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NLGJA News > Message from the National President

NLGJA Called Decision Makers to Task Over Imus
Spring/Summer 2007

Podcast Version

My personal opinion? Perhaps cable news giant MSNBC should never have signed to simulcast Don Imus’ radio show in the first place back in September 1996. And it was long overdue that both NBC News and CBS Radio did something about his demeaning brand.

There. I said it.

After NLGJA issued a letter to the industry in April commending the networks for taking action by issuing a two-week suspension for the radio “shock jock,” I heard from a handful of NLGJA members. Some of them valued our response as an articulate and forceful voice, despite not being the mirror message of solidarity with other journalism organizations, including the National Association of Black Journalists, the National Association of Hispanic Journalists and UNITY: Journalists of Color.

Others faulted us for not falling in line with the call for his firing. Our letter was dismissed as both ridiculous and embarrassing.

We were certainly cognizant of where the other organizations stood. On April 6, NABJ initially called for Imus’ “immediate, sincere and unequivocal apology” and later urged for “the immediate removal of Imus and his WFAN producer, Bernard McGuirk.” NAHJ, citing his history of inflammatory remarks, said, “Enough is enough. Can him.” The Journalism & Women Symposium (JAWS), in its own letter, asserted that MSNBC “should consider stiff disciplinary action,” without suggesting a specific course of action.

Our own objective was simple. We asked news organizations to finally consider what was being put on their air, under their banner. And what occurred at NBC and CBS is what we asked for: they took action. Along the way, they listened to their employees, their audience and, to no one’s surprise, their suddenly fleeing advertisers.

In part, our letter said,“The ability of the media to be a strong and credible voice in the public forum is compromised when news outlets and organizations allow hateful, discriminatory and harmful speech to go out under their banner.Whether produced by the organization or not, the ultimate responsibility rests on the decision makers who allow them to be broadcast or printed. ”

We could have delved into greater detail about Imus’ well-documented history of hateful language, as he offended many individuals who were targeted because they were simply different from him and his on-air colleagues. Imus and his cohorts drenched their broadcasts with racist, sexist, anti-gay and anti- Semitic language and ideology for years, and it was addressed by journalists and commentators for days after Imus’ fateful broadcast. There appeared less purpose in building a case by regurgitating the hateful basics.

Could we have called for Imus’ ouster? Sure. After all, as we noted, MSNBC in 2003 fired host Michael Savage for anti-gay comments. That could be considered a precedent. Hate speech is hate speech, and Imus was given a forum despite that.

But, on principle, NLGJA has never in its history taken an activist stance that called for boycotting or firing an individual. And since our mission focuses on journalism and news coverage, “ shock jocks” and much of talk radio have been, by definition, outside of our mission.Weighing in further on Imus and related issues could change how we conduct ourselves on a fundamental level. That’s not to say that we shouldn’t consider broadening our focus; it
would just take larger discussions.

We have previously taken a pass at responding to other issues regarding nonjournalists. In 2003, when Barry Humphries, a.k.a. Dame Edna, penned a column for Vanity Fair magazine in which he offered an offensive string of observations against Latinos, the magazine apologized for the piece but said the comments “were offered in the spirit of outrageous comedy and were never intended to be taken to heart.” NAHJ countered that “ Dame Edna gets to spout off such bigotry, and we’re not supposed to say anything about it because the character is a clown and the column is satire? We disagree. Humor and satire are not safe hiding places for ignorance and bigotry. ”

NLGJA, after much discussion, chose not to respond, because it was intended to be comedic and opinion and was not “ news coverage” itself. Yes, it appeared in a news magazine, but we seemingly absolved it of responsibility. (Personally, I felt we should have responded.)

In 2005, Dr. Ruth Westheimer ignored contrary research about bisexuality and declared in her syndicated newspaper column that “everyone is either straight or gay.” NLGJA classified it as entertainment and opinion, not reporting, and didn’t hold newspapers accountable for printing it. (Again, I personally felt we had a case to respond in some manner.But NLGJA isn’t just one person — me — and the consensus was we shouldn’t respond.)

What of the Details magazine series “Gay or…” in which gay stereotypes are played against other demographics, including minorities? After the Asian American Journalists Association (AAJA) and others protested a 2004 piece contrasting gays and Asians, the editor apologized, noting that the particular piece “was insensitive, hurtful, and in poor taste.”Yet the regular column still
runs today, and NLGJA has not responded to it. Perhaps it’s time?

And why didn’t NLGJA join NABJ its condemnation of Rush Limbaugh in 2003 when, as an ESPN commentator, he made racist remarks about the NFL? (NABJ called for the network to “ separate itself” from Limbaugh and went on to “proudly share the credit for his ouster” after he resigned.)

For that matter, I wonder why NLGJA didn’t confront MSNBC when it signed to simulcast Imus in 1996. And why didn’t we raise a red flag when, coincidentally, the same network signed Michael Savage’s “Savage Nation” broadcast in 2003? (He was quickly fired by MSNBC after making anti-gay remarks, but he continues his racist, sexist and anti-gay commentary on radio stations across the country.)

Perhaps our focus is too centered on an old-school definition of “news.” I’ve noted before that the public gets its news and information from many nontraditional sources in broadcast, print and on the Web. Talk shows — even those hosted by non-journalists — have great power, and NLGJA could be a constructive force in helping to make the content more respectful and fair.

As noted by journalist Gwen Ifill (herself a onetime target of Imus’ brand) on NBC’s “Meet the Press” in April, “Words matter, whether they’re meant to be comedic or not.” Maybe this entire incident constitutes a tipping point, as many commentators have already suggested.

There are plenty of voices within our organization who would agree that we’ve hit that point.Whether or not we respond — and, for that matter, how often, forcefully and consistently— is the question we now need to consider.

Sincerely,

Eric Hegedus
NLGJA National President

E-mail NLGJA National President Eric Hegedus with your questions about NLGJA's mission and work within the news industry.


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