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Greg Moore Resigns From Denver Post

14-Year Newsroom Leader Says He Has No Plans

Media Debate Blame for Trump’s Rise

Fallout Over NASCAR Leader’s Trump Endorsement

Trump’s Killer Immigrant Ad a ‘Red Herring’

2 at Breitbart Resign After Trump Firestorm

Short Takes


Greg Moore tells the Denver Post staff, “I leave with a grateful heart and no regrets,” and advises those gathered around him to “keep making a difference with the journalism that you do.” (Photos by RJ Sangosti/Denver Post)

14-Year Newsroom Leader Says He Has No Plans

Denver Post editor Gregory L. Moore on Tuesday resigned from the paper he has led through a period of tumult and transformation,” the newspaper reported Tuesday afternoon.

“Moore, 61, who led the paper to four Pulitzer Prizes during his 14-year tenure, will depart on April 1.

” ‘The Denver Post will continue its outstanding work,’ he said. ‘There is strong and stable leadership in place. But it’s time for a fresh voice to lead from the corner office. After 14 years, I’ve decided it’s time for new challenges and I will step down as editor of this great newspaper.’

“Publisher Mac Tully said a national search for Moore’s replacement will begin soon. In the interim, news director Lee Ann Colacioppo will lead the newsroom. She also is a candidate for the job. . . .”

Moore, who came to Denver from the Boston Globe, is among 11 African American top editors at daily newspapers, according to a tally maintained by Don Hudson, executive editor, of the Decatur (Ala.) Daily, for the National Association of Black Journalists.

The others are Kevin Aldridge, editor, Cox Ohio newspapers, Journal-News in Hamilton and Middletown  Journal; Dean Baquet, executive editor, the New York Times; Michael Days, editor, Philadelphia Daily News; Hudson; Avido Khahaifa, editor of the Orlando Sentinel Media Group, recently given the additional title of publisher; Sherrie Marshall, executive editor, Telegraph Media Group, Macon, Ga.; Hollis Towns, executive editor and vice president of news, Asbury Park Press, Neptune, N.J., Mark Rochester, editor, the Herald, Rock Hill, S.C., and Jill Nevels-Haun, executive editor, Monroe (Mich.) News.

John X. Miller, managing editor of the Winston-Salem (N.C.) Journal, announced two weeks ago he was leaving for the Undefeated, the new ESPN website on race, sports and culture.

The Post also wrote, “Moore told the newsroom Tuesday afternoon that he felt some of the paper’s most creative thinking had been done in the face of shrinking resources.”

The recent departure of an editorial writer left editorial page editor Vince Carroll as essentially the Post’s lone editorial writer. “And that means there will be days when publishing a locally written editorial won’t be possible,” as Corey Hutchins reported Feb. 26 for the Columbia Journalism Review.

In 2012, the Post announced that it was eliminating its copy desk. Instead of dedicated copy editors, reporters and assignment editors would be responsible for copy editing duties, which would be spread throughout the newsroom, according to the Knight Center for Journalism in the Americas.

Denver Post staff members listen as Moore announces his resignation, saying, “It’s time for a fresh voice to lead from the corner office.”

Moore told managers before Tuesday’s newsroom meeting, “I couldn’t have asked for a better run — or a better team,” the Post reported.

Westword, an alternative newspaper in Denver, told readers, “We’re told the meeting was announced with little notice, but those who attended immediately knew something important was going on given the presence of cameras, as well as publisher Mac Tully and union head Tony Mulligan.

” ‘All good things must come to an end,’ Moore told the journalists gathered before him, adding, ‘I know many people here thought I would only be here for a short while…but here we are, fourteen years later.’

“Moore stressed that ‘this is something I chose. It was not imposed on me.’

“Nonetheless, Moore made note of the many departures from the staff during his years in charge when referring to a staff photo snapped shortly after the Post won a Pulitzer prize for its coverage of the Aurora theater shooting. . . .”

Westword quoted from a 2002 piece it published about Moore that said his “hiring has gotten plenty of attention, in large part because he’s black — which shouldn’t be a big deal but is, thanks to the predominantly pale hue of Colorado’s media power structure. On the day he took the job, Moore instantly became the most prominent African-American in the history of Colorado journalism.

“Opening this door is ‘a point of pride,’ [then-publisher Dean] Singleton says, but he emphasizes that race ‘played absolutely no role whatsoever in my decision to want him in Denver. What’s important to me is that he’s a born leader who knows how to evaluate talent and knows how to lead it.’

Dan Kennedy, longtime media columnist for the Boston Phoenix, a weekly alternative newspaper, underlines this point. ‘It’s not surprising that a lot of people have dwelled on Greg Moore being black, but he’s also an editor, and a damned good one. Although being an African-American is important to who he is, it’s strictly incidental to the fact that he’s a very good editor.’

“Moore’s qualifications appear to be quite strong. Born in Cleveland, he is a graduate of Ohio Wesleyan University who joined the staff of the Dayton Journal Herald in 1976 before jumping to the Cleveland Plain Dealer four years later. After shifting from reporting to editing, he signed up as assistant metro editor with the [BostonGlobe in 1986. At the time he was named managing editor at the paper, in 1994, he was a regional director of the National Association of Black Journalists.

“But Matthew Storin, then the Globe’s editor, told the NABJ Journal that he would benefit from doing the right thing every bit as much as Moore would: ‘This is a high-profile job we’ve given him, and when I announced it, I presumed that some people might wonder if he got the promotion because he’s a person of color. I said, ‘Sure, in a way he did. If you had someone that good and you could also add to the diversity of your senior staff, you’d be crazy not to promote him.’ People understand what I mean, because they know he’s that good.”

Benjamin Mullin added Tuesday for the Poynter Institute, “Digital First Media has undergone tumult of its own in the years since Moore was named editor at The Post. Steady declines in print revenue have afflicted the chain, which has over time shed more than 100 newsroom jobs under the parentage of primary owner Alden Global Capital. A thwarted attempt by the company to sell itself for $400 million in 2015 was followed by the departure of former CEO John Paton. Thunderdome, an attempt to centralize news production of national news in a single New York newsroom, imploded in 2014 and was followed shortly by the departure of former top editor Jim Brady. . . .”

Journal-isms readers might recall that in 2012, Moore agreed to answer their questions about coverage of the mass shooting at an Aurora, Colo., movie theater that killed 12 people and wounded dozens. “We had some people on the scene for 17 hours,” he said.

According to the Post, Moore said Tuesday, “Over the past 14 years, I’ve worked assiduously to make The Denver Post the best it can be. From historic floods, tragic wildfires, the anguish of Aurora, to the joys of Super Bowl 50, our newspaper has been committed to telling the stories, just as they happened. That’s the trademark of a great newspaper — getting the facts and reliably relaying that information to the community. Nothing more, nothing less.” [Updated March 16]

What If Journalists of Color Ran Campaign Coverage?

March 14, 2016

Media Debate Blame for Trump’s Rise

Fallout Over NASCAR Leader’s Trump Endorsement

Trump’s Killer Immigrant Ad a ‘Red Herring’

2 at Breitbart Resign After Trump Firestorm

Short Takes

Roland Martin, host of TVOne’s “NewsOne Now,” co-moderated a “Democratic Presidential Town Hall” at Ohio State University Sunday night with CNN’s Jake Tapper. (Credit: NewsOne)

Media Debate Blame for Trump’s Rise

They used different words, but when asked about coverage of the increasingly volatile presidential campaign, the presidents of the national associations of black and Hispanic journalists agreed: Not enough journalists of color have been in decision-making positions.

“With 30 percent of the population being African American or Hispanic and our current president being black, the news media is out of touch with regard to newsroom diversity and coverage on the issues of politics and race,” Sarah Glover of the National Association of Black Journalists told Journal-isms Monday by email.

“And when outlets do bring in their Latino or black journalists and box them into asking the Black Lives Matter or immigration questions, it tells me we have a long way to go,” Mekahlo Medina, president of the National Association of Hispanic Journalists, messaged Journal-isms separately.

Medina and Glover were responding as journalists debated whether the news media have been tough enough on GOP front-runner Donald Trump and share responsibility for the violent turn at some of his rallies — violence that Trump seems to encourage.

George Stephanopoulos, host of ABC’s “This Week,” asked Univision anchor Jorge Ramos on Sunday, “You’ve seen this kind of rhetoric from Donald Trump since the beginning of this campaign, his announcement well back in June.

“Where does it go next? Can it be contained now that this violence has kind of been unleashed?”

Ramos responded, “You know, what I’ve been asking is where were all the candidates nine months ago…when he announced June 16th and where were they?

“Where was the press asking the tough questions?

STEPHANOPOULOS: “Right.

“RAMOS: I mean he was as hateful and divisive, um, when he said that Mexican immigrants were rapists and criminals and drug traffickers.

“And where was the press?

“And where were the candidates?

“Where were the political parties?

“Where — where was the government?

“Where was the government of Mexico?

“And, um, so who is surprised now?

“I am not. . . .”

Jorge Ramos and Maria Salinas at the Democratic presidential debate in Miami on March 9. (Credit: Univision)

Matthew Dowd, a white panelist on the program, contended that tough questions wouldn’t make much difference. “Voters have the information about Donald Trump. . . .

“They’ve had it for a year,” Dowd said. “It’s not as if the media should have done more or asked more questions. They know that — what Donald Trump said about Mexican-Americans and they know [what] he said about immigrants. They know what he said about Muslims. They know all the language he uses. . . .There are a huge segment of voters in this country that feels frustrated…”

Still, it’s worth wondering how the conversation would be different if more journalists of color had key roles in the campaign coverage.

Medina, a reporter at KNBC-TV in Southern California, said he would have made different coverage decisions. “News organizations need to focus on reporting news from these political rallies and stop broadcasting them live,” he said. “News outlets become de facto communications arms of campaigns. News rallies should be covered but by journalists who apply reporting, not just a live camera without any context, questioning or accuracy.”

Roland Martin, host of TV One’s “NewsOne Now” and a black journalist, co-moderated a “Democratic Presidential Town Hall” at Ohio State University Sunday night with CNN’s Jake Tapper, who is white.

Senator Sanders, you have talked a lot about income inequality during this campaign,” Martin asked Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont. “Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr., who is here, has been fighting Silicon Valley, opening up the doors and opportunities for African Americans and other people of color.

“Yet four years ago, PowerPAC+ did a study showing that the Democratic Party spent $514 million on various consultants, yet minorities only got 1.7 percent or $8.4 million of that.

“How can the people trust Democrats to do something about income inequality when, when it comes to political dollars, they practice income inequality?”

Sanders replied that Martin had a point, and added, “I think we should be very aggressive in targeting federal contracts to the African-American community, the Latino community, those communities that can help us the most deal with high rates of unemployment. . . .”

Martin asked Hillary Clinton, “Both you and Senator Sanders have significant union support, yet many of the trade unions that — we [talk] about built the country, they’ve locked out black folks and other minorities for decades. Would you, even right now, and even as president, call a meeting with the trade unions and say it’s time for you to open up those doors and bring in more African Americans and Hispanics, and others . . . because those are high-paying jobs.

“And, if we keep saying rebuild America with a huge infrastructure and billions of dollars, they’re the ones who are going to do it. And, black folks and others are going to be left on the outside looking in.”

When Clinton asserted her “special commitment that we would open up apprenticeships for the full diversity of our country,” Martin replied, “I don’t mean any disrespect, but apprenticeships . . . . I’m talking about the people who are already trained, who are grown, who’ve been in it. They’ve been shut out. Often times they bring up apprentice jobs, that’s the early folks. I’m talking about the skilled folks right now.”

Clinton revised her answer to say “We should do the whole gamut, you know? . . . ”

Jamelle Bouie

Many people have discussed Trump’s appeal to members of the white working class who felt that the economy has left them behind. But few have framed it as black journalist Jamelle Bouie did in a piece for Slate Sunday. Bouie considered several reasons for Trump’s rise, then wrote, “Race plays a part in each of these analyses, but its role has not yet been central enough to our understanding of Trump’s rise.

“Not only does he lead a movement of almost exclusively disaffected whites, but he wins his strongest support in states and counties with the greatest amounts of racial polarization. Among white voters, higher levels of racial resentment have been shown to be associated with greater support for Trump.

 

“All of which is to say that we’ve been missing the most important catalyst in Trump’s rise. What caused this fire to burn out of control? The answer, I think, is Barack Obama.”

Bouie also wrote, “For millions of white Americans who weren’t attuned to growing diversity and cosmopolitanism, however, Obama was a shock, a figure who appeared out of nowhere to dominate the country’s political life. And with talk of an ’emerging Democratic majority,’ he presaged a time when their votes — which had elected George W. Bush, George H.W. Bush, and Ronald Reagan — would no longer matter.

“More than simply ‘change,’ Obama’s election felt like an inversion. When coupled with the broad decline in incomes and living standards caused by the Great Recession, it seemed to signal the end of a hierarchy that had always placed white Americans at the top, delivering status even when it couldn’t give material benefits.”

Bouie added, “The Obama era didn’t herald a post-racial America as much as it did a racialized one, where millions of whites were hyperaware of and newly anxious about their racial status. . . .”

Not your garden-variety analysis.

As alarm over the prospect of a Trump nomination rose in the last week, some commentators faulted the standard of “objectivity” embraced in the mainstream media as a culprit.

If a reporter for a major news organization described this matter accurately — that Trump is an unusually enthusiastic liar whose falsehoods come in such quantity that they’re difficult to keep up with — she’d be accused of abandoning her objectivity,” Paul Waldman wrote Thursday for theweek.com.

Neal Gabler dated the blame back decades. He wrote Friday on billmoyers.com, “Something happened in American politics over the last 25 or 30 years to release our demons and remove our shame. The media didn’t want to look. Now Trump has come along to reap what the conservatives had sown, and stir up those demons, and the media are suddenly in high dudgeon. Where were they when America needed them?”

Activist journalist Glenn Greenwald, best known for his Guardian articles based on National Security Agency leaks from Edward Snowden, wrote Monday of Trump, “Many people are alarmed, but it is difficult to know that by observing media coverage, where little journalistic alarm over Trump is expressed.

“That’s because the rules of large media outlets — venerating faux objectivity over truth along with every other civic value — prohibit the sounding of any alarms. Under this framework of corporate journalism, to denounce Trump, or even to sound alarms about the dark forces he’s exploiting and unleashing, would not constitute journalism. To the contrary, such behavior is regarded as a violation of journalism. Such denunciations are scorned as opinion, activism, and bias: all the values that large media-owning corporations have posited as the antithesis of journalism in order to defang and neuter it as an adversarial force.

“Just this morning, NPR media reporter David Folkenflik published a story describing the concern and even anger of some NPR executives and journalists over a column by longtime NPR commentator Cokie Roberts — the Beacon of Washington Centrism — that criticizes Trump. ‘NPR has a policy forbidding its journalists from taking public stances on political affairs,’ he wrote. For any NPR reporter, Roberts’s statements — warning of the dangers of a Trump presidency — would be a clear violation of that policy. . . .”

Such commentaries seem to ignore moments like those after the Feb. 25 Republican presidential debate, when Chuck Todd of NBC told viewers, “Every time we think public discourse has hit a new low, it hits a new low,” and Bob Schieffer said on the “CBS Evening News, ” “Unpresidential doesn’t begin to describe it.”

Or last week at the Univision/CNN Democratic debate in Miami when moderator Karen Tumulty asked Clinton and Sanders directly whether they considered Trump a racist.

On “The O’Reilly Factor” on March 2, host Bill O’Reilly welcomed former “Nightline” host Ted Koppel onto the show — “but as it turned out, Koppel wasn’t interested in playing the role of a polite guest, especially not on the subject of Donald Trump,” Scott Eric Kaufman reported the next day for Salon.

“ ‘I’ve interviewed him a number of times,’ O’Reilly said, and it’s ‘not an easy interview. How would you do it?’

” ‘You and I have talked about this general subject many times over the years,’ Koppel said. ‘It’s irrelevant how I would do it.’

“ ‘You know who made it irrelevant?’ he asked. ‘You did. You have changed the television landscape over the past 20 years. You took it from being objective and dull to subjective and entertaining. And in this current climate, it doesn’t matter what the interviewer asks him — Mr. Trump is gonna say whatever he wants to say, as outrageous as it may be.’ . . .”

Fallout Over NASCAR Leader’s Trump Endorsement

When Brian France endorsed Donald Trump for president, the chairman and chief executive of NASCAR thought of it as nothing more than a ‘routine endorsement,‘ ” Jenna Fryer reported Wednesday for the Associated Press.

“He’s been dealing with the fallout ever since.

“France’s decision to personally back the front-runner for the Republican nomination has roiled a sport his family built from the ground up. It’s threatened a decade of work to broaden NASCAR’s appeal among minorities, upset one of the most powerful teams in the sport and risked a break with the corporate sponsors that are its financial lifeblood.

Last month, NASCAR gave the National Association of Black Journalists its 2016 NASCAR Diversity Institution Award at the Daytona International Speedway in the run-up to the Daytona 500. NABJ President Sarah Glover and Sports Task Force member Ricky Clemons accepted.

Glover messaged Journal-isms Monday, “NABJ received an award from NASCAR Diversity, which says its mission is to engage women and people of diverse, ethnic and racial backgrounds in all facets of the NASCAR industry. Brian France’s endorsement of Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump does not impact the work NASCAR Diversity has done to provide scholarships and professional development for students. Mr. France’s endorsement is a personal decision.”

Fryer’s report continued, ” ‘I was frankly, very surprised, that my diversity efforts for my whole career would have been called into question, over this, in my view, a routine endorsement,’ France said Wednesday in an interview with The Associated Press.

“France acknowledged he’s had to have conversations with sponsors since making the endorsement, which came as NASCAR is seeking a new main sponsor for its top series.

” ‘I made a few phone calls and clarified some things,’ he said. ‘That kind of goes with the territory.’

“France’s appearance at a Trump rally the day before last week’s Super Tuesday elections fits with the sport’s history of occasionally blending politics with the action at the track. France told the AP on Wednesday he backed Barack Obama in 2008 and actively participated in the campaign. . . .”

Fryer also wrote, “France is also trying to protect his record on diversity. He said NASCAR has spent ‘tens of millions of dollars’ on a program aimed at boosting the participation of minorities in the sport, among them Mexican driver Daniel Suarez, who has risen to the second-tier Xfinity Series. Some of Suarez’s current corporate backing comes from Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim Domit, whose family’s company cut ties with Trump after the real estate mogul announced his signature plan to build a wall along the U.S. southern border. . . .

“France’s efforts to quell criticism over what he insists was a ‘personal and private’ decision have also been complicated by Trump’s continued mentioning of how he’s received ‘NASCAR’s endorsement.’ ”

Despite Donald Trump’s ad, “Hispanics don’t kill African-Americans and African-Americans don’t kill Hispanics with any statistical significance,” columnist Phillip Morris wrote. (Credit: jamielshaw.com)

Trump’s Killer Immigrant Ad a ‘Red Herring’

Jamiel Shaw Jr. was considered a top high school football recruit in the Los Angeles area in the spring of 2008,” columnist Phillip Morris wrote Saturday for the Plain Dealer in Cleveland.

“A lightning-fast tailback and punt returner, he was reportedly on the radar of a number of schools including Stanford and Rutgers University. ‘Jas,’ as he was known, dreamed of eventually making it to the NFL and then becoming a sports agent.

“His potential sizzled with promise until a fateful March evening when he randomly encountered Pedro Espinoza, 19, an illegal Mexican immigrant with a violent criminal history.

“Espinoza, a passenger in a car, mistook Shaw, who was on foot, for a rival gang member because of a red Spider-Man backpack he wore. In some Los Angeles neighborhoods, wearing the wrong colors can prove fatal for African-American males.

“Espinoza jumped from the car and shot Shaw in the stomach, before firing another round point-blank into the boy’s head. Shaw, 17, died less than a block from his parents’ home.

“At his trial, prosecutors argued that Espinoza, who had just been released from jail for assaulting a police officer, was trying to burnish a reputation as a gang enforcer and a killer. He was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death.

“Shaw has been dead for 8 years now, but suddenly his story has been resurrected with strident political overtones. GOP front-runner Donald Trump is using the tragic narrative of an African-American male being shot dead by an illegal immigrant in a powerful political commercial now airing in Ohio.

” ‘Jas’ dad is supporting Donald Trump because he knows he will end illegal immigration,’ an announcer intones just before the father appears on screen. . . .”

Morris also wrote, “In a season full of noxious campaign bleating, Trump directly connects a core issue — border control — to another emotionally charged issue, violent street crime.

“But here’s the problem.

“Hispanics don’t kill African-Americans and African-Americans don’t kill Hispanics with any statistical significance. The same goes for white Americans and Hispanics.

“While the national murder rate involving Hispanics and white Americans is slightly higher than that involving blacks and Hispanics, murder remains almost exclusively intra-racial.

“According to the FBI, 2,491 African-Americans were murdered in the United States in 2013. The race of the offender indicted or convicted in 2,245 of those murders was African-American. Hispanics were indicted or convicted in 76 of the murders of African-Americans that year.

“So why do these numbers matter as Trump rolls out the memory of Jamiel Shaw Jr., in hopes of enlisting voter support for his immigration policies?

“It’s simple. We can’t afford to be distracted by red herrings. . . .”

2 at Breitbart Resign After Trump Firestorm

Breitbart reporter Michelle Fields and editor-at-large Ben Shapiro have both resigned from the company, the two announced on Sunday evening,” Hadas Gold reported Monday for Politico. “And more are expected in the coming days.

” ‘Nobody wants to stand with [Breitbart Chairman Stephen] Bannon,’ said one source at the company on Sunday evening. ‘Besides the senior management and his loyal reporters that provide pro-Trump stenography.’

“In her statement, Fields cited the company’s lack of support over the past week after she became the center of a media and political firestorm following an incident on Tuesday when Donald Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski forcibly grabbed Fields’ arm to move her away from the candidate as she tried to ask a question. Fields, who has shown pictures of her bruises from the incident, has filed a police report in Jupiter, Florida where the altercation took place. . . .”

Short Takes

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