampling:
Worst. Debate. Ever.
The ABC Debate: A Shameful Night for the U.S. Media
ABC Hosts Heckled After Debate

USA Today has a wrap-up of blogger criticism.

But the New York Times' David Brooks gave ABC an "A."

What did you think?

 
April 16, 2008

Live, from Atlanta, It's News & Notes!

So we had our first ever, live town-hall style show today. We focused in on the youth vote and hip-hop politics. Our guests included the President of the Atlanta City Council, the head of Spelman's chapter of the NAACP, and DJ Drama (who we interviewed last year about the legalities of mixtapes).

All of our guests were thoughtful and sometimes surprising. Check it out.

I want to give major props to our crew here ... both the folks we brought from LA and DC and the staff from WCLK, Clark Atlanta University, and Georgia Public Broadcasting.

We are doing one more live show from Atlanta, this time on Friday. I am not sure how many spaces we have left in the audience. We're serving lunch at noon and then do the show at 1PM. If you'd like to go, you can go to gpb.org, click on News and Notes and RSVP.

It's been great meeting some of the wonderful friends and fans we have out here. Thanks for the hospitality! Check out some of our photos from the road.

 
April 15, 2008

Politicians: When Do Reporters Cross the Line?

In one of my previous lives ... okay, jobs ... I remember sitting in a swank New York hotel bar fighting with Gary Hart. I don't mean hair-pulling, punch-throwing fight, but the verbal equivalent. A friend of mine had invited me to drinks with the two-time presidential candidate. If you're my age or older, you may remember Hart all but daring reporters in 1988 to find out whether he was having an affair. To quote him directly, he said:

"Follow me around. I don't care. I'm serious. If anybody wants to put a tail on me, go ahead. They'll be very bored."

Well, the political reporters took him at his word. Eventually, pictures of him frolicking on the deck of a boat called the Monkey Business with Model Donna Rice (NOT his wife) hit the covers of national papers. He ended up going from being a frontrunner to dropping out of the race.

So flash forward roughly a decade. I'm at this bar with a group of political reporters and consultants ... and Hart. Hart started railing against the media. And I basically told him: look, you DARED people to find out if you were cheating. And you were. So why are you mad they did their job?

Thus, a very, uh ... lively ... conversation ensued. Hart -- and I won't use the exact words because I don't want to get them wrong (but they were highbrow, not profane) -- basically said I had the mindset of a Neanderthal.

Anyway ... why am I talking about Gary Hart? Well, today we kicked off our broadcasts from Atlanta with an interview with Mayor Shirley Franklin of Atlanta. She was named one of the best mayors in the country by Time magazine; is ably dealing with a fiscal shortfall facing the city of Atlanta ... and the drought ... and the real estate market. And she is also the mother of children including Kai Franklin. Recently, Kai Franklinreceived probation for a financial transaction linked to her husband's drug deals.

Shirley Franklin

Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin speaks with Farai Chideya.

Geoffrey Bennett, NPR

Now, as we did the research on Mayor Franklin, we debated whether or not to ask her about her daughter. We did, and the Mayor's response was blunt, direct, and refreshing -- in essence, that she will not run for another term as mayor at least in part because she does not want her children and grandchildren to have to deal with the media's glare.

And I certainly want everyone who listens to this interview to listen closely to Mayor Franklin's astute strategy on issues like the drought and the economic downturn facing the city. But I also would like to know what you think about asking personal questions. Is it fair game, or too much?

Mayor Franklin noted that this prosecution was not about her personally (unlike the situation involving, say New York's Elliot Spitzer or Detroit's Kwame Kilpatrick) but about her adult child. What I was hoping to get at, and what I asked, was how she dealt as both a mayor and a mother with the issue of drugs. Again, she answered ably. And I personally think our exchange was useful -- if difficult -- journalism.

So: what do you think? What is fair game, and what is off limits? How do you react when you hear a reporter ask a question of a personal nature?

Meanwhile, tomorrow we have our first-ever live town hall format show from the campus of Clark Atlanta University. We certainly hope you'll tune in.

 

Delta, Northwest in Merger Talks

Delta Airlines -- which has its headquarters in Atlanta -- is making big news: the company has announced plans to merge with Northwest, becoming the world's largest airline.

The industry is in dire straits. "Since Christmas, five small airlines have shut down. Last week, Denver-based Frontier Airlines sought Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection," writes USA Today.

On the heels of this news, some analysts expect United to pursue a deal with Continental.

What do you think of this merger? Good for business? Or is the lack of competition bad for your wallet? And while we're on the topic, have any air travel nightmares to share?

 

Obama, Clinton Spar Over 'Bitter, Elitist' Remarks

It's the latest theme in the presidential media cycle: Barack Obama's characterization of some small-town Pennsylvania voters as "bitter" and Hillary Clinton and John McCain's attempts to paint him as "elitist" and "out of touch."

Obama counterpunched, but Clinton already has a new ad ready to hit the airwaves:

UPDATE: Obama's new ad, in response ...

[Here's an interesting look at how this whole thing got started.] Now according to the AP, "more [Pennsylvanians] seem to think it was no big deal."

What do you think? How will this latest dust-up play out?

 
April 14, 2008

Live from Cold-Lanta

Hey folks:

As Geoff mentioned in the previous post we're here on the ground in Hotlanta, which TOTALLY is not living up to its name today. Its 44 degrees! I mean, my blood has thinned since I moved from New York to California four years ago, but it's not just that I'm cold ... it's that I'm cold in Atlanta.

Okay, enough whining. I love being out in the field. There is nothing that compares with seeing how people live where they live. This is such an amazing and diverse country and I wish more of us would get out and see it. My guesstimate is that I've been to forty-five of the fifty states in the course of my twenty years of reporting. I definitely have not been to the Dakotas or to Wyoming.

As far as cities go, Atlanta is a great place to report on and from. The city's dealing with the real estate market; a drought; and a budget shortfall. On the positive side it has some of Americas best historically black colleges (HBCUs), a strong black business and arts community, and a great news culture (the Pulitzer-winning Atlanta Journal-Constitution and CNN just to name a few).

We'll keep feeding you tidbits from the road ... and if you're in the ATL and have ideas for us to cover OR want to attend one of our live shows on Wednesday or Friday, please let us know.

 

Taking It to the ATL

News & Notes is in Atlanta this week, and our series of special reports begins tomorrow and carries through Friday. (We've got a live townhall meeting scheduled for Wednesday ... more about that later.)

We just returned from City Hall, where Farai had a revealing one-on-one with Mayor Shirley Franklin. (You can check that out on the show tomorrow.) Then, we talked with local cab drivers -- many of whom are African immigrants -- about adjusting to life in the States.

Since we'll be on the road all week, we may not be able to post as consistently as we'd like, but don't let that stop the conversation. Feel free to post here or hit us up on our Facebook page.

Now off to Paschal's for some chicken, greens and sweet tea. In the meantime ...

 
April 11, 2008

Tavis Smiley Quits 'Tom Joyner Morning Show'

We assume some of you listen to Tom Joyner's show only when you aren't listening to NPR ... but TransWorldNews has this late-breaking story ...

"Tavis Smiley reportedly quit his weekly political commentary position with the Tom Joyner Morning Show on Friday.

The move was announced on air on the show Friday morning. However, the exact reasons for his resignation were not determined.

Smiley became a frequent commentator on the Tom Joyner Morning Show, a nationally syndicated radio show broadcast on African-American stations, in 1996."

On his blog, Roland Martin hints that it might have something to do with the backlash Smiley experienced for his criticism of Barack Obama. What do you think?

UPDATE: Tom Joyner on Tavis:

"The real reason [he is leaving] is that he can't take the hate he's been getting regarding the Barack issue -- hate from the black people that he loves so much. He needed to feel the love."

 
April 10, 2008

Congressional Salaries, Trips and Finances -- All Online

Another sign of the digital age ... a new site called Legistorm has caused an uproar for posting congressional staffers' salaries, trips, and financial disclosures on the Web.

Though the info is in the public record, it is typically made available upon written request. Never before has it been served up for public consumption like this.

Some on Capitol Hill are furious because sensitive information -- including children's names, home addresses, and bank account information -- wasn't redacted in these files ... but apparently that is how the government provided the information to Legistorm.

What do you think? Is this level of transparency good for democracy? Or is it just another form of Internet voyeurism?

And if you are curious ... here's a link to the info. Happy hunting!

 

Here's A Story You Don't Often Hear

Tony Cox and Kevin Figgers

Tony Cox (left) and Kevin Figgers (right) photographed at the studios of NPR West.

Bettina Wiesenthal-Birch, NPR

After today's Sports Bloggers Roundtable, the producers were all teasing me as I walked from the studio back to my office. That's because I had the biggest grin on my face.

Kevin Figgers put it there.

I invited Kevin to be on the show with me because I believe in him, and I know that sports is his first love and that he would step up, if just given the opportunity. Boy, did he step up. He was poised, prepared, funny, personable and professional.

When's the last time you read or saw the media describe a 19-20 year old black male in those terms who wasn't an athlete?

Kevin graduated from an inner-city high school in Los Angeles in 2005, escaping gang violence, low test scores and low expectations. He's studying broadcast journalism at California State University, Los Angeles and lives at home. You might not even notice him in a room full of people, he's so quiet. But not today.

Kevin is one of my students, and the first one I'd ever dared to bring on the air with me. Student-professor relationships can often be tricky, and ought to be handled with care. After all, this wasn't a classroom assignment or school project.

This is where I work. I take it seriously and am trying to teach that responsibility to students like Kevin. He was excited about the invitation and jumped at the chance to be on the radio. And he was wonderful. Listen to him, if you get the chance, and judge for yourself. Today was proof that some of our young black men are listening to us, and they deserve an opportunity.

I was proud.

 

Oprah's Popularity Takes a Hit; Obama to Blame?

Oprah at an Obama fundraiser

Oprah Winfrey addresses an Obama rally in February 2008.

Valerie Macon, AFP/Getty Images

The Queen of Daytime Talk may need to straighten up her crown. A handful of public perception polls show Oprah Winfrey's favorability ratings on the decline -- and some are linking it to her public support of Barack Obama.

On May 1, 2007, Oprah -- who had never before endorsed a political candidate -- announced her support of Obama on CNN's Larry King Live. Here's more from Politico.com:

"Almost instantly, Oprah's popularity in America plummeted. An August 2007 CBS News poll showed only 61 percent of Americans were favorably disposed to her -- a considerable drop of 13 percentage points from a similar survey conducted just seven months prior. An October 2007 Gallup/USA Today poll that showed Oprah with a slightly higher 66 percent favorability still reflected a drop.


But by the time Fox News/Opinion Dynamics asked Americans about their attitudes toward Oprah in a survey conducted about 10 days later, Dec. 18-19, Oprah's favorability ratings had dropped even further -- to 55 percent -- the lowest level of favorability ever registered for Oprah in opinion surveys. Oprah's negatives also spiked, with one in three respondents (33 percent) reporting unfavorable impressions of her.


The results of a March 26, 2008, AOL Television popularity poll of television hosts reveal Americans may now embrace Ellen DeGeneres over Oprah by a wide margin."

What do you think? Is it an Obama backlash? Or is something else at play here?

More Political Headlines:
Thousands Turn Out For Clinton Fundraising Concert
Edwards's Wife Backs Clinton on Healthcare
On the Stump, McCain Outlines Differences with Bush
Powell Praises Obama's Handling of Rev. Wright Controversy
Obama's Pennsylvania Strategy: 'Inevitability 2.0'
Gay Press Frustrated by Obama Approach

 

Roscoe's Wins Chicken and Waffle War

Roscoes

A chicken and waffle plate from Roscoe's House of Chicken' n Waffles in Los Angeles.

LWY, Flickr Creative Commons

Like McDonald's and McDowell's ... but worse ...

"Last month a restaurant calling itself Rosscoe's House of Chicken and Waffles opened in Chicago. That's "Rosscoe's," you understand, with a double S. Immediately, Los Angeles' famous Roscoe's House of Chicken n Waffles sued for copyright infringement, and a Chicago court has ordered Rosscoe's to remove every trace of that name from the place by the end of business next Wednesday. The owner will change the name to Chicago's House of Chicken and Waffles.

The problem wasn't just the name. Rosscoe's had the same logo as Roscoe's (a chicken standing in front of a waffle) and served drinks named Sun Rise and Sunset, just as Roscoe's does."

Read the rest.

 
April 9, 2008

Have You Managed to Hold Onto Your Home?

For an upcoming show segment, we're looking for people who've weathered the troubled housing market and managed to hold onto their homes despite trick mortgages, cash shortfalls or lender defaults. If you fit the bill and want to share your experience on our show, we'd like to hear from you. Leave us a comment below, and we'll be in touch.

 

Haitians Riot Over Sharply Rising Food Prices

Haiti protests

Haitians run through the streets during demonstrations in Port-au-Prince against the cost of living in Haiti.

Thony Belizaire, AFP/Getty Images

Riots and unrest have thrown parts of Haiti into chaos, as people protest the high cost of living and sharply rising food prices.

The AP describes the scene on the ground:

"On Wednesday, police cleared away torched cars and other debris left by two days of looting and rioting. But helicopters circled the air amid black smoke rising from intersections as protesters continued to set tires ablaze, and gunfire was heard throughout Petionville, where many diplomats and foreigners live.

Several people have been injured by bullets and rocks in the capital, including a Haitian police officer, U.N. police spokesman Fred Blaise said. Five people have been killed in food riots in the southern city of Les Cayes, where protesters tried to burn down the U.N. compound last week."

The article also points out this interesting fact:

"Food prices, which have risen 40 percent on average globally since mid-2007, are causing unrest around the world. But they pose a particular threat to democracy in Haiti, where most people live on less than US$2 (euro1.27) a day."

Related: UN: Food Costs Threaten Haiti Stability

What should be done to stabilize the country? If you have family or friends in Haiti, what have they told you about the conditions there?

 
April 8, 2008

'News & Notes' Is Heading to the ATL!

Atlanta Skyline

iStockphoto.com

Next week, News & Notes will be broadcasting from Atlanta, Ga. If you live in the city and want to flag us to a story, person, or place you think deserves attention, let us know!

Please be sure to leave an accurate e-mail address, in case we need to follow up. [It will not be made public.]

 

How's Journalism Doing?

Farai Chideya Lots of us in the business are asking that question ... for selfish AND altruistic reasons.

Last week, Newsweek announced it was buying out over a hundred key employees.

I started my career as a Newsweek summer intern in 1989, and went on to work there full time for four years. I learned so so much there, although the racial environment was ... complicated. (It always is.)

So many of the people who took the buyout taught me how to be a journalist: how to get your calls out early; how to deal with hostile sources; even to be brave and sure of myself when traveling alone. I got to do so many amazing things, including going as a press pool reporter on Air Force One.

Now, a recent article in the New York Times (which we discussed on air) noted how few outlets are even sending press reporters on the presidential campaign trail. It costs too much. It costs too much to have feet-on-the-street journalism, I suppose.

I could give you a whole dissertation on media economics, but this is the short form: everything has gone digital; the big companies don't know how to shift their revenue models; some media companies (or their parent companies) are expecting a 25 percent return instead of the single digit returns they used to expect; so they are faced with adding digital infrastructure AND declining revenues from traditional models AND desperation AND ... that means people are getting fired. En masse.

While we are having the most important political election of our times; the housing market is collapsing; and the war rages. While we have SO MUCH NEED for good journalism, some of the people who actually have the best skills are leaving or being forced out of the business.

That's the bad part.

The good part is that there are also bright spots of innovation and success, including blogs that do original reporting; the smarter news-entertainment hybrid shows (Iike The Daily Show and Real Time with Bill Maher); student journalism; and the many traditional news organizations and reporters that are still trying to build a community of informed listeners/readers/viewers ... and (via blogs and other media) user-participants.

Also, the announcement this week of the Pulitzer Prizes spurred this article by Washington Post bloggerJoel Achenbach, which read in part.

The [Washington] Post has just won six Pulitzer Prizes, which looks like a typo. It was a newsroom-wide triumph -- Metro, National, Investigative, Foreign, Financial, Magazine. Within that Variety Pack of journalism, there's a common ingredient -- something we too seldom discuss when we cogitate about how to reinvent the business model: Reporting.

Original reporting still matters. It's probably our best gimmick. It's what we do (imperfectly to be sure) better than anyone else in the news business. It also can't be easily replaced on the cheap by some other information-delivery system.

Our role at News & Notes is a hybrid. Although we do some original reporting, we also rely on a lot of guests who spend weeks, months, even years generating investigative reports and books.

I love hitting the road -- as we will when we go to Atlanta next week. But I also love the idea that we can do something to highlight the great work that's being done by so many reporters at such a critical time.

 

Update: Condi as VP? Not So Fast

 
“I very much look forward to watching this campaign and voting as a voter.”
 
 

"The GOP must be very desperate to consider Condoleezza Rice as a VP candidate."

"It would make a great reality show, sitcom, or movie. Wasn't Bush bad enough?"

"If she's McCain's pick, GAME OVER. The Dems will rise from the grave to stand in line to take a shot at that ticket."

"As a political choice, choosing Condoleezza Rice as a VP candidate seems to be a strong one."

"This entire scenario smacks of the repub media machine floating a name to see what the response will be."

That's what some of you had to say about the possibility of Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice potentially pursuing the Republican vice presidential spot. But it's over before it got started. According to the AP, Rice "stressed Tuesday that she has no aspirations to join John McCain as his running mate."

After her tenure is up, Rice says, "I am going back to Stanford, back to California, west of the Mississippi. I very much look forward to watching this campaign and voting as a voter."

Related: Eugene Robinson Op-Ed -- Run, Condi, Run!

 

Casting Couch Picks: The Obama Life Story - Part II

Following up on this post about who should star in an Obama biopic ... several people have suggested that actor Harry Lennix (Fox's 24) would make a better Barack Obama than Will Smith.

On second look ... I think you guys got that one right.

Obama and Harry Lennix

(Photo Credit: Getty Images and IMDB.com)

 

NAACP Claims Racial Bias in 'Barbie Bandits' Case

Barbie Bandit Case

Heather Lyn Johnston, (left), was sentenced to 10 years probation. Bank teller Benny Allen III, (right), was given five years in jail and five on probation.

Courtesy Jessica McGowan, Atlanta Journal-Constitution

"When four people are involved in the same crime and those who happen to be Caucasian receive much less time than those who are African American, this reflects a problem in the justice system that must be addressed," said Edward DuBose, head of Georgia's chapter of the NAACP.

DuBose is talking about the so-called Barbie Bandits bank heist case, which has dominated the news around Atlanta. Here's more from the AJC:

"The Feb. 27, 2007, heist at a Bank of America branch involved four people: two young white women and a black male bank teller -- who admitted their roles -- and another black man convicted by a jury of planning the job."

Here's what happened: one of the girls was sentenced to two years in jail, followed by eight years probation. The other girl got 10 years probation. [Prosecutors had recommended both be sentenced to three years in jail and seven years of probation.]

Of the two men involved in the case ... one -- who was on probation for a drug conviction and was said to be uncooperative with prosecutors -- received five years in jail. The other man -- who is serving 15 years on unrelated drug-trafficking charges -- was ordered to complete another 10 years in jail for the bank theft.

Is this a case of racial bias?

Do the men's prior convictions make a difference? Should the sentences handed down in this case reflect each person's role in the crime? Or should each sentence be the same across the board?

 

States in Budget Crunch Consider Freeing Prisoners

Handcuffs

iStockphoto.com
"Lawmakers from California to Kentucky are trying to save money with a drastic and potentially dangerous budget-cutting proposal: releasing tens of thousands of convicts from prison, including drug addicts, thieves and even violent criminals."

That's the focus of News & Notes lead story today. According to the Associated Press, "at least eight states are considering freeing inmates or sending some convicts to rehabilitation programs instead of prison ... which could save an estimated $450 million in California and Kentucky alone."

At issue: What kind of offenders would be released? What impact would it have on the communities where they live? And what about victim safety? How will releasing them early relieve state budgets?

Listen to the segment, and check out the rest of the AP report and share your thoughts about this controversial issue.

Related Links:
California Prisons Rocked by Problems
U.S. Shifting Prison Focus to Re-entry Into Society

 
April 7, 2008

Condi for VP?

Condoleeza Rice

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is pictured at Banski Dvori, the Governor's Palace, in Zagreb.

Denis Lovrovic, AFP/Getty Images

According to a Republican strategist, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is pursuing the Republican vice presidential spot.

On a Sunday morning political show, Washington insider Dan Senor said Rice recently attended The Americans for Tax Reform meeting, a weekly gathering of high-powered conservative leaders. It was the first time a secretary of state has ever paid such a visit, Senor said.

Senor continued:

"What the McCain campaign has to consider is whether or not they want to pick a total outsider, a fresh face, someone a lot younger than him, a governor who people aren't that familiar with. ... The challenge they're realizing is that they'll have to have to spend 30 to 45 days, which they won't have at that point, educating the American public about who this person is."

For his part, McCain said "he missed those signals" that Rice was interested.

What would you think of a McCain-Rice ticket?

Flasback: Rice: "I Don't Do Politics"

 

Protests Throw Olympic Torch Relay Into Chaos

Olympic torch

A policeman catches a protester who tried to stop the Beijing Olympics torch relay on in Paris.

Patrick Kovarik, AFP/Getty Images

Protests against China's human rights record and the government's links to the violence in Darfur have turned the typically celebratory Olympic torch relay into chaos.

This from the Washington Post:

"Protesters halted the Olympic torch relay in Paris Monday, forcing officials to extinguish the flame at least three times and carry it inside a bus for safety, despite a massive deployment of 3,000 police across the heart of the city. ...By late afternoon Paris time, with the relay hours behind schedule and facing continuous stops by protesters, officials gave up on finding a way to restart the procession. They said the torch would be carried by bus for the rest of the route."

Even presidential candidates are jumping into the mix: Hillary Clinton today encouraged President Bush to boycott the Olympics' opening ceremony ... presumably in an attempt to draw attention away from the resignation of her campaign's chief architect, Mark Penn.

What's your stance on China hosting the Olympic Games?

Flashback: Spielberg Pulls Out of Olympics Over Darfur

 
April 4, 2008

A Beautiful Remembrance of Dr. King

I have to give major props to News & Notes producer Roy Hurst, who put together today's audio montage about Dr. King's death.

We featured top King aid Ambassador Andrew Young, former Assistant Attorney General Roger Wilkins, Democratic political strategist Donna Brazile, poet and educator Haki Madhubuti and author Michael Eric Dyson telling us exactly where they were and how they felt when Rev. King was killed.

We don't do a lot of stories in this format, and I hope you are as captured with its power as I was.

Peace on this day.

 

MLK: 40 Years Later

Martin Luther King, Jr.

Martin Luther King, Jr. photographed at London Airport in 1961.

FPG/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

Today marks the 40th anniversary of the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

We're observing the somber milestone on today's show with firsthand accounts from some of our regular contributors and key players in the Civil Rights Movement, and we'll get an update on the state of black leadership from Michael Eric Dyson.

Extended Coverage:
AOL Black Voices: King Family Photo Album
Afro-American Newspapers: 1968: Remembering the Turmoil
Associated Press: Atlanta, Memphis Mark 40th Anniversary
Think.MTV.com: Friendship Public Charter School Pays Tribute
Atlanta Journal-Constitution Coverage
Memphis Commercial Appeal Coverage

Commentaries:
Alice Bonner, theRoot.com: The Night Washington Burned Black
AllAboutRace.com: 40 Years Ago on a Balcony in Memphis
Michael C. Dawson, theRoot.com: April 4, 1968: Chicago Burned
Jon Friedman, marketwatch.com: How King Should Be Remembered by the Media
Earl Ofari Hutchinson, syndicated: Forty Years Later, Many Still Ask Who Killed King
Dwight Lewis, Nashville Tennessean: Two Ways 'Who Speaks for the Negro?' Resonates
Clarence Page, Chicago Tribune: Promised Land: Are We There?
Ronda Racha Penrice, ebonyjet.com: Eyewitness to Murder or Denials of Conspiracy
Leonard Pitts Jr., Miami Herald: Can You See the Promised Land of Equality?
Mary Sanchez, Kansas City Star: King Had Some Hard Truths to Tell America
Jack White, theRoot.com: Forget the Government Conspiracy
Gary Younge, The Guardian: America Lauds Martin Luther King, But Undermines His Legacy Every Day

Write or link to a commentary of your own below.

 
April 3, 2008

Casting Couch Picks: The Obama Life Story

When we heard Tyler Perry was considering a film script inspired by the life of Michelle Obama ... we took the opportunity to kick around names of actors we'd cast in an Obama biopic.

So, here are our picks.

Obama and Will Smith
As Barack Obama ... Will Smith (this was an easy one)

Michelle Obama and Regina King
As Michelle Obama ... Regina King (in the no-nonsense/loving wife role she knows well)

Hillary Clinton and Meredith Baxter
As Hillary Clinton ... Meredith Baxter (or Cybil Shepperd, but we're still creeped out by her Martha Stewart portrayal)

Marian Robinson and Margaret Avery
As Michelle Obama's Mom (Marian Robinson) ... Margaret Avery (a dead-ringer)

Malia and Sasha Obama and Willow Smith and Jamia Simone Nash
As the Obama Kids (Malia and Sasha) ... Willow Smith and Jamia Simone Nash (the ages are a little off, but still ...)

David Axlerod and James Eckhouse
As Obama Chief Strategist