Fact checking > Yellow journalism

Conservative radio show host Rush Limbaugh made some inflammatory comments about La Raza. Limbaugh insinuated that La Raza, the nation’s largest Latino civil rights and advocacy organization has not been vocal about the Trayvon Martin shooting because George Zimmerman, Martin’s killer has identified himself as being Hispanic.

“You know, that’s an interesting point,” Limbaugh said to one of the callers to his show. “You’re right. I haven’t heard a word from La Raza about this.”

When I hear comments like that two words come to mind: Yellow Journalism. According to most journalists, anyone who engages in this practice exploits, distorts, or exaggerates the news to create sensations and attract readers.

This story was picked up by an African-American website called The Grio. The Grio did not say that La Raza was wrong for not discussing the story they just mentioned that Limbaugh insinuated that La Raza was distancing itself from the story because of Zimmerman’s Latino heritage.

The blame for this type of journalism falls at the feet of Rush Limbaugh and The Grio. I wonder if any of them even bothered to check if this was even true. In case you are wondering, I did some fact checking of my own. La Raza did indeed release a statement regarding the Trayvon Martin shooting over a week ago read it here.

If anybody out here has ever read any of my blogs, I always stress to people to do their own research, connect the dots and come to your own conclusions.

 

March Madness brings out the ugly in everybody

Why didn’t the fans of Southern Mississippi  University’s basketball team know that Puerto Rico is a U.S. territory(which means they are U.S. Citizens)??

Why does a Chicago police officer tell a journalist and a photographer that their first amendment rights can be “revoked?”

And why have more people in social media posted links about Kony 2012 than about Trayon Martin?? 

I think that it is very interesting that an armed neighborhood watch volunteer can disregard the orders of a police dispatcher and go after a teenager,shoot him, and not be arrested. That does doesn’t sound right does it??? The kid was armed with a bag of Skittles and an iced tea. Sounds like he’s armed and dangerous. I’m okay with people wanting to post about Kony 2012 as long as they also post things about stuff going on here in the city too. It bothers me that people have no problem posting things about places they know very little about and completely ignore stuff that happens in the city i.e. the 6 year old girl who killed in Little Village when she was sitting on the porch.

So why was voter turnout  at an all-time low last night??

I think that it was a referendum on how people are aware than some politicians are not interested in being public servants. People are fed up with politicians who take cash bribes and only come around during election time looking for votes. It is very difficult to get people excited about elections when the general public decides to give all elected officials a no-confidence vote.

Evan F. Moore is a Freelance journalist who also is a blogger for Chicago Now. He blogs at Fanning the Flames since 1978.

We Must Save Chicago’s Mental Health Clinics

Make sure to pick up an issue of this week’s Extra Newspaper to see the full article I’ve written about this struggle.

The issue of mental health and access to affordable, quality treatment is one that is very important to me. People in my community on the Southwest Side are struggling to find ways to cope with an economic/jobs crisis that puts so much stress on them. This creates a need for more support in maintaining emotional and mental health for their families.

The Mental Health Movement in Chicago has scheduled a public town hall for March 21st in Logan Square to call attention to the effects that the closing of mental health clinics will have on the Latino community. The town hall will take place at Resurrection Catholic Church located at 3043 N. Francisco. The event will feature a panel that includes Former State Senator, City Clerk and Mayoral Candidate Miguel del Valle.

The City Council passed Mayor Rahm’s Emanuel’s proposed 2012 city budget that will close six of 12 mental health clinics operated by the Chicago Department of Public Health. These clinics serve over 5,000 city residents. A group called the Mental Health movement has been organizing against the closure of the six mental health clinics because it will disrupt services to thousands of patients.

In an email to  supporters they wrote: “After the closing and layoffs, there will be a sizable reduction in Spanish speaking services available. This reduction will leave the entire north side of the city without any Spanish speaking services available.”

The Mental Health movement has been very active and well organized. Aside from holding town halls, public hearings and press conferences they’ve also organized direct actions such as singing altered Christmas Carols, staging a sit-in outside Mayor Emanuel’s office in City Hall and mic-checking Rahm during a New Trier ceremony where he received an award (see video).

The group also criticizes the Mayor for “laying the weight of our budget woes on working families while finding ways to lighten the burden on the largest and wealthiest corporations in our City.”

A petition to both the City Council and Commissioner of the Chicago Department of Public Health, Bechara Choucair, M.D, has been started on Change.org demanding that the Mental Health Clinics be kept open. To sign the petition click here.

In the end, these cuts would save each taxpayer only $2 per year. The city would only save about $2.3 million from the budget but the affects this would have on individuals, their families and the communities they’re a part outweigh any possible benefits from these cuts.

Read this statement below taken from an interview I did with Matt Ginsberg-Jaeckle on WRTE Radio Arte.

Mayor Emanuel thought he could just roll over our city’s 99 percent, especially its most vulnerable citizens, by passing a budget that closes half Chicago’s mental health clinics, privatizes all of its neighborhood health centers and cuts off other services to its poorest citizens. He thought twisting arms to get a unanimous vote would keep people from noticing that he balanced the budget on the backs of the city’s poorest communities. He thought people wouldn’t notice he’s cutting the jobs of hundreds of mostly black and Latino workers and slashing needed services in the most under-served communities while expanding benefits for rich corporations. He thought the story would be that he made tough but necessary choices.

Town Hall on Mental Health Clinics

Wednesday March 21st, 2012
7pm-9pm
Resurrection Catholic Church
3043 N. Francisco – Parish Hall

For more information contact: MentalHealthMovement@gmail.com - www.stopchicago.org – (773) 340-9598

Twitter: StopChicago

Facebook: facebook.com/SaveOurClinics

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First Annual Cuban Film Festival

In correlation with an exhibit by political Cuban prisoner, Gerardo Hernández, Calles y Sueños and the Chicago Cuba Coalition have put together four films via grassroots muscle in order to educate the Chicago community of happenings around the world.

“The reason why we are doing this festival and show now is because we, that is Calles y Sueños-Chicago, continue to feel that is it necessary to continue in nurturing dialogue around issues that are impact our Latino communities,” said Christina Obregón, coordinator at Calles y Sueños. “It is in our mission and vision to challenge and provoke the Latino community to be critical thinkers and analyzers about what happens around the world so that we can use ‘Nuestra arte y cultura’ as a tool against oppression.”

Although there are only four movies, Obregón says that they hope to make the festival bigger as the years go on. They did not receive any grants, sponsorship or funding for this project.

 Hernández, who was sentenced to a double-life term and is not allowed to see his family, has been locked up for 13 years in a case that has been called the single most outstanding “unfair trial” by Amnesty International.

“Gerardo and the rest of the Five are locked up for a collective four life terms plus 77 years for blowing the whistle on terrorists operations carried out by violent Miami-based “anti-Castro” groups –groups whose open violations of U.S. and international law Washington has turned a blind eye to for decades even while they killed and maimed nearly 10,000 Cuban civilians,” according to information released by Calles y Sueños. ”Gerardo along with the rest of the Five volunteered to infiltrate these groups to prevent further loss of life. Outrageously, their turning over yard-high documentation of terrorist crimes to the FBI led to their being charged and convicted of “conspiracy” for revealing them.”

The exhibition will display 30 original political cartoons by Hernández from his prison cell and runs from March 9 to April 28.

Calles y Sueños & The Chicago Cuba Coalition invite you to the launching of the

First Annual Chicago Cuban Film Festival

 

Sunday March 18

Will the Real Terrorist Please Stand Up?’ directed by Saul Landau

Chicago premiere.

Will The Real Terrorist Please Stand Up documents the history involving the CIA, violence, and the five Cubans serving long sentences in U.S. prisons. The film features an interview with Gerardo Hernandez, one of the Cuban Five who is currently serving life imprisonment in Victorville Maximum Security Prison for “conspiracy to commit espionage.”  Landau also interviews Luis Posada Carriles, Orlando Bosch, and others who have acknowledged perpetrating acts of terrorism in Cuba as “freedom fighters.” Delightful surprises are appearances in the film by Fidel Castro and Danny Glover.

[2011, 68 min.]

3pm

 

Friday March 30

‘In the Wrong Body’ (En el Cuerpo Equivocado)

Chicago premiere.

 The documentary is a moving portrayal of Mavi’s life, Cuba’s first gender reassignment. Mavi Susel has had to endure discrimination and abuse, but she courageously pursued her dream of realizing a reassignment surgery, the first to be performed in Cuba, in 1988. The growing national discussion in Cuba promoting inclusion and respect for diversity has been led by Cuba’s National Sex Education Center.

[Dir. Marilyn Solaya, 2011, 52 min..]

Screened with Cuba’s Campaign against Homophobia’

[10 min.]

7pm

Sunday April 15

Roots of My Heart’ (Raíces de mi Corazon)

An independently produced short feature film, deals for the first time in Cuban media with the 1912 massacre of thousands of members of the Independents of Color, the hemisphere’s first black political party outside Haiti.

[Dir. Gloria Relonda, 2001]

3pm

Saturday, April 21

Maestra’

The Cuban Literacy Campaign in 1961 was one of the farthest-reaching and most successful literacy campaigns to date, one of the pinnacle moments in the social history of the Americas. This 56-minute documentary tells the story of the campaign through personal stories of women literacy workers who went to the mountains and valleys across the island to teach—and found themselves deeply transformed in the process.

[Dir. Catherine Murphy,30 min.]

7pm

 

 

All film screening will be shown at

Calles y Sueños

1900 South Carpenter

Chicago, IL

 Free & Open to the Public

 For more information contact

773-208-0553 or 312-952-2618

facebook.com/Calles y Sueños-Chicago

www.ChicagoCubaCoalition.org

 

Canteca de Macao close out another successful Flamenco Festival

After a great month-long Flamenco Festival, Canteca de Macao closed it out with a bang for the second time ever. Dancing, singing and world music brought the Double Door alive in a performance brought to you by RatioNation.com in collaboration with Arte y Vida Chicago and the Instituto Cervantes.

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Los Amigos Invisibles pack the Cubby Bear in Wrigleyville

Los Amigos Invisibles are taking out this year with a bang. Celebrating the end of the world as we know it, the band brought out the party in people and Latinos from all around the city. Jumping, singing and dancing, the packed house and intimate setting made for a great Thursday night.

Sound quality aside, the band brought out its best and most popular songs like Mentiras, Vivire Para Ti, La Vecina and Cuchi Cuchi. We were lucky enough to capture the night through still photos by Abel Arciniega that you can find below.

Did you attend the event? What did you think?

-Christina E. Rodriguez

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Old, white and male: Do you qualify to be an Oscar voter?

By: Kevork Djansezian/AP Photo

The Oscar’s best-kept secret is out thanks to a little investigative work by the L.A. Times. No one knew who the 5,765 members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences were… until now.

The Times “spoke with thousands of academy members and their representatives – and reviewed academy publications, resumes, and biographies” and figured out the demographics of roughly 89 percent of all Oscar voters.  The results: old white guys.

Here is what the study revealed.

  • 94% white
  •  77% male
  • 2% black
  • Less than 2% Latino
  • 14% people under 50
  • Median age is 62

The overall composition of the Academy’s membership reinforces the diversity (or lack thereof) on screen and affects the industry’s decision-making.

In the Oscars 83 years of history, less than four percent of the acting awards have been awarded to African-Americans. Only one woman — Kathryn Bigelow — has received the Academy Award for directing “The Hurt Locker.”

“Asians, Latinos, black people — you never see them. We are 320 million people in America and about 48 million black people and the same of Latin descent — but you would not believe that based on what you see in films and television shows,” said African-American actor, Bernie Casey who recently quit the academy disappointed in its racial makeup.

This year several people from underrepresented communities received nominations. Viola Davis for best actress in “The Help” and her fellow cast mate Octavia Spencer for supporting actress. Mexican-born, Demián Bichir, who stars in the film “A Better Life” is competing in the best actor category.

All of this year’s five nominated directors are white men and of the 21 producers of the nine best picture nominees, not one of them is a person of color.

Were there more Latino academy members, Bichir said, opportunities for Latinos would improve. “That would mean there would be a lot more roles for Latin actors,” the actor said, “and a lot more movies for [Latin] cinematographers.”

It’s not surprising that in a culture where “predominantly white” is used more often than not to describe institutions, that the Academy Awards would be the same.

Now that the ugly truth is out let’s hope that more people in the community respond and represent. To Demián Bichir and the rest of the folks of color nominated tonight, “Si se puede!”

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Paco Communications releases media breakdown

Let’s face it, you spend a lot of time on your phone, right? Texting, Googling, Facebooking but not really talking.

If you’re Latino, you’re most likely addicted to texting, according to a study released by Paco Communications, that shows a breakdown of TV, Mobile and Internet usage by ethnicity.

Of 259 million Americans, 35 percent of them owned a smartphone in 2011. Of those 35 percent, 44 percent are Latino compared to the 48 percent that are Asian/Pacific Islander and 30 percent Caucasian users. The Black community ties with the Latino at 44.

Another very interesting point that was made in the report was that Latinos and Asian/Pacific Islanders are leading the way in tablet usage. Do you have a tablet? Of the 29 percent of Americans who own some sort of tablet or e-reader, 12.6 percent of them are Latinos and 14.4 percent are Asian/Pacific Islander.

Both communities are also early adapters of new technology and mobile devices. That was evident in reports released about Latina moms online by Mamiverse.com.

Next question: Does this surprise us? As a news/media agency, I’m glad we have up-to-date numbers about this, definitely. But after walking around a mall, sitting on a bus or walking down the street, I could have told you Latinos were addicted to texting. I mean, I am addicted to texting. 

What I found interesting is that although only 3.5 percent of Asian/Pacific Islanders watch videos online, they come in first place with time spent watching videos at 10 hours a month. Approximately 12.1 percent of Latinos watch videos online, but only spend 6.5 hours watching videos.

But I have to admit, I believe that being connected to the digital world has revamped watching television. If you watch Fox at all, you’ll find a hashtag in the corner of the screen (#Glee, #House, #FamilyGuy). Television networks are picking up on what people are doing, so they’re implementing it and getting a lot of traction and feedback because of it. I probably won’t go to their Facebook page to answer a question, but I will probably criticize or praise something about their programs on Twitter. #justsaying  So, let’s look at what they said about TV usage:

  • On average, the American public watched 32 hours and 36 minutes of TV a week at the end of 2011 and of the 38 percent of Americans who owned a DVR, Latinos ranked in dead last with 28.8 percent.
  • But we love live TV. Like I said, Twitter makes it that much more fun and now there’s proof! While watching TV, 40 percent of tablet and smartphone users check email, search the web or are on social media.
  • And who says football isn’t popular among the Latino population? The Super Bowl raked in 10.4 million Latino viewers of 111.3 million who watched in 2012.
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Photos of demonstration in Humboldt Park

Here are a few photos of the demonstration and press conference that took place in front of Tipsy Cake bakery in Humboldt Park, courtesy of Carlos Jimenez Flores.

Dibs:The time-honored tradition

It’s Chicago. It’s Winter. It’s snowing. You know what that means. The time-honored tradition: Dibs. Let me explain Dibs to those of you out there who do not know exactly what that is: Dibs is when someone shovels out a parking space and leaves a lawn chair or some sort of marker to save the parking space that they shoveled.

Of course this is a polarizing issue for people who are new to Chicago. Remember the saying “When in Rome, do what the Romans do?” That means when you move into a neighborhood do not get upset at the natural order of things. It is same as a condo association or a block club. There are unofficial rules in every neighborhood (i.e. keeping your lawn up and not barbequing in the front yard).

To those of you out there who think Dibs is a silly concept think of this: Say you were at a restaurant and you picked out a booth to sit in and someone disregarded the fact that you got to that booth first and sat in the booth with you. You would not be happy with that person right?  That is exactly what Dibs is. Someone took time to shovel out a parking space for him or herself. Why would you think that they could just remove someone’s chairs and take advantage of someone else’s work? That doesn’t make any sense, does it? So next time you are driving around looking for a space, resist your natural inclination to do something that upsets the natural order of the neighborhood.

 

Evan F. Moore is a Freelance journalist who also is a blogger for Chicago Now. He blogs at Fanning the Flames since 1978.

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