Oakland Voices

The Oakland Tribune has a new community project that  teaches West Oakland residents to write stories about their neighborhoods. The program is called "Oakland Voices." Its goal is to empower West Oakland residents with skills and tools to go into their neighborhoods and report on issues, people, and ideas they think are important. It will be based at the The West Oakland Public Library's Community Media Access Center.

Chris Matthews, Obama and fault lines

Dear Chris,

Initially, so many people weighed in after your State of the Union remarks, the ones in which you said you actually forgot our first black president was black, that I thought there wasn’t much for me to add to the conversation. But then I had an experience recently that made me realize that while a lot of people are talking about you, it doesn’t sound like too many people are talking with you.

Dori J. Maynard (February 11, 2010)

Band of Sisters Survived and Thrived at Washington Post

Bobbi BowmanI attended the funeral of a D-Day veteran last month. Lester Lease landed in the hell of Omaha Beach on June 6, 1944, D-Day.

A week later I attended the funeral of a veteran of another kind of war, Marcia Slacum Greene.

Bobbi Bowman (February 11, 2010)

The 2010 Census

Bobbi BowmanOne of the most historic censuses in US history is four months away. The major theme of this census: The historic racial-ethnic changes in the 21st century.

The 2010 Census story, now well underway, will continue through May 2011 and beyond. I suggest that news organizations create a three-part coverage plan:

I. The count, from now to July 2010; II. The winners and losers, December 2010 to May 2011; III. The children, April 2011 into the future.

Bobbi Bowman (January 12, 2010)

Rushed words

If all I knew about African Americans was what I learned from the media, I might sound like Rush Limbaugh too.

Last week, Limbaugh demonstrated that he does not have his finger on the pulse of the black community by announcing that the triple threat of high black unemployment, the fact that Tiger Woods’ bad behavior was played out with a host of white women and President Obama’s inability to specifically address the high rate of black unemployment has wrecked havoc with our emotional health.


Dori J. Maynard (December 16, 2009)

We be fly

Ms. Mansoor, are you a terrorist? Ms. Mansoor is quiet in class. Ms. Mansoor comes from an Arab country. She is technically an “ESL Student” at our University. That means, she is not yet 100 percent fluid in her ability to write the English required of a university-level student of Freshman Rhetoric&Composition. “No,” she says -- quietly. But Ms. Mansoor – you’re a Muslim – right? “Yes,” she says.

Mary Ann Hogan (12/24/2009)

The missing point

The nation seems to be stumbling toward some kind of “health care reform” but when the dust settles I can’t help but wondering if all Americans will be able to afford health insurance, an issue that seems to be missing from the avalanche coverage.

Jean Marie Brown (12/09/2009)

GOP senators want census funds cut if citizenship isn't asked

Bobbi BowmanThe U.S. Senate finally turned aside an attempt to add a citizenship question to the upcoming 2010 Census.

The Washington Post reported Nov. 5 that “Lawmakers voted 60 to 39 to effectively kill an amendment by Sens. David Vitter (R-La.) and Robert Bennett (R-Utah) that would have excluded illegal immigrants from population totals used to apportion Congressional seats in each state. The pair argued that the high numbers of illegal immigrants in larger, heavily-urbanized states would mean that at least nine other states would lose Congressional seats following next year's census.”

Bobbi Bowman (November 19, 2009)

Covering rape across the fault lines: a discussion

The account of a Richmond, CA teenager reportedly beaten, robbed and gang raped outside of her high school during the homecoming party has spread across the local and national news.

Please join us in a thoughtful and respectful conversation on how the reporting succeeded and where it could have been improved. Our goal is not to criticize the reporters, but to help all of us find ways to better and more accurately cover issues across the fault lines.

Dori J. Maynard (November 02, 2009)

From Glenn Beck to Rush Limbaugh to Joe Wilson, the "Obama's a Nazi" comments, the monkey cartoon, and the watermelon patch-at-the-White House jokes ... is it so hard to believe that a former president who has as steep an education in racial politics as anybody alive is on the money here? So here's the question, America: What is it about the topic of race that makes us go running for the closet and away from any useful conversation? Why can't we face this like we do terrorism or the swine flu or the crashing of the stock market?

Lee Ivory (9/18/2009)


Download the Oakland Tribune Community Journalism Project's Community Correspondent Form.
JOIN OUR BLOG DISCUSSION
Come join Sally Lehrman, a professor and journalist who writes regularly on race, gender and identity issues and Maynard Institute President Dori J. Maynard as we talk about the best and worst of media coverage and diversity. Add comments and give us your thoughts.

BLACK HISTORY MONTH
The Maynard Institute gears up for its coming celebration of Black History Month

Much of today's media coverage breaks the country into black and white, North and South, male and female. Doing so fails to capture the complexity of American life that journalists need to portray.

Based on the late Robert C. Maynard's belief that the five fault lines of race, class, gender, generation and geography are the most enduring forces shaping lives, experiences and social tensions in this country, the Maynard Institute's Fault Lines framework helps journalists build a more diverse source list, have more voices in stories and determine which fault lines are at work in complex issues.
[more...]
Black History Project
Stories of the African American journalists who broke into media during the '60s and '70s.
Caldwell Journals
An account of the pioneers who broke the color barrier in America's newspapers
Ed Bradley
View video from his interview as part of the Black Journalists Movement Project

Black History Month and Beyond documents and preserves the stories of those courageous African American journalists who broke into general circulation media during the turbulent 1960s and 1970s. [more...]

Martin Reynolds
View an interview with Martin Reynolds, Managing Editor at the Oakland Tribune.
Media Academy
View video from the Maynard Media Academy at Harvard University
Chauncey Bailey
View video and more from the Chauncey Bailey Project
History Project
Stories of the African American journalists who broke into media during the '60s and '70s.
Caldwell Journals
An account of the pioneers who broke the color barrier in America's newspapers
Ed Bradley
View video from his interview as part of the Black Journalists Movement Project