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Text of NABJ's List of 30 Influential Moments
30 Influential Moments in Journalism (1975-2005)
Crucial milestones and achievements involving black journalists.
- Robert C. Maynard becomes editor of The Oakland Tribune in 1979,
and in 1983 becomes editor and president in the newspaper industry's
first management-leveraged buyout. By doing so, he becomes the first
African American to own a major metropolitan newspaper. Once "arguably
the second worst newspaper in the United States," it won a Pulitzer
Prize in 1990 for its coverage of the Loma Prieta earthquake. In 1992,
the earthquake's aftermath and Oakland Hills fire combined with a
national recession and troubled city economy, forced Maynard and his
wife, Nancy Hicks Maynard, to sell The Tribune.
- Forty-four men and women found the National Association of Black
Journalists in Washington on Dec. 12,1975. More than 100 people gathered
for the first meeting at the Sheraton Park Hotel, which was scheduled
to coincide with a national conference for black elected officials.
Chuck Stone of the Philadelphia Daily News is elected founding president.
- CNN's Bernard Shaw moderates presidential debate between George
H.W. Bush and Michael Dukakis on Oct.13, 1988. Shaw's opening question
to Dukakis, whether he would favor the death penalty for someone who
raped and murdered his wife, is a crucial campaign moment. Shaw aimed
to give Dukakis a chance to show emotion, but the governor answers
in a wooden, lawyerly manner and remains the "Ice Man" to
many voters.
- Max Robinson, on July 10, 1978, becomes one of three co-anchors
of ABC's new "World News Tonight," and thus the first black
journalist to serve as a nightly network news anchor. Robinson held
the job until 1983, when ABC switched him to weekend anchor. He soon
left the network to work as a news anchor at WMAQ-TV in Chicago.
- Robert Johnson launches Black Entertainment Television, the first
black-owned national cable-TV network, in 1980. BET would come to
air "Lead Story," a weekly news talk show filling the void
of black-related concerns ignored by major networks on Sundays, and
"BET Nightly News," a newscast dependent on black freelancers.
BET later cancels such programs amid complaints it focuses more on
entertainment and less on substantive matters.
- The first Unity: Journalists of Color convention, held in Atlanta
in 1994, draws 6,000 members and supporters of black, Asian, Hispanic
and Native American journalists. A second Unity convention is held
in Seattle in 1999, though many black journalists decry the anti-affirmative
action measure passed in Washington state that year. Unity 2004, billed
as the largest journalism convention in U.S. history, draws 8,100
people to the nation's capital.
7. Ed Bradley joins CBS News' "60 Minutes" during the 1981-1982
season after serving as a White House correspondent and anchor of
"CBS Sunday Night News." Now finishing his 24th season on
"60 Minutes," Bradley, a former radio reporter, is a broadcast
journalism icon who has won nearly 20 Emmy awards.
- Former sportscaster Bryant Gumbel becomes the first black co-anchor
of a network morning news show, on NBC-TV's "Today" show
in 1982. Among many achievements during his 15 years as host, Gumbel
is credited with orchestrating and anchoring the show’s groundbreaking
weeklong coverage from Africa in November 1992. He also anchored the
network's coverage of the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, Spain.
- Jayson Blair commits wide-scale plagiarism and fabrication at The
New York Times, which in 2003 leads to the resignation of the paper's
top two editors (including its first black managing editor). The saga
spurs a full-scale review of ethics policies at The Times and media
nationwide; spawns complaints from affirmative action opponents and
causes concern for young black journalists, in particular, that their
work and futures would be tarnished.
- Isabel Wilkerson in 1994 becomes the first black journalist to
win a Pulitzer Prize for individual reporting and the first black
woman to win a journalism Pulitzer - 25 years after Ebony's Moneta
Sleet Jr. wins for his photograph of Martin Luther King Jr.'s widow
and child at King's funeral. Wilkerson, of The New York Times, wins
in the features category for a profile of a Chicago fourth-grader
and for two stories about a Midwestern flood.
- Janet Cooke wins a Pulitzer Prize for "Jimmy's World"
at The Washington Post in 1981, but the paper returns it after she
admits she made up the story. Cooke is disgraced as a journalist and
drops out of public view for many years. She briefly re-emerges in
1996 to tell her story to GQ magazine. The movie rights from that
interview were sold for $1.6 million.
- Bill Clinton is the first U.S. president to visit a large organization
of black journalists, at 1997 NABJ convention in Chicago. Beginning
with Clinton's visit to NABJ in Detroit in 1992, presidential tickets
find it advantageous to appear before black journalists. In 1996,
Al Gore, Bob Dole and Jack Kemp visit NABJ in Nashville. (A photo
of Dole sitting beneath NABJ's logo appears the next day on the front
page of The New York Times.) President George W. Bush and Sen. John
Kerry speak at the Unity 2004 convention in Washington.
- Emerge launches as a monthly national black newsmagazine in 1989.
The publication generates hard-hitting news stories and columns about
African-American concerns, especially among black journalists eager
for an outlet to produce stories hardly placed in mainstream media.
Emerge makes waves with covers of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas
but makes its biggest mark with Reginald Stuart's three articles about
Kemba Smith, a federal inmate serving a lengthy prison term. The articles
help prompt President Bill Clinton to commute Smith's sentence in
2000 - the same year Emerge shuts down.
- Jesse Jackson's 1984 presidential campaign for the White House
presents unprecedented opportunities for black journalists to cover
a presidential campaign. They include, among others, Gerald Boyd,
Jacques Chenet, Milton Coleman, George Curry, Julie Johnson, Sylvester
Monroe, Kenneth Walker and Jack white. Some feel betrayed when Jackson
announces his candidacy to Mike Wallace on "60 Minutes,"
a week after the minister had met with black journalists and signaled
that one of them would get the "scoop."
- Ten years after the Kerner Commission spotlights the lack of newsroom
diversity, in 1978 the American Society of Newspaper Editors pledges
to have the newspaper industry reach parity by 2000. Two key impetuses:
The recently released -- and first-- extensive survey of journalists
of color by Jay T. Harris, an assistant journalism dean at Northwestern
University; and the spurring on by Robert C. Maynard and others at
the new Institute for Journalism Education. Harris' study becomes
model for annual ASNE diversity census. In 1998, despite fierce criticism,
ASNE extends the parity goal to 2025.
- The Institute for Journalism Education (IJE) is incorporated in
Oakland in 1977. Renamed in 1993 to honor late co-founder Robert C.
Maynard, the institute reports that it has trained and placed hundreds
of journalists of color in newsrooms and offered training to hundreds
of journalists of color seeking advanced editing and high-level management
jobs.
- President Jimmy Carter meets with 29 Black Press representatives
at the white House on Feb. 16, 1978. The Washington Post reports Carter
in the meeting "warned that the United States would 'consider
it a very serious breach of peace,' if the Ethiopia-Somalia conflict
leads Ethiopian forces to cross Somalia's borders." Carter discussed
the naming of black and women federal judges during a second meeting
with black journalists on Jan. 10, 1979.
- Mumia Abu-Jamal, a freelance radio reporter and outgoing president
of the Philadelphia Association of Black Journalists, is sentenced
to death for the 1981 murder of a police officer. PABJ maintains "considered
support" for him and his right to a fair trial. After years of
appeals, Abu-Jamal's execution is set to happen during the 1995 NABJ
convention in Philadelphia, but a stay is granted just before. Disappointing
many who want it join an international chorus to "free him,"
NABS joins other journalist groups in supporting his free-speech rights.
Prison officials had banned him from doing media interviews.
- Newsweek's Mark Whitaker in late 1998 becomes first black journalist
to be named editor of a major weekly newsmagazine. Whitaker joined
Newsweek as an intern in 1977 and had been its managing editor since
early 1996. He filled in as top editor during his predecessor's illness,
supervising coverage of the Monica Lewinsky scandal, among other major
stories.
- In 1976, St. Louis-area black journalists create the first hands-on,
training program where black high school and junior college students
gather with professionals on weekends to learn about journalism. The
program has benefited hundreds of students with training and scholarships,
and spawned many similar high school journalism workshops nationwide.
- U.S. Court of Appeals in the District of Columbia on April 14,
1998, rules that the FCC's 30-year-old EEOC rules requiring broadcasters
to hire minorities are unconstitutional. Some news organizations issue
statements that they will continue following the rules voluntarily.
- BET News Anchor Ed Gordon, on Jan.24, 1996, sits with O.J. Simpson
for an hour before a live, national cable TV audience. It was Simpson's
first live broadcast interview since his Oct. 3, 1995, acquittal after
a months-long trial that riveted the nation. Gordon's probing receives
many positive reviews, but Simpson refuses to discuss specifics while
insisting he did not kill his ex-wife or her friend. BET scores its
highest prime time rating to date but is criticized for letting Simpson
promote his mail-order video before and after the broadcast.
- Black journalists at the Los Angeles Times and elsewhere experience
deja vu after the April 29, 1992, acquittal of four poice officers
in the Rodney King case leads to rage and unrest in the city. A generation
after the 1965 Watts riots led The Times to hire its first black reporter,
black journalists who covered the new unrest believe they were assigned
"primarily because they were black," according to a NABJ
report. While many black journalists volunteered to go to Los Angeles,
feeling obligated to their race and hoping for a career boost, they
felt their papers "undervalued their talent and ideas,"
the report found.
- Many black journalists report on Million Man March in Washington
on Oct.16, 1995. Some were wary of editors' concerns that going to
the march may show support of Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan.
Keith Woods later writes for The Poynter Institute that the media
focused more on the minister's "proclivities for race-, religion-
and sexuality-baiting" than on "the story of the racial
rejection, estrangement and hunger for acceptance and brotherhood
that drove all those folks to the mall." Farrakhan calls black
journalists "slaves" of white media at NABJ's 1996 convention
in Nashville.
- Fifty-plus black photojournalists help produce "Songs of My
People," a book of images of African Americans. Gordon Parks,
the legendary photojournalist, contributes an essay, as do black writers
and critics who introduce sections on the black male; black artists,
musicians, performers, filmmakers, athletes, and ministers; black
women and the black family.
- Milton Coleman of The Washington Post reports Jesse Jackson's off-the-record
"Hymictown" comments about New York, creating a firestorm
that cripples Jackson's 1984 presidential campaign. It also causes
a divide among black journalists over whether they should cut black
officials or sources more slack than white counterparts - and concern
that newsroom leaders could stop assigning black reporters to major
stories.
- Black journalists shine in Pulitzer Prize-winning series, "How
Race Is Lived in America." Published by The New York Times in
2000, the series explored racial experiences and attitudes across
America in the military, law enforcement, public schools, workplace
and other settings. Then-Deputy Managing Editor Gerald Boyd serves
as a co-senior editor, and black reporters Steven A. Holmes, Ginger
Thompson and Dana Canedy wrote stories.
- On Sept. 11,2001, reporter Sonya Ross, cameraman George Christian
and sound technician Erick Washington are among only five journalists
with President George W. Bush aboard Air Force One the day of the
terrorist attacks. Many black journalists nationwide play active roles
in the crisis coverage, but many others feel left out of the action.
New Managing Editor Gerald Boyd helps The New York Times earn six
Pulitzer Prizes for 9/11-related coverage.
- Gregory Moore, managing editor of The Boston Globe since July 1994,
is named editor of The Denver Post in June 2002, making the Colorado
paper the country's largest (circulation-wise) with a black journalist
at the helm.
- Pam McAllister Johnson in November 1981 becomes the first black
woman named publisher of a general circulation newspaper, the Ithaca
(NY) Journal. Johnson was named assistant to the publisher a month
before at the 20,000-circulation paper, which had just been named
"The Best of Gannett" for 1981.
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