“Doctor Who:” The Countdown Continues!

This movie gets a bad rap: Yeah, yeah, “The Americanization of ‘Doctor Who.'” But they continued, not rebooted, the series, and deeply respected its content!

It aired opposite the series finale of “Roseanne,” so only Whovians watched it when it aired on FOX in 1996. 🙂

The filmmakers allegedly watched all 600 episodes of “Doctor Who” to figure it out, but, unfortunately, they emphasized the wrong things, IMHO.

But I thought this was a GREAT attempt, and I would have loved to watched this for a season or two!

He came back below, during the show’s 50th anniversary celebration. It was a prequel to the 50th anniversary story.

Thanks, NBC’s “Meet The Press” and Kevin Tibbles!

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Liked this report, because it shows that white journalists can learn how to cover white racism properly, even with “objectivity.”  🙂 He started with the right questions.

ANDREA MITCHELL:
Thank you so much, Governor Nixon, from Missouri. While the events in Ferguson this week have certainly shocked the nation, focusing renewed attention on the nation’s disparity that still exists in our justice system. Our Kevin Tibbles takes a closer look at that situation.
(BEGIN TAPE)
KEVIN TIBBLES:
A week of unrest and racial tension. In today’s America, black men are six times more likely to be incarcerated than white men. Prison sentences for black men are 20% longer than those for whites convicted of the same crime. And on average, 100 black people are killed each year by white police officers.
JAMES CLARK:
They had to get America’s attention. They had to get America to take notice of their pain.
KEVIN TIBBLES:
James Clark is a Saint Louis community activist who says he sees the disparity every day.
JAMES CLARK:
Crimes is going up. The perpetrators are now getting younger and younger. And there is a fundamental reason why, because they’re living in subcultures that mainstream, would rather act like it doesn’t exist.
KEVIN TIBBLES:
But they do exist. And some maintain there are two Americas, one white, one black. And they are not equal. Greg Howard is a columnist who was so outraged, he wrote an essay entitled America is Not For Black People.
GREG HOWARD:
We’re seeing so many black men killed by police officers because police officers don’t value black men’s life as they do that of white people. It’s physically easier for a police officer to weigh what a black man’s life is worth and to end up feeling what he’s justified in pulling the trigger.
KEVIN TIBBLES:
Heather McDonald strongly disagrees.
HEATHER MCDONALD:
I stand the opposite. The criminology profession has been trying for decades to prove that the over-representation of blacks in prison or in arrest statistic is a result of criminal justice racism. It is black crime rates that predict the presence of blacks in the criminal justice system. Not some miscarriage of justice.
KEVIN TIBBLES:
Still, in Ferguson, as in many other impoverished urban communities, the authorities are often seen as the enemy.
JAMES CLARK:
After the cameras leave, and after young Michael is buried, if we don’t reach into the neighborhoods, they’ll become more bold. They’ll become much more brazen.
KEVIN TIBBLES:
The death of a young man in suburban Saint Louis resonates across the nation. But will it encourage solutions or create further division? For Meet the Press, Kevin Tibbles.

(END TAPE)

Mumia Abu-Jamal Addresses 2014 NABJ Convention

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WOW! It’s been a loooong journey from 1995! LOL! 😉

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Journalism: Activism or Profession? (AUDIO LINK)

[Speech writ. 7/29/14] © ’14 Mumia Abu-Jamal

When we consider the historic role of journalist among Black people, we are left with the deep conviction that, for Black people, the necessities of the time demand that activism must play a role in the performance of the profession.

It must be so, I argue, then – in our not-too-distant past – and now, in our troubled present, for to fail to do so leaves our people at the not-too-tender mercies of a system that has demonstrated a kind of vehemence and animosity that few populations in America have suffered from.

For ultimately, a profession is just that – a claim to act a certain way in the world, according to certain stated norms and codes that a certain area of employment must abide by.

Except in the long history of Black America, we know better.

We must know, as did the esteemed Black journalist, Frederick Douglass, that a constitution written on parchment would differ greatly from government and legal practice, when it came to Black people. They were promises: promises broken and unfulfilled for over a century, after the Supreme Court decided in the Plessy decision that ‘separate but equal’ was good enough. Black journalist Ida B. Wells-Barnett worked long and hard to bring light to the lies used to justify lynching’s against Black people. So much so that, according to recent scholarship, she was shunned and avoided by leading lights of the early civil rights movement, who regarded her as too militant’ too outspoken.

Meanwhile, under the Hayes-Tilden gentlemen’s agreement, white terrorism, expressed by lynching was the peculiar American custom that wasn’t spoken of in polite society. So, quietly (except for Wells) Black bodies hung and burned by the thousands — across America, the courts and law deeming it mere local custom, beyond their control.

When we enter the modern era, we see a panorama of Black pain that is as unprecedented as it is silent. I speak of mass incarceration, the targeting, imprisonment and criminalization of dark people in ways (and in numbers) the world has never seen. For decades.

And, until recent days, the silence -even among Black journalists – has been deafening. Recently the New York Times has editorialized against it. How many Black newspapers have done so?

Why not? Professionalism? A false objectivity?

The late historian, Howard Zinn, for years decried the notion of professionalism. In a speech in Colorado in 2006, Zinn said:

‘We all go into professions where you’re supposed to be professional. And to be professional means that you don’t step outside of your profession. If you’re an artist, you don’t take a stand on political issues. If you’re a professor, you don’t give your opinions in the classroom. If you’re a newspaperman, you pretend to be objective in presenting the news. But, of course, it’s all false. You cannot be neutral.’

In Zinn’s words, “You can’t be neutral on a moving train.”

As journalists, the choices before you are actually quite clear. Follow the dictates of your bosses; or serve the interests of your people.

Black America, in the main, lives a life of hell – daily. For them, freedom is a word, but prison is inevitability. For them, civil rights are a mirage, and daily humiliations are a certainty.

For all the powers of the State are arrayed against them.

They know this – as do we, but such lived realities rarely flow from our pens, our mouths or our fingers.

So, we write dross on the life-styles of the rich and famous. Or some blathering from a politician.

While our people suffer.

The choice, for any journalist, should be clear.

Thank you, NABJ.

–© ‘14maj