Lost in the Flood
By Jack Shafer
slate.com
Why no mention of race or class in TV's Katrina coverage?
I can't say I saw everything that the TV newscasters pumped out about Katrina, but I viewed enough repeated segments to say with 90 percent confidence that broadcasters covering the New Orleans end of the disaster demurred from mentioning two topics that must have occurred to every sentient viewer: race and class.
Nearly every rescued person, temporary resident of the Superdome, looter, or loiterer on the high ground of the freeway I saw on TV was African-American. And from the look of it, they weren't wealthy residents of the Garden District. This storm appears to have hurt blacks more directly than whites, but the broadcasters scarcely mentioned that fact.
Now, don't get me wrong. Just because 67 percent of New Orleans residents are black, I don't expect CNN to rename the storm "Hurricane" Carter in honor of the black boxer. Just because Katrina's next stop after destroying coastal Mississippi was counties that are 25 percent to 86 percent African-American (according to this U.S. Census map), and 27.9 percent of New Orleans residents are below the poverty line, I don't expect the Rev. Jesse Jackson to call the news channels to give a comment. But in the their frenzy to beat freshness into the endless loops of disaster footage that have been running all day, broadcasters might have mentioned that nearly all the visible people left behind in New Orleans are of the black persuasion, and mostly poor.
To be sure, some reporters sidled up to the race and class issue. I heard them ask the storm's New Orleans victims why they hadn't left town when the evacuation call came. Many said they were broke—"I live from paycheck to paycheck," explained one woman. Others said they didn't own a car with which to escape and that they hadn't understood the importance of evacuation.
But I don't recall any reporter exploring the class issue directly by getting a paycheck-to-paycheck victim to explain that he couldn't risk leaving because if he lost his furniture and appliances, his pots and pans, his bedding and clothes, to Katrina or looters, he'd have no way to replace them. No insurance, no stable, large extended family that could lend him cash to get back on his feet, no middle-class job to return to after the storm.
What accounts for the broadcasters' timidity? I saw only a couple of black faces anchoring or co-anchoring but didn't see any black faces reporting from New Orleans. So, it's safe to assume that the reluctance to talk about race on the air was a mostly white thing. That would tend to imply that white people don't enjoy discussing the subject. But they do, as long as they get to call another white person racist.
My guess is that Caucasian broadcasters refrain from extemporizing about race on the air mostly because they fear having an Al Campanis moment. Campanis, you may recall, was the Los Angeles Dodgers vice president who brought his career to an end when he appeared on Nightline in 1987 and explained to Ted Koppel that blacks might not have "some of the necessities" it takes to manage a major league team or run it as a general manager for the same reason black people aren't "good swimmers." They lack "buoyancy," he said.
Not to excuse Campanis, but as racists go he was an underachiever. While playing in the minor leagues, he threw down his mitt and challenged another player who was bullying Jackie Robinson. As Dodger GM, he aggressively signed black and Latino players, treated them well, and earned their admiration. Although his Nightline statement was transparently racist, in the furor that followed, nobody could cite another racist remark he had ever made. His racism, which surely blocked blacks from potential front-office Dodger careers, was the racism of overwhelming ignorance—a trait he shared (shares?) with many other baseball executives.
This sort of latent racism (or something more potent) may lurk in the hearts of many white people who end up on TV, as it does in the hearts of many who watch. Or, even if they're completely clean of racism's taint, anchors and reporters fear that they'll suffer a career-stopping Campanis moment by blurting something poorly thought out or something that gets misconstrued. Better, most think, to avoid discussing race at all unless someone with impeccable race credentials appears to supervise—and indemnify—everybody from potentially damaging charges of racism.
Race remains largely untouchable for TV because broadcasters sense that they can't make an error without destroying careers. That's a true pity. If the subject were a little less taboo, one of last night's anchors could have asked a reporter, "Can you explain to our viewers, who by now have surely noticed, why 99 percent of the New Orleans evacuees we're seeing are African-American? I suppose our viewers have noticed, too, that the provocative looting footage we're airing and re-airing seems to depict mostly African-Americans."
If the reporter on the ground couldn't answer the questions, a researcher could have Nexised the New Orleans Times-Picayune five-parter from 2002, "Washing Away," which reported that the city's 100,000 residents without private transportation were likely to be stranded by a big storm. In other words, what's happening is what was expected to happen: The poor didn't get out in time.
To the question of looting, an informed reporter or anchor might have pointed out that anybody—even one of the 500 Nordic blondes working in broadcast news—would loot food from a shuttered shop if they found themselves trapped by a flood and had no idea when help would come. However sympathetic I might be to people liberating necessities during a disaster in order to survive, I can't muster the same tolerance for those caught on camera helping themselves in a leisurely fashion to dry goods at Wal-Mart. Those people weren't looting as much as they were shopping for good stuff to steal. MSNBC's anchor Rita Cosby, who blurted an outraged if inarticulate harrumph when she aired the Wal-Mart heist footage, deserves more respect than the broadcasters who gave the tape the sort of nonjudgmental commentary they might deliver if they were watching the perps vacuum the carpets at home.
When disaster strikes, Americans—especially journalists—like to pretend that no matter who gets hit, no matter what race, color, creed, or socioeconomic level they hail from, we're all in it together. This spirit informs the 1997 disaster flick Volcano, in which a "can't we all just get along" moment arrives at the film's end: Volcanic ash covers every face in the big crowd scene, and everybody realizes that we're all members of one united race.
But we aren't one united race, we aren't one united class, and Katrina didn't hit all folks equally. By failing to acknowledge upfront that black New Orleanians—and perhaps black Mississippians—suffered more from Katrina than whites, the TV talkers may escape potential accusations that they're racist. But by ignoring race and class, they boot the journalistic opportunity to bring attention to the disenfranchisement of a whole definable segment of the population. What I wouldn't pay to hear a Fox anchor ask, "Say, Bob, why are these African-Americans so poor to begin with?"
the elephant in the room
Posted by David at 3:31 PM
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6 comments:
With Casey, I thought you wrote that. Consider it a compliment to your intelligence. I was wondering, though, where you learned the word "demurred."
Seriously, though...That is powerful.
And scary.
Sorry I should have just limked to it but I want people to read it.
D
Good idea to write it all out. I would have never followed the link. Yes, it is true, I also thought you wrote it... the strange thing is you cited it at the beginning and we just all looked right past it.
This hurricane has really floored me. I wrote on my blog about my amazement of how life goes on normal here, while another part of this country is crippled and people are literaly dying. I saw a huge Coors Light truck pulling into a restaurant today and thought..."empty your freakin' beer, load your truck with water and get a** down south".
I was watching a clip abott a hospital last night. All the patients were on the roof. Some had died that day. The other awaited a helicopter rescuing 2X2. In another clip at the Superdome two people had died. Their bodies were simply pushed outside. One was wrapped in a tablecloth. The other was partially covered with some cloth. Such travesty.
I am glad you posted this article, because I had begun assuming that New Orleans was 97-98% black, and that everyone there was poor.
In response to James, I feel your compassion, but I hate that I or we don't feel that compassion more intensely for the rest of the developing world that are constantly in these situations. I am aware of it, and like you said on your blog, it is good to give money in a tsunami situation, but we have to start wanting/getting our hands dirty - I encourage you and your family to join a community that does such. Our friends Doug and Molly Wharton are doing this in Honduras at an Orphanage and I hope to be apart of such a community when we leave here in less than a year. I do believe we are all called to this. The more we accept this Calling, like Kevin Peterson and Mandy, the less we will see the whites being bused out to hotels while blacks learn to swim and survive themselves.
I am encouraged by your heart.
Peace
hey brother, i don´t have a bunch of time...but i have a question for you.
(sorry if this is akward, i just found your blog a few minutes ago...and i haven´t really talked to you in a few years)
but molly and i are going to be back in the states for just a few days at the end of sept. and once again at the end of oct. during one of those times she´ll be speaking at a church in new albany trying to raise awareness (and hopefully a little money) for the orphanage down here. what are the chances that you and your wife could arrange for us to speak at your church while we´re in the neighborhood? if you think this would be possible, please let me know and i will give you more information regarding the orphanage and the dates and any other misc information. (bran740@hotmail.com)
it´s good to know about your journal. if you don´t mind, i may make it a frequent refuge.
glad to know you are well dave. and i look forward to a continued dialog.
to you and all my other brothers that read this,
peace
It's good to hear from you Doug. We are working on getting some time for you and Molly to share here. If it doesn't work out at the church we would still like to see you both.
You are welcome here and your thoughts are valued, I'm glad you found me.
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