Juana Summers – Nieman Lab https://www.niemanlab.org Thu, 04 May 2023 16:42:05 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2 The voices of NPR: How four women of color see their roles as hosts https://www.niemanlab.org/2023/05/the-voices-of-npr-how-four-women-of-color-see-their-roles-as-hosts/ https://www.niemanlab.org/2023/05/the-voices-of-npr-how-four-women-of-color-see-their-roles-as-hosts/#respond Thu, 04 May 2023 16:42:05 +0000 https://www.niemanlab.org/?p=214871

This story was originally published by The 19th.

Juana Summers is struck by “an incredible sense of responsibility.”

She took over one of the host chairs at “All Things Considered” in June 2022 after many years as a political correspondent for NPR. Now almost a year into her new role, she sees herself as a guide to making the news program — and NPR in general — a place where people can feel represented.

Part of that, Summers believes, starts with the audience knowing her.

“I am never setting at the door that I am a Black woman, I am a stepparent, I am a woman who grew up in the Midwest and lived in a low- and middle-income home growing up, and who went to private religious schools,” said Summers, 34. “All of those dynamics are things that inform how I do my journalism, and the degree in which I lean into any part of that varies from story to story.”

Summers is one of the four women of color — three of them Black — who have taken over hosting duties at flagship NPR programs over the past year. Leila Fadel moved to “Morning Edition” in January 2022, joined just over a year later by veteran NPR host Michel Martin. Ayesha Rascoe became the host of “Weekend Edition Sunday” in March 2022. Their roles extend beyond the voices delivering the headlines. Each are editorial leaders with immense influence over what and who is covered.

“It would seem that after NPR top executives and news managers saw its three most popular women of color hosts departed within the last year, they would have pondered seriously about why these stellar female journalists left, with serious determination to make progressive changes at the public network to recruit and retain women of color hosts,” said Sharon Bramlett-Solomon, an associate professor at Arizona State University and an expert on race and gender in broadcast journalism.

Bramlett-Solomon added that leadership at NPR now faces a unique challenge in showing their commitment “to move forward with dramatic and meaningful transformation in programming inclusion and not simply window dressing on the set.”

Whitney Maddox, who was hired for the newly created diversity, equity and inclusion manager role in January 2021, said that in her role, she has especially focused on women of color at NPR: “What’s happening with them? How are they doing? What do they need?”

She has created a monthly space for women of color at the organization to meet and share about their day-to-day experiences and voice what resources they need. Her work also includes consulting to the flagship programs and checking in on their workplace cultures and how people are supported, including how stories are pitched and edited.

Maddox also started Start Talking About Race, or STAR, which is a twice-monthly event open to everyone in the organization. From these conversations, Maddox said she’s already seen an impact.

“This is moving beyond this space into how people are pitching their stories,” Maddox said. “Editors have come back to me and said, ‘A point that somebody made in STAR — I used that when I brought up a point of how we should think differently about how to source this story.’ There is a process, there is time, there is changing people’s hearts and raising their consciousness to understand why this work is important.”

The leadership of Fadel, Martin, Rascoe, and Summers are key parts in acting on conversations surrounding equity. Their roles in the host chairs are a signal of NPR’s commitment to reflecting their audience, Marrapodi said. “Our job is to be public media for the entire public,” he said. “We’re here for everybody. Our job is to hold a mirror up to society. And this is what society looks like.”

Fadel, 41, is acutely aware that her in the host chair is a representation of what society looks — and sounds — like.

“I just never thought it could happen. Clearly women have held host seats at NPR long before me, and people of color have moved up through the organization, but I just never imagined it,” she said. “How could I have imagined this for myself? There was no one who looked like me, who was an Arab woman, who was Muslim, doing this job.”

“I think about that responsibility and I take it very seriously,” Rascoe said. She said she thinks about her late grandmother, a sharecropper from North Carolina, constantly as she works. “I think about her and I think about my whole family, and I never want to make them not proud of me. I never want them to look at what I’m doing and say, ‘What is she out here doing? How is she representing us? We didn’t raise her that way.’”

Even the sound of her voice has been true to Rascoe’s roots: As her executive producer Sarah Lucy Oliver said, “Ayesha sounds like herself. She says she sounds like a Black woman from Durham, North Carolina.”

Oliver described what she calls “NPR voice” — a low register, stripped of any regional dialects, that registers as white and male — as the prevailing sound of NPR. Rascoe, she said, is a disruption to that.

“For decades, listeners have been accustomed to a particular kind of NPR voice. You can run through the dial and figure out when you’ve landed on an NPR member station,” Oliver said.

Hearing a voice like Rascoe’s “is a definite change in direction, and is exactly the kind of voice NPR wants to bring to the air,” Oliver said. “This is part of the real world. People speak differently. People have different regional accents. People use different kinds of colloquialisms. NPR is trying to sound more like the real world now.”

But Rascoe has had to reckon with the way audiences — used to that staid, white, and masculine NPR voice — perceive her. She has received racist listener feedback: coded messaging urging her to “sound professional,” telling Rascoe about how they don’t like her voice.

Rascoe says this is “all just a way of saying, ‘You are Black, and you are a Black woman from the South, and therefore you are stupid.’” When she first arrived at NPR in 2018 from Reuters, where she was a White House correspondent, it was a shock. “I will not try to pretend that it didn’t hurt and that it wasn’t frustrating,” she said.

Though Rascoe said she has received nothing but support from her colleagues and managers, her experience speaks to the dynamic at play in newsrooms nationwide aspiring to evolve, change and grow in being representative in their journalism.

The work of “disrupting the whiteness that journalists of color so often feel in white newsrooms” is hard and real, Bramlett-Solomon said — but doable, especially when there is real, on-the-ground support from management, with actual dollars behind it to show it.

Rascoe is aware of the fact that by simply being on air in such a high-profile way, she is doing that work of not only changing NPR, but changing American audiences’ expectations more broadly on credibility within the news.

“I have a voice that is not a voice that people necessarily expect — but it’s mine…Hopefully, it helps expand their idea of what authority, what professionalism and what intelligence can sound like,” Rascoe said.

Martin, 63, first joined NPR in 2006 to launch “Tell Me More,” an interview-focused show that aired on NPR member stations nationwide from 2007 to 2014. She then became host of “Weekend All Things Considered,” a position she held until joining “Morning Edition” as one of the hosts in March.

After decades in journalism, and many years at NPR specifically, Martin is deliberate and thoughtful in her imagining of the organization’s future and her role in it. As someone with a long history with the organization — one that includes using her voice to help push NPR forward on how it thinks about and covers race — she brings to her new role the ability to hold the past in the present while continuing to look forward. She said she’s constantly thinking not only about her time at NPR, but the ways journalists of color have worked to serve communities throughout history in how she approaches her role today.

“I just want us to keep getting better,” Martin said. “I want us to keep getting better because if you aren’t, then you are not growing. If you are not growing, then you’re dying.”

Martin steps into leadership at the flagship program at a time when the political climate often makes it tough for journalists to report. Martin says she thinks journalists play an especially important role “to help us understand each other’s experiences.” Without helping audiences dig into the nuances of why people believe what they do — and why the political is so personal for so many — journalists aren’t doing the job they are charged with executing.

“Yes, the words are changing and we’re all having to learn to use different language and to recognize different identities that were perhaps not part of our own experiences before. But that’s life. That’s learning. That’s education. That’s the news,” she said.

Martin said she takes inspiration from the way that Spanish-language and Black newspapers have crafted their coverage strategies.

“The origin of these news outlets was not just to talk about the politics that particularly affected these communities, but also to help people understand how to live in the new world that they were in: telling people things like how to register to vote, how to register your kids for school,” Martin said.

It is exactly this kind of work — often dismissed by editors and audiences alike as “unserious” for being service-oriented or because its target audience is those from historically underrepresented backgrounds — that Martin has always prioritized, and sees as essential now more than ever.

“What I want the most is for us to keep moving forward and not lose sight of our mission, which is to serve the public…I want us to keep doing our jobs because I think the country really needs us,” Martin said. “I want us to get more honest and stronger and more clear in how we serve people by helping them understand the world that does not lead them to carry the baggage of waking up and saying, ‘Whose side am I on today?’ That’s not who we are and I think not being that is so important.”

To think about equitable journalism means to consider the weight and totality of experience that exists behind each voice that feels unheard. That’s something that Martin’s “Morning Edition” co-host Fadel thinks a lot about, too. Fadel said she sees a major part of her job as being someone who can actively make and support a “safe space” for a range of voices, opinions, and perspectives in the editorial process.

Being fully present as herself in the host chair is a critical element of that, Fadel said — while also acknowledging that simply sitting in the seat doesn’t mean her newsroom, or any other, is done with the work of thinking holistically about what representation means in journalism.

“Change doesn’t happen because one person sits in a chair,” Fadel said. “It requires action at every level. This is happening at NPR, but of course there is more work to be done. Diversity isn’t just who is in a newsroom, but whose voices are in a story, and there is still a lot of work to be done there. We have a very diverse newsroom, but we need to always make sure it is more than white men whose voices get to talk about what happened.”

Fadel said she thinks all the time about how her own journalism can help change other people’s — and predominantly white listeners’ — perceptions.

“I didn’t see myself and my family in the stories I saw on the news. My father is from Lebanon and I grew up in Saudi Arabia. Talking about people like my family in the news meant only talking about people who were ensconced in conflict. It was all conflict. But there are real people who exist in these places where there is conflict. And they are nuanced and may all experience pain differently and joy differently and have lives outside of the conflict going on around them.”

Sitting in the host chair at “Morning Edition” is a way that she feels she can change this kind of sentiment across journalism, writ large.

“Representation matters,” she said.

Jennifer Gerson is a reporter at The 19th, where this story was originally published.

Ayesha Rascoe, Michel Martin, Leila Fadel and Juana Summers, four women of color who have taken over host chairs at flagship NPR programs over the past year. Photo by Lexey Swall for The 19th.

]]>
https://www.niemanlab.org/2023/05/the-voices-of-npr-how-four-women-of-color-see-their-roles-as-hosts/feed/ 0
This just in: How 9 news organizations are reporting election results live on the web https://www.niemanlab.org/2016/03/this-just-in-how-9-news-organizations-are-reporting-election-results-live-on-the-web/ https://www.niemanlab.org/2016/03/this-just-in-how-9-news-organizations-are-reporting-election-results-live-on-the-web/#respond Tue, 01 Mar 2016 16:00:36 +0000 http://www.niemanlab.org/?p=121166 ’Tis the season of colorful speeches, embarrassing (campaign-destroying) tweets, and unbelievable victories. Will Hillary Clinton come out strong over Bernie Sanders in the South, or is Sanders making inroads with minority voters? Will Donald Trump sustain his momentum today in the Super Tuesday races?

As caucus and primary results come flying in state after state, and as raucous debates air with increasing frequency, how are news outlets delivering the most up-to-date state of the race to readers? What do readers really want? (Play-by-play live tweeting? Deeper context? More Trump? Less Trump?) And how do they want to consume it? (On mobile as a second screen? As their only source?)

In a recent Pew survey on how Americans are following the 2016 presidential campaign, 24 percent of respondents said cable news was the most helpful way for them to follow the campaign. But among 18- to 29-year-olds, 35 percent of respondents favored social media as the most useful channel for obtaining election information.

“In many ways, this is a wholesale change to how we’ve covered past elections. The biggest change is what the audience wants and how it wants it,” said Domenico Montanaro, NPR’s lead editor for politics and digital audience. “Readers and listeners have become far more mobile-first, even just over the past year or so, so that changes how you conceive everything from the writing to the layout.”

We checked in with several news organizations on how they’re handling their live coverage of the 2016 presidential campaign. Below are their responses, lightly edited for length and clarity.

Bloomberg Politics

John Geddes, Bloomberg U.S. politics editor:

Breaking news coverage has always been a core component of Bloomberg News’ success. In this election, we’ve capitalized on that and regularly use Bloomberg First Word in the Campaign Tracker section of our website. The team at BFW watches debates and monitors social networks, websites and news sources for breaking news. Then they send out headlines and reports where developments and analysis are condensed into a bullet-point format for speedy comprehension and quick reading.

Bloomberg-campaign-tracker-screenshot

In this election, video is playing a far bigger role in our coverage than it has in the past. Our live hour-long Bloomberg Politics show, With All Due Respect, was in the early states, doing interviews with candidates and updates with reporters on a daily basis.

What remains unchanged is our belief that, whenever possible, reporters should be present physically on the trail. That’s the only way we feel a journalist can truly capture and understand the rhythm of a campaign, the resonance a platform or candidate has with voters, and how the candidates craft their message to appeal to the various electoral interests found in the the different states.

On big political nights, we divide and conquer on social. Our dedicated social editor for Bloomberg Politics constantly pushes out new content on Twitter and live-tweets quotes from candidates. We also coordinate our efforts with other social editors to get our features out across the flagship Bloomberg social properties in real time. We try to turn around those newsworthy, mic-drop live TV moments as fast as humanly possible, whether in native video or GIF form, to help us illustrate the larger story.

For all the weekday debates, With All Due Respect has broadcast live from the event’s locale. And by having specific individuals charged with filing breaking news and others charged with social messaging, it allows those other reporters covering the event to focus on the authoritative reporting and analysis that Bloomberg’s audience values.

The Washington Post

Terri Rupar, national digital projects editor:

On election nights, our maps incorporate live analysis and show who’s winning, the size of the lead and population density, as well as highlight areas where something significant has happened. The maps are modular, making it easy for us to tell the story and incorporate it across our site, whether that’s on mobile, desktop, the homepage, or even new features like Backdrop.

WashingtonPost-backdropBackdrop is a feature we launched with live results in mind. It’s a mobile-optimized panel on politics articles that helps put what’s happening in the election into context, allowing the reader to get the latest results without ever leaving the page. We’re also using newsletters as a way to reach people to both preview and wrap up major events. We have the newly launched Daily Trail newsletter, and the 5-Minute Fix and Fact Checker newsletters.

We’ve tried a variety of platforms and approaches and are continuing to experiment. The social quote cards we launched late last year have been hugely helpful with telling the story of debates as well as candidate speeches on Twitter. As a real-time platform, Twitter is a great place to share images of our primary-night maps as results come in, and we’re experimenting with other images. And GIFs, of course.

For social, we focus on repackaging our existing assets, such as prior reporting we may have done explaining issues and talking points back when voters weren’t paying attention, or even lighter content that shows a different side of a candidate’s pitch, such as our series of literal elevator pitch videos. Our strategy is to make sure we have those stories queued up in such a way that we can share them to provide context during live events. We’ve received a lot of feedback that people find value in providing those stories, and for our outlet, providing that value is more important than stacking up retweets.

Our desire is to provide context, rather than simply tweet out what a candidate just said. When a candidate mentions his tax policy, for instance, it’s worth taking a moment to dig up that story we did on his tax policy to tweet out, rather than to simply repeat that talking point. We actually created a series called Where They Stand because we knew that it would come in handy for providing that context as the primary drew closer. The series focused on the issues we knew candidates were likely to talk about as points of differentiation during debates — guns for Democrats, for instance, and foreign policy for Republicans.

Another example of this occurred during the final GOP debate before New Hampshire, when Marco Rubio repeatedly leaned on his talking points (and Chris Christie attacked him on that). We’d actually done a story in which we’d taken a Rubio stump speech and deconstructed it, because that very repetition was something one of our reporters had noted on the trail. We did a minor edit on that story and shared it again, and it brought people to our site that likely hadn’t visited us before.

Mashable

Juana Summers, political editor:

This is the first election cycle Mashable has had a politics editor on board, so we’ve completely built this effort from the ground up. Until now, we hadn’t covered politics in a particularly targeted way, and we consider this the entire newsroom’s story.

While some elements — like our Lego visualizations of the Iowa caucus and New Hampshire primary results — are carryovers from past cycles, I really considered myself starting with a blank slate. We hired two great reporters, Emily Cahn and Cameron Joseph, to tell the stories that other outlets may overlook.

Our biggest goal this campaign cycle was to cover the 2016 election in ways that are constantly surprising and to really have the freedom to play with format. Leveraging social channels is a huge part of that, and the bedrock of what Mashable does. You’ll find our coverage of the 2016 race on Twitter (@Mashable, @MashableNews, @MashPolitics), Vine, Facebook, and Snapchat.

Debate nights are a labor of love in our newsroom that includes contributions from our politics, real-time news, video, business, global news and watercooler (viral content) teams, as well as our social team, which manages our multiple accounts throughout the evening. One of our big mandates is to do nothing obligatory. Every piece of content we promote or create should have the audience in mind. We’ve also taken a highly visual approach to covering the debates. Debates are soundbite-driven events, and capturing the most important moments and being able to rapidly promote them on social — Vine, Facebook, Twitter — has been essential.

Photo of stickers given out to voters after Super Tuesday in 2012, by BU Interactive News, used under a Creative Commons license. Photos of Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders signs courtesy of Fungai Tichawangana, used with permission.

]]>
https://www.niemanlab.org/2016/03/this-just-in-how-9-news-organizations-are-reporting-election-results-live-on-the-web/feed/ 0