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Thursday, December 11, 2008

Well It Was Good While it Lasted.....NPR is Cancelling A Few Shows......News & Notes is Kaput!



I am extremely dissappointed that it appears NPR has succumbed to our nation's financial crunch pretty much like any other corporate entity. This was of course exhibited by the announcement that the politically progressive media outlet is laying off staff and cancelling shows, one of which (News & Notes hosted by the incomparable Farai Chideya) yours truly was fortunate enough to appear on regularly. Although I am not a wholesale believer in leftist politics and policies, I have to give praise to Ms. Chideya and Notes' producer, Devin Robins for giving our Afronerd blog (and radio show) a platform to "pimp" our conservative wares. I guess it's true that all good things must surely come to an end. Here's more on this issue, courtesy of ScienceBlogs.com:


NPR cancels News & Notes, Day to Day; cuts 7% of staff

Posted on: December 10, 2008 10:02 PM, by Abel Pharmboy

Driving home tonight, I learned that NPR is cutting staff and canceling two shows produced at NPR West: News & Notes with Farai Chideya and Day to Day with Madeleine Brand. (Full memo at HuffPo)

Farai put up a blog post late this afternoon entitled, We Love You! (And, Yes, We Are Cancelled). I don't know if I'd have the gut and optimism to be so gracious in the face of having my show terminated effective 20 March 2009. The companion blog post at Day to Day certainly lacked this optimism. But Farai has many, many things going in her favor despite this setback:


Chideya, who was born and raised in Baltimore, Maryland, and graduated with a B.A. from Harvard University magna cum laude in 1990, is also the founder of PopandPolitics.com, an online journal for younger Americans based at the University of Southern California's Annenberg School of Communications. Chideya and PopandPolitics.com have won awards including a MOBE IT Innovator award, being named one of Alternet's New Media Heroes, and ranking in PoliticsOnline.com's worldwide survey of "25 Who Are Changing the World of Internet and Politics."

Chideya has published three books. Don't Believe the Hype: Fighting Cultural Misinformation About African Americans (Plume Penguin, 1995), is now in its eighth printing. . .


. . .and so on.

As I have returned to an area of academia focused on the recruitment and retention of underrepresented minorities, Ms Chideya and News & Notes gave me great insight into my community and, in particular, was a tremendous resource in the 18 months leading up to the US presidential election. Moreover, Farai routinely featured bloggers and it was on her show that I first learned of the Philadelphia attorney and author of the award-winning Field Negro blog. Farai's interview with Stephen Sterling of Esterlina Vineyards opened my eyes to the Association of African American Vintners and the interest in estate wines produced by Black professionals.

At a time when the US has elected its first African American president, one would hope that NPR could've kept its one program one of its two programs devoted specifically to the African American community. But, like all businesses, money talks and financial support for shows produced at NPR West suffered from the stock market downturn to which News & Notes was not immune.

However, I am certain that Farai Chideya will find a very high-profile position in journalism where her talents will reach an even wider audience at this critical juncture in American history.

Olbermann, Matthews, Maddow: I'm looking at y'all.


At times, I can only come to the conclusion that there is literally a conspiracy to hinder the promulgation of intelligent programming for persons of color. And mind you, this hypothesis is coming from someone who is inherently not a conspiratorial thinker. One can make an salient supposition that there is an anti-intellectual strain throughout many aspects of the media, however minority programming seems to get hit the hardest from a macroeconomic perspective. News & Notes will get cancelled and yet minstrel radio programming will continue to thrive. Case in point (again, excuse the expletives):

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