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Media continues to trivialize stories from the motherland
Tuesday, 13 June 2006 20:00
Roland Martin
 
CHICAGO ?? A few days after ABC named Charlie Gibson as the sole anchor of its ?®World News Tonight?∆ franchise, the veteran newsman found himself in the middle of a brouhaha after New York magazine published an inflammatory comment he reportedly made about reporting from Africa.

In a May 29 story by Joe Hagan, Gibson was asked if he would be traveling the globe like his competitor, NBC??s Brian Williams. According to Hagan??s report, Gibson responded: ?®That??s because of Katrina; you saw him going down there. Now he??s in Africa. I don??t know why you do that. Why the hell do you go to Africa? It??s certainly an interesting choice. We??ll do travel, when it warrants.?∆

?®Why the hell do you go to Africa??∆

Those eight words stood out big time for me when I read the story after visiting the broadcast trade website TVSpy.com.


I was taken aback because Gibson has always seemed to be a personable and intelligent guy, and making such a remark appeared to be out of character.


So the next day we dealt with the issue on my radio show on Chicago??s WVON-AM. I was a bit hot under the collar and wanted Gibson to explain what he meant. After leaving a few messages with the network, Gibson??s name popped up on my screen.


He wasted no time in slamming Hagan and his reporting.


?®This guy, who I will never talk to again from New York magazine, who is something of a snake, he took my quote and I think perverted the meaning of it to indicate in some way that I was insensitive to news from one of the five major continents in the world,?∆ he said.


Gibson said he discussed the issue with Hagan as it pertained to why Williams would report on Africa because of rock star Bono, who has traveled across the world to raise awareness to issues on the continent.


The ABC veteran said he initially posed the question after receiving an e-mail congratulating him on his appointment as the solo anchor from his longtime friend, NBC News executive producer John Reiss.

?®You??re not going there to look at the issues (of Africa), and it (the story) becomes about Bono. It doesn??t become about the problems of Africa or the issues of Africa ...Why do you do that? I was curious about why NBC made that decision,?∆ he said.

Gibson said that ABC has long been committed to coverage of Africa, noting that the network is the only broadcast news division ?®with a full-time reporter on the continent?∆ and has reported extensively of AIDS on ?®Good Morning America,?∆ ?®primarily because of my interest.?∆


Hagan was called off air and declined to discuss the story on air, but did tell me, ?®I stand by the article.?∆


Some might think the story is no big deal, but African-Americans ?? and a few others ?? have long complained that issues on the continent are ignored.


President Bill Clinton continues to apologize for his complete inaction during his tenure, when as many as 800,000 people were slaughtered in Rwanda.


The continent is certainly ravaged by a variety of issues ?? AIDS, hunger and genocide, just to name a few. Yet few media outlets are willing to explore the continent beyond the horrific tragedies. What about the exploding movie industry in Nigeria? How about the president of Liberia (a country formed by ex-American slaves), Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, the first woman in modern-day Africa to lead a country on the continent? Since Libya is no longer on our terrorist watch list, are they stories of substance from the country?


I know so many of us don??t care about what??s happening around the globe. Heck, we barely care about our neighbor next door! But if Americans are going to think more globally, we are going to have to demand ?? and watch ?? something other than ?®American Idol.?∆


Thankfully, I??m pleased that a fellow colleague, Bob Reid, is leading the Africa Channel, a 24-hour cable network devoted to the continent. When Al Jazeera launches their U.S. network, it would be nice to see stories through their eyes.


I don??t think for a second that ABC and Gibson will purposely ignore Africa. But he did say one thing that I agree with, and that is if the ratings show that the viewers want more international news, then we will see it.


Unfortunately, I just don??t hold out much hope that Americans really care that much about our global brothers and sisters.

?ÿ
 Roland S. Martin, editor of The Chicago Defender newspaper,  is author of ?®Speak, Brother! A Black Man??s View of America.?∆
 



 


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