Programs/Content
WBEZ blends entertainment and identity with ‘Shoes Off: A Sexy Asians Podcast’
|
The show celebrates what it calls “badass Asians who are making a mark on pop culture.”
Current (https://current.org/series/diversity/page/4/?wallit_nosession=1%29)
The show celebrates what it calls “badass Asians who are making a mark on pop culture.”
This year’s RTDNA/Newhouse School at Syracuse University Survey survey found that 63.9% of noncommercial radio newsrooms surveyed had staffers of color.
The costs of bad Latina/o/e/x outreach can be fatal for your organization’s strategy, writes Ernesto Aguilar.
“Our handling of story ideas can have built-in defenses against the biases that all of us bring to work every day.”
KPBS is one of five newsrooms that will “test new strategies to build relationships with underserved communities.”
“I think that the only way we do better is if we have accountability,” said Pallavi Gogoi, head of NPR’s business desk.
Representation of Hispanics and African Americans grew in leadership ranks, while the percentage of such roles held by Asians and Pacific Islanders fell.
The seminal research initiative Audience 88 shaped programming for more than 30 years. It’s time for a new vision.
With launch of “This is Nashville,” WPLN aims to deliver coverage that’s “driven by the community, for the community.”
Changing the storytellers is the only way to help reverse the news media’s unconscionable pattern of racial inequity, says YR Media CEO Kyra Kyles.
Our webinar featured Whitney Maddox, NPR’s DEI manager, and Kim Salvaggio, chief DEI officer at Rocky Mountain Public Media.
The network said that in fiscal year 2021, 51% of its nationally programmed prime-time schedule “included diverse on-screen talent; was produced, written or directed by diverse makers; and/or explored diversity-related topics.”
Almost every public media organization is prioritizing diversity. Yet beyond hiring, what are the next steps for content strategy?
“When you’re at home, how do you engage in difference?” asks Byron Green, who joined PRX in April 2021. “How do you engage across differences at large?”
NPR’s SAG-AFTRA union issued a mixed progress report this month on its demands for addressing diversity issues within the network.