Monday, December 6, 2010

Profile on my Listening Post Guide.

Standing in the catering hall of the synagogue a man, who wears a yarmulke and tzitzis (bound tassels) outside of his pants, patiently waits for the next service.
Ofir, 37, was not always a religious man. In fact, he wears his bound tassels outside of his pants to have a constant reminder of his religious commitment and faith.
No one would guess this man worked as a paramedic directly for Pope John Paul II when the Pope took his historic pilgrimage to Israel in spring 2000. He spent three days with him and thought the Pope was “pleasant”.
Ofir was agnostic back then. It was ten years ago and he had a lot of inner angst. His work as a paramedic in Israel caused him to see immoral things on a daily basis.
As the son of a faithful, practicing Orthodox Jew, Ofir grew up in a religious household. However, the rest of his family has never been religious. Ofir was born Tiberias, Israel in a house that “had views of the beautiful bay,” as he described it.
Yet he is currently residing in Miami, FL. He recalled the time that he saw “a 13-year old girl smoking cigarettes” as the moment he realized he needed to leave Israel.
According to Ofir, there is a difference between the old world (what he describes as Europe) and the new world (United States). To him, the new world represents better education and a society with better morals. Ofir wants to send his future children to “religious school. To learn the Torah, gain values, and have a structured way of life,” he said.
That is what religion is to him: A way of life. Yet Ofir was Agnostic until four years ago. He went on a religious retreat in Israel. During a service, the men around him were praying so feverishly that he started to feel the presence of God and he cried in spiritual acceptance.
“I felt so embarrassed to cry. It was like an arrow hit me in the heart. This is what I was looking for all my life,” he said while staring up at the arched ceiling of the synagogue.
He attends an Orthodox Jewish Synagogue whose rabbi speaks primarily Spanish and Arabic. Rabbi Netivezra Avichai entered, wearing a fedora with a round brim, and shook Ofir’s hand in a familiar way. It was clear that Ofir’s commitment to his religion has been unwavering.
His synagogue is in North Miami, FL. Quite a long way from Isreal. Ofir has brought himself to the “new world” as he described it.
Having spent a year in Los Angeles and a month in Miami, Ofir is confident that the east coast is better for him.
His extended family spreads across the United States from LA to MIA and Ofir knew he wanted to settle in this country from an early age.
“I’ve come to Miami almost every year. I always stay for a few weeks. The weather and the people are why I love it here,” Ofir said.

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Cross-Cultural Thanksgiving

My family is Cuban and my boyfriend's family is Peruvian, yet both families did their best to conform to the American meal plan for Thanksgiving dinner. It was interesting to see how well different cultures can adapt to the traditions of another culture.

Today I've had two turkeys, natural mashed potatoes, and the best stuffing ever from the Cuban side. From the Peruvian side I had sweet ham and several other options including sour pear wrapped in bacon and topped with goat cheese.

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Thoughts on Class pt. 4

I wish we had gotten to see more interesting examples of media going deep into reporting on an ethnic community. I felt being showed the snippets of 'Barbershop' was effective and should have taken more importance than talking about it. We spent the whole class talking about seeing it, then saw it, then adjourned. There was a mismanagement of class time that day for sure.

In general, I feel the class has progressed too slowly. I am not complaining because having this easy class has been the one saving grace for my hectic 18 credit semester. I am not wishing we had more assignments, but I am wishing the class had more involvement. To be effective and have a lasting effect on our future careers, we should have gone on class trips to difficult places and then held reflections afterward.

The actual class meetings have simply reflections for our individual listening post experiences and I feel it had to go further. We had to get a chance to watch each other in a different setting to help each other grow. I know for a fact that there are people in this course who never broke through the fears of their listening post and it's because they didn't have enough hands on training to do it.

Monday, November 8, 2010

Belated Thought on a Cross-Cultural Halloween

The internet-phenomenon Antoine Dodson got his start by being interviewed by NBC affiliate WAFF-48 News in a news clip about the local police searching for a man who tried to rape his sister in Huntsville, AL.

Mr. Dodson's gifted speech delivery skills and sassy inflection got him noted by a group who "auto tunes the news." The group used his interview to create a song that was actually incredibly catchy.

His success and uniqueness made him a popular Halloween costume. The official costume was sold on Mr. Dodson's site. It was based on the outfit that he wore in the news package that made him famous. The pieces included a raggedy afro wig with a red bandana around it, a black tank top, and red cargo shorts.

I was surprised that one of my anglo acquaintances chose to dress up as Mr. Dodson. My acquaintance is snow white, but decided to dress like Mr. Dodson and the costume actually worked. I saw a photo of him and I instantly knew what it was. I was dismayed to see he had added fairy wings as a response to Dodson's sexual orientation, but in general the costume left a positive impression on me. It was nice to see that a cross-cultural success Mr. Dodson has become through the coverage he was given by a reporter.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Who would have thought...

Today I interviewed for an internship with Scripps network. My first choice of which channel to work for was Travel channel. The interviewer asked me if I had an understanding of other cultures and if I had developed any sensitivity to them. I was actually able to use this class as an example!

I told her I have been in a lecture/discussion class about multi-ethnic reporting. I explained to her how this class has taught me to be more sensitive to how the media portrays minority groups in a socio-politic-economical view point. She was really impressed by how well I was able to articulate the ideas of cross-cultural journalism.

It made me realize that I am actually learning from this class!

And even if I had known all of this before, at least now I have a credible background in it =)

Monday, October 25, 2010

Hmmm...

An article can be tinged with bias just by using a single word with a noted connotation.
It kinda makes me think about all the times I read an article and understood the bias, but never did anything about it.

A blatant example that comes to mind is the "terror mosque". these days the talk of the nation is the "terror mosque" supposedly being built on Ground Zero. Fox 'news' network started calling the religious community center by this nickname, showing their fear fostering bias. Their facts were also cherry-picked because the community center is actually being built a block to a few blocks away.

Isn't it insane that the most watched news network is basically flinging dung at the Muslim populous? What people would do for ratings!

So like I said before, it makes me sad to think about the amount of people who watch this network and do not think twice about the bias.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

What it's all about pt. 2

“Some people say stories about minority communities often sound like visits to the zoo: "Oh, look at all the animals and the funny things they do!" Do you agree? If so, how can we prevent that?”

All genres of articles can be accused of not going deep enough. I think ethnic or cultural reporting is a genre that should not be slighted.
Ethnic reporting is a genre that is more affected by slight than any other because the groundwork for human success is to be able to work together. Articles on minority communities have opportunities to break down barriers than a lecture or a PSA announcement. Articles tell stories of real people. I believe there is still a majority if the U.S. population that believes in newspapers enough to trust that what they report is true.

If an article on immigration simply quotes that AZ congressman who said illegal immigrants “multiply like rats” to produce “anchor babies”, using him as an “expert”, the article does a huge injustice to that population because media is their only voice.

The best way to prevent this from happening is to adhere to a strict standard for news stories. The article must quote as many (or even more) regular people or people who are affected by the situation as it does experts. That is something we really don’t see enough because journalists struggle to maintain credibility and they assume the public will trust a seemingly educated and reputable source more than a real person who might not give an intellectual sounding quote.