
I think I’ll stop awarding myself, now that I know they have finally recognized me.”
Gee…… why can’t we have BOTH ceremonies?

I think I’ll stop awarding myself, now that I know they have finally recognized me.”
Gee…… why can’t we have BOTH ceremonies?
Nope, we’re not talking about Sara Lawrence, who’s pictured above.
We’re talking about this little piece of video. Enjoy a good laugh.
P.S. My friend who sent me this added: “And peep how Miss Zimbabwe is a white woman? LOL!  I thought Mugabe took care of all that!” Yeah, you woulda thought……. 🙂
 
Are books like this going to be regulated to history? Hmmm…….
Thought this was good enough to share in full.
Article published Mar 6, 2007
Procter & Gamble ads targeted to blacks paid off
By Cliff Peale
Gannett News ServiceCINCINNATI — When Procter & Gamble Co. rolled out its Tide with a Touch of Downy detergent in late 2004, it included a special advertising campaign targeting black consumers.
“Nostalgia Dad†featured a black man lovingly cradling his sleeping young son. The ad was designed to convey warmth and fatherly caretaking, and the pair’s crisp white T-shirts seemed almost peripheral. It also was designed to counter stereotypes of fatherless black households.
“It was very deliberate to have a man with his son,†says Najoh Tita-Reid, associate director of P&G’s multicultural marketing unit. “It was very deliberate for him to have a wedding ring on.â€
The heartwarming images are only the latest evolution of a 40-year movement inside Cincinnati-based P&G to try to reach more black consumers. The early efforts — in the 1960s, when racial tensions throughout the country were running high and white faces dominated nearly every commercial message — were not without risks.
Today P&G is acknowledged as a leader in creating advertising for black consumers.
“Without question, P&G has to be seen as one of the companies that other companies pattern their behavior after,†says Ken Smikle, president of Target Market News in Chicago, which tracks patterns of advertising to black consumers.
Along the way, reputations were made and enhanced. Crest toothpaste used a young Bill Cosby for a television commercial in 1969. In the 1980s, some Tide ads featured the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater.
In the past decade, the movement has accelerated. P&G spends at least six times more on media targeting black consumers than it did five years ago. And it’s constantly adding new ways to reach black consumers, such as a 2004 sponsorship deal with the popular Tom Joyner morning radio show.
Today you’ll see Queen Latifah on commercials and Internet sites pitching a Cover Girl line for black women. Angela Bassett promotes the benefits of Olay body lotion for black skin. Soon, Tiger Woods will tout the virtues of Gillette razors.
Black spending power is driving much of P&G’s strategy.
The $68 billion company has pledged to investors that it will add at least 5 percent to total sales every year, and the spending power of black Americans is an important piece of that growth, having reached $799 billion in 2006, according to the Selig Center for Economic Growth at the University of Georgia.
Procter executives say they want both marketing efforts and employee base to reflect the more diverse face of the 21st century American consumer.
“We need to define diversity broadly and leverage it to the hilt,†chairman and chief executive A.G. Lafley said last fall at an internal event. “Being ‘in touch’ is an attitude. To lead in this kind of environment, we need a balance of business skills and empathetic skills.â€
…………..Dr. Jared A. Ball of Morgan State University, who was just named a Communications Fellow of the Green Institute.

 
Kalamu strikes again. Dug this quote in the profile of Nigerian novelist Helon Habila:
What upsets him even more, though, is an image of his homeland that he has found in the West. In “Waiting for an Angel,” Lomba is told by a woman at a party: “You really must try and get arrested—that’s the quickest way to make it as poet. You’ll have no problem with visas after that, you might even get an international award.” I refer him to the words of the Ugandan writer, Doreen Bainganawho: “Sometimes I wish my life had been more tragic. This is because my audience expects me, as an African writer, to regale them with tales of hunger, war and catastrophe.” He agrees.
“There is a tendency, especially in the West, to look at African writing as all about war and famine and refugees,” he has found. “When they think about Africa they expect someone to be dying. But literature is supposed to show you life in a more balanced way. Shakespeare’s Macbeth is a murderer, ambitious; but he loves his wife, he is a general, a hero. It takes more effort to make a character round, but it makes him more compelling. And Africans are just like any other people: happy, sad, optimistic. If readers don’t want to see people laughing, then they should read other people’s novels.”
 
These can be real good sometimes.Â
————-Â
TODAY’S WORD ON JOURNALISM–Tuesday, Feb. 6, 2007
2/6/07: News from the vast wasteland:
   “I’m here to propose that we replace the bad old bargain that past FCCs struck with the media moguls with a new American Media Contract.
It goes like this. We, the American people have given broadcasters free use of the nation’s most valuable spectrum, and we expect
something in return. We expect this:
  1. A right to media that strengthens our democracy;
  2. A right to local stations that are actually local;
  3. A right to media that looks and sounds like America;
  4. A right to news that isn’t canned and radio playlists that aren’t for sale;
  5. A right to programming that isn’t so damned bad so damned often.”
    –Michael J. Copps. Federal Communications Commission, 2007
(Thanks to alert WORDster Mark Larson)* * * * *
TODAY’S WORD ON JOURNALISM is a free “service” sent to the 1,500 or so misguided subscribers around the planet. If you have recovered, send “unsubscribe.” Or if you want to afflict someone else, send me the email address and watch the fun begin. (Disclaimer: I just quote ’em; I don’t necessarily endorse ’em. In theory, all contain at least a kernel of insight.) Responses and rebuttals welcome.* * * * *
Ted Pease, Professor of Interesting Stuff
Utah State University
“Words are sacred. They deserve respect. If you get the right ones in the right order, you can nudge the world a little.” –Tom Stoppard,
playwright
TODAY’S WORD ON JOURNALISM–Wednesday, Jan. 31, 2007
The press’s deafening silence on peace:
   “One day after an anti-war rally in Washington, D.C., attracted a crowd estimated at 100,000 by the Los Angeles Times, the networks’ Sunday morning talk shows remained mostly unaffected by the expression of broad opposition to the war, keeping their discussions
confined to the narrow spectrum of Beltway elites.
   “Despite overwhelming public sentiment opposing the Iraq War—expressed in opinion polls, in the streets of D.C. and elsewhere
around the country—the network Sunday shows booked guests more representative of the center-right spectrum in official Washington.”
     –FAIR (Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting) 1/29/07
(http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=3035)* * * * *
TODAY’S WORD ON JOURNALISM is a free “service” sent to the 1,500 or so misguided subscribers around the planet. If you have recovered, send “unsubscribe.” Or if you want to afflict someone else, send me the email address and watch the fun begin. (Disclaimer: I just quote ’em; I don’t necessarily endorse ’em. In theory, all contain at least a kernel of insight.) Responses and rebuttals welcome.* * * * *
Ted Pease, Professor of Interesting Stuff
Utah State University“Don’t take life serious, Son . . . it ain’t nohow permanent.”
  –Porky Pine to Albert the Alligator, by Walt Kelly

 found out his family is uncomfortably connected to the family of

Sharpton says he wants a DNA test. I hope he’ll want more in the days, weeks, months and years to come. 🙂

 ………….that New York Times article on The Minister?
Or hear today’s “News And Notes,” which was pretty much all about him?
March 3 addition: “On The Media” also chimed in, I see.