Thursday, July 9, 2009
Journalism in Hell
Long-term US Death Row inmate and former Philadelphia president of the Association of Black Journalists Mumia Abu Jamal has released his latest article commenting on his role of reporting the unreported behind bars. An excerpt is below. Abu Jamal's latest book, Jailhouse lawyers: prisoners defending prisoners against the USA, can be ordered from City Lights
I’ve written of unjust and improper prosecutions, harrowing brutality, stunning institutional boneheadedness, and cruelty that would curdle milk.
In 1995, I was institutionally sanctioned for “engaging in the business of journalism.” It took years of legal wrangling, including sitting in a courtroom for several weeks, in shackles so tight that one’s ankles were swollen and bleeding, to finally prevail on the principle that the U.S. constitution’s 1st Amendment protected such activity, but it was well worth the battle (the case was: Abu-Jamal v. Price).
For years, writing a story meant, quite literally, writing a story. With an ink pen. On a legal pad. Sometimes with a 4-inch long flex-pen (this is a pen which has in inner tube of an ink pen, but the shaft is composed of see-through rubber, with a rubber cap at both ends, one allowing the 1/2–centimeter tip to protrude). It has been likened to writing with a wet noodle. Two of my books were written with these instruments, and then sent out to be typed by friends or editors.
More here
Tuesday, July 7, 2009
Press corp exposes Obama silencing dissent
Robert Gibbs getting grilled by CBS's Chip Reid and Media Vigilante favorite Helen Thomas.
Labels:
exposed,
helen thomas,
obama,
robert gibbs,
silencing dissent
The Australian launches attack on Green Left Weekly
The July 1 Australian carried an extraordinary attack by Ilan Grapel on Green Left Weekly and its monthly Arabic insert the Flame titled “A willing ally to Hamas’s hatred”. Both publications are guilty of a “radical anti-Israel stance”, Grapel said.
But the Flame, “unbeknown to its English readers”, also allegedly “supports terrorist groups and promotes violence”.
Grapel claims that, through the Flame, GLW is “openly promoting extremism”.
More here
They have since refused to allow the right of reply to the editors of either GLW or the Flame. Show your disgust by sending a letter of complaint to The Australian opinions editor Rebecca Weisser at weisserr@theaustralian.com.au, or phone (02) 9288 1634.
But the Flame, “unbeknown to its English readers”, also allegedly “supports terrorist groups and promotes violence”.
Grapel claims that, through the Flame, GLW is “openly promoting extremism”.
More here
They have since refused to allow the right of reply to the editors of either GLW or the Flame. Show your disgust by sending a letter of complaint to The Australian opinions editor Rebecca Weisser at weisserr@theaustralian.com.au, or phone (02) 9288 1634.
Labels:
aijac,
green left weekly,
hamas,
terrorism,
the australian,
the flame
Media makes Tamils pay dearly
Despite the military defeat of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), which waged an armed struggle for an independent Tamil state in Sri Lanka’s north-east, life for the Tamil minority remains one of oppression and suffering.
But for Australia’s media, still heady from “victory” celebrations in Colombo in late May, the world has moved on and another oppressed people have been left behind.
More here
Also ABCTV (Australia) recently apologised to the Tamil community for their misrepresentation of the history of Tamils within Sri Lanka.
Read more here
Alternative media giving a voice to the voiceless
The Salvadoran community media has always been different — alternative in the most hard-core sense of the word.
A strong alternative cultural tradition is represented in names that have become household words in this country, such as Roque Dalton, the tragic poet laureate of the Salvadoran revolution and Mariposa (“Butterfly”), the voice of Radio Venceremos during the guerrilla struggle.
More here
Thursday, June 25, 2009
Revolutionising Television in Venezuela
In Venezuela they are a key force in the country’s ongoing media-war. Armed with video cameras, they are a team of some 380 young people working for Caracas television station, Avila TV. Started as an experiment just three years ago, according to one study it is now the third most watched station in the city. Funded completely by the government, they consider themselves a voice of President Hugo Chavez’s “socialist revolution.”
Read more here
Venezuela: Socialist party calls for debate about media
As part of a the struggle for a new, participatory and democratic socialism, the United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV), the mass party led by Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, has called for a national debate on the role of the corporate-owned private media.
Read more here
Read more here
Labels:
corporate media,
hugo chavez,
public ownership,
socialism,
Venezuela
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