Community Media Workshop
is, of course, helping to level the playing field. But not
everyone knows about their work or has the time to even think about
press outreach. Many of them are too busy doing the work that
makes them relevant to the city and to media discourse. The
organizations and people we want to report on are the same ones
that haven't gotten coverage in the Trib, WBEZ, the Sun-Times or
the Reader. How do we report on the invaluable work of these
community organizations and individuals?
Ideally, neighborhood reporters that we work with know about these
people and their work and will seek them out for stories. As we
develop our regional story meetings, hopefully some of this will
come out.
I think we have to think about some fundamentals about class, race,
age and privilege in our coverage though. We've been conscientious
about recruiting neighborhood reporters, striving to develop a
group that accurately represents the complicated social geography
of Chicago. I think we need to have those same lenses in place
when we look at which organizations and individuals are pitching us
community news.
Media responsibility means asking seriously whose interest is
served by publishing certain kinds of stories, and why different
organizations seek coverage. Particularly here, I'm thinking about
the connections between crime coverage and gentrification.
Now it is true that providing the public with details about crime
rates and incidents of violent crime can be a public service. It
can also be true that organizations seeking to advocate for
increased police presence or cameras in neighborhoods can have a
particular set of interests. I don't think anyone would argue that
an increased police presence in most Chicago neighborhoods would
expedite gentrification and serve as a message to communities of
color in those neighborhoods.
I'm not saying that this is binary, rather that in thinking about
representing a 'community' we need to think about how many
different communities there are within each geographic community,
and whose voices are the loudest both on our pages and on the pages
of other publications. Generally it will be that with the most
sophisticated communications infrastructure. And generally that
will be the group with the most money and clout. Often that group
will be largely white, new to the neighborhood, and middle class.
The underdogs get left out.
I think part of doing bottom up journalism is rethinking the way
that PR works in the newsroom. We're beginning to build direct
connections with community organizations and would love to hear
from anyone doing interesting community based work. Journalists
love to complain about PR 'flaks' but honestly, I'm not sure that
many of them would know what to do without them at this point.
Reworking this relationship will take some work.











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