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Sunday, October 5, 2014

AP Study: Minorities say media portrayal still not accurate

Ever since Rochelle Alleyne was 10 years old, she knew she was going to be a reporter. As a youngster, the 21-year-old telecommunications senior would create make-believe newscasts for her family in their living room. She has since interned with CNN in Atlanta, Georgia, and reports weekly for local TV stations in Gainesville. But even at a young age she couldn’t help but notice there were few people on TV who looked like her: dark-skinned with curly hair.
            A report released earlier this month by The Associated Press and NORC Center for Public Affairs Research took a look at the two fastest-growing minority populations in America: African Americans and Hispanics. According to the report, both groups are adopting digital technology, including mobile news, at increasing rates. Despite their acceptance of this developing media, however, only a third of Hispanics and a quarter of African Americans believe their communities are accurately portrayed in the media.
Alleyne is the president of the University of Florida chapter of the National Association of Black Journalists. Like most people, Alleyne said, Blacks and Hispanics are consumers of media even though it does not truly reflect their reality.  
“Usually most TV shows you watch have that one token black kid to come say something funny,” Alleyne said. “It’s kind of funny, but it’s also sad because that’s not the way life is. There is always more than one black person in group settings in real life.”
Giselle Bermudez, 21, is the executive director for Hispanic Heritage Month for UF’s Hispanic Student Association, which runs until Oct. 15. She is on a personal quest to find television shows and other media that portray the variety in the Hispanic community. She thinks mainstream media tends to lump all Hispanic lives into a single experience, when in reality it’s much more varied.
“I’m an Afro-Latina and a lot of times I feel like I’m not black enough for some people and not Latina enough for other people,” Bermudez said. “Not all Latinas are Sofia Vergara or Jennifer Lopez. Ultimately, I define what my Latina is and what it isn’t.”
Rosana Resende, a cultural anthropologist and lecturer for UF’s Center for Latin American studies, said she found it interesting that the study noted a smaller gap between how Hispanics feel they are portrayed in the media as compared to African Americans. She credits the growth of Spanish language media and believes ethnic coverage can be so different from mainstream media that it can make the viewer feel as though they are in a different city.
            “When people don’t see their lives reflected back at them in the media they consume,” Resende said, “it can generate a lot of skepticism and mistrust.”
            Resende also believes that when minorities are covered in the media it’s usually negative. When it’s positive coverage, she said it is undifferentiated, one-dimensional and the attention is brought solely to a person’s race. Lumping minorities together in this way, she said, can give them a “strength in numbers” advantage, but ultimately does not allow for the greater diversity between them.
            “We can’t just talk to Latinos about immigration issues and Cinco de Mayo,” Resende said. “Minorities are a part of our neighborhoods and schools, and media should make an effort to include them on discussions of all kinds of topics.”
Alleyne added that appearance and visibility are important factors in how women are portrayed in the media. Hair in particular, she said, is often the subject of discussion within the black community. This conversation centers on whether women should wear their hair straight or natural, and what implications that stylistic choice may have, especially for women in media.
            “I decided to start wearing my hair naturally about a year ago,” Alleyne said, “so that when little girls see me on TV they can say ‘Wow mom, she looks just like me, and I can do what she does.'”
She said not seeing people like her on TV never made her feel like she wasn’t able to accomplish what she wanted. But watching professional, black women achieve goals similar to hers always gave her a positive feeling she couldn’t explain.
Bermudez said she feels that the overwhelming messages young Hispanic men and women receive about their lives from media are focused on poverty, unplanned pregnancy and high dropout rates. She said that by including more varied and positive Hispanic role models in the mainstream media, younger members of the community will be inspired to achieve greater things, because they will then believe it’s in their capacity to do so.
To help media entities better represent minorities, Alleyne believes the change needs to start behind the camera. She says newsrooms need to have greater diversity to allow for a wider variety of thoughts and opinions. When she works on stories for journalism classes and local TV stations, Alleyne makes a concerted effort to interview people from different races and genders to more accurately reflect the diverse population that makes up the community.
            Resende says when African Americans and Hispanics are highlighted in the media, they should not be expected to act or speak on the behalf of their entire culture or ethnic group.
            “Feeling like you have to do that is a lot of pressure,” she said. “No one asks a white person how they feel about something as a white person.”
            Instead Resende wants to see the media include as much context as possible and provide more opportunities for minorities to contribute to mainstream media.
            Alleyne says her organization hopes to provide aspiring black journalists with resources to grow professionally and personally. Group members also hold discussions on when to take into consideration the ways in which race does and does not play into their careers.
            “These can be awkward and difficult conversations to have,” she said, “but it’s important that we start having them.”
  

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