In the 1950s, the mainstream American press had very little experience covering segregation and its impacts. In The Race Beat, Gene Roberts and Hank Klibanoff tell the story of how the civil rights struggle gradually made its way onto the front pages.
- media history
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Comments [2]
What is left unsaid is that the northern, mainstream press scapegoated the southern segregationists while continuing to fail deal with the racism in the entire country and, for that matter, of the whole western world, which continues to today.
Evidence is provided not just by the Gina 6, here in Connecticut we have had a spate of nooses left about including at the Coast Guard Academy. Not to be outdone by white racists, our New Haven Vietnam Veterans Memorial, just off I-95, was recently graffitied with "Kill Whites" and "Kill Gringos", supposedly by a violent Hispanic gang.
Whether it is Minutemen stationed at the our borders or a British writer unsettled more by urban music extolling the virtues of the AK47 than by rock and rollers doing the same, race is a beat that has hardly stopped being relevant.
Electing Barak will not make it go away.
i found The Race Beat fascinating and very enlightening. Tells of an aspect of history lesser known--how black life was simply not covered in the white press at all, how northern reporters went to the south to tell the civil rights story, exposed what was going on to the the whole nation, and the dramatic problems they had doing it.Also the attitudes of southern papers, and how their reporters had to cope with the new developments.
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