Follow Anne on Pinterest

Loading..

Style & Design

Black Book Magazine
British Vogue
Cooking Channel TV
Dazed Digital
Dezeen
Dossier Journal
Gotham Magazine
Home & Design
Industrie Magazine/Nowmanifest.com
Interview Magazine
Liqurious
Metropolis Magazine
New York Magazine
NYTimes Home & Garden
NOWNESS
Ode Magazine
On Earth
Organic Authority
STYLE
Taste Spotting
TheOnes2Watch
Travel + Leisure
Vanity Fair
Vogue.com
Vogue Paris
Vogue Italia
W Magazine
Wallpaper
Wine Spectator
WSJ Life, Culture, Magazine
Yatzer - Design To Share

Informed

Academic Earth Lectures
Al Jazeera English
Ahram Online
AlterNet
American Thinker
BBC
Bloomberg
City Journal
CNN Politics
Commentary
EcoSalon
Economist
Financial Times
Foreign Affairs
Foreign Policy
France 24
Good
Grist
Guardian UK
Harvard Magazine
Los Angeles Times
More Intelligent Life
Mother Jones
NPR Arts & Life
National Geographic
National Review
New York Times
New York Review of Books
Orion
Pew Research Center Online NewsHour|PBS
Politico
Psychology Today
Public Broadcasting System
Reason Magazine
Scientific American
Skeptic
Slate Magazine
Sydney Morning Herald
Telegraph UK
The Atlantic Magazine
The Christian Science Monitor
The Daily Beast
The Daily Green
The Hindu
The Huffington Post
The Nation
The National UAE
The New Republic
The New York Times
The New Yorker
The Root
The Times of India
Utne Reader
Vanity Fair
Wall Street Journal
Washington Post
Washington Times
World Changing
Whole Living
Xinhuanet
Yes Magazine

Sensual and Superyoung

Healthy, Sensual Living Blogs

Anne’s Sensual Vitality Blog

Health: Libido, Sexuality, Superyoung Longevity

 

« Behind the Scenes Treasures at Harvard's Museum of Natural History | Main | The Rustbelt Prepares to Go Green »
Saturday
Aug152009

Janine Zacharia of Bloomberg News Sets PBS Guys Straight on Hillary and the Congo Interview

Last night wasn’t a shining spotlight for three male journalists on “Washington Week in Review”. Gwen Ifill was off.

Nor was the week a glowing one for male journalists generally — at least not in their coverage of Hillary Clinton and women’s rights abuses.

Atrocities against women in the Congo carried little interest with the guys, who make up the majority of onscreen journalists. (Note, most women bloggers weren’t interested either.)  I’ve tried to help you with the story.

I’m a regular “Washington Week in Review” watcher, and all I can say is thank goodness for the journalistic integrity of Bloomberg News Janine Zacharia, who walked the extra mile for Hillary, in the old boy’s network, last night.

This is tough talk from me, but this week male journalists get the big thumbs down in my playbook, for doing nothing to articulate international women’s issues. Feature stories on women were lost to boy-babble about Hillary’s ‘meltdown’, senior moment, and hormonal imbalances.

Under pressure to join them in a bit of Hilllary-bashing last night, PBS style, Janine Zacharia stood her ground, defending exactly what happened in the now infamous Hillary comment.

Had anyone just looked at the video, instead of jumping all over the Secy of State, they wouldn’t have made two retractions about what the questioner really meant, addressing Mrs. Clinton. He spoke in English and he defintely insulted her.

The question: We’ve all heard about the Chinese contracts in this country — the interferences from the World Bank against this contract. What does Mr. Clinton think, through the mouth of Mrs. Clinton, and what does Mr. Mutumbo think on this situation?” (via NYTimes, who also disowned the buzz on Aug. 13)

If the questioner didn’t speak English, and didn’t know what he was saying, he shouldn’t have addressed Hillary Clinton in the first place.

The questioner lives in the Congo, where women have no rights to speak of. They are nearly the legal property of their husbands, which is why they are raped at random and used as weapons of war.

Why was this event not a live example of paternalistic smugness in action, Congo style — rather than Hillary having a feisty meltdown. Why not take the questioner at his word, that he was merely reflecting the values and attitudes of his society?

I noted to my friend last evening that it’s an interesting moment in American media, when Bloomberg News and the Wall Street Journal speak favorably about Hillary’s trip to Africa, and the liberal media are jumping all over her disposition, rather than the story, even on PBS.

My question “Washington Week in Review”: “Why did you focus on this incident last night, rather than the other events of Secretary of State Clinton’s week in Africa?” Did listeners really need to hear ‘your take’ on that news conference moment? This is not why I watch PBS.

So much for journalistic purpose and standards. Thank you, Janine, for not taking the bait last night, and telling the story exactly as it happened. Anne

Read the WSJ’s Weekend interview: The Hillary Doctrine

Reader Comments

There are no comments for this journal entry. To create a new comment, use the form below.

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
Some HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>