It’s the season to give thanks, so to close my 2011-12 term as president of the Asian American Journalists Association, I will be counting down December with a daily shout-out.
Day 25
Thank you to all our eyes and ears in AAJA MediaWatch. We need your vigilance and your outspokenness to ensure that news coverage of our communities is fair, accurate and sensitive. (Pictured: Bobby Calvan, left, and Jam Sardar — 2011 MediaWatch co-chairs. They and Julie Tam were honored as AAJA’s 2012 Members of the Year.)
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Day 24
Listen up! AAJA’s on the radio …
MediaWatch Chair Jam Sardar was invited to ESPN’s Game On with Bruce Jacobs. Here’s the broadcast. It starts out pretty feisty — until Jam gets the chance to explain AAJA’s positions.
And I was asked to speak with Larry Mantle of KPCC’s “AirTalk,” who also urged his callers to comment.
Help Be an AAJA Watchdog
Apply by March 9 for this opportunity to make a difference in media coverage.
Via AAJA Online:
Click on the link above for the application. If you have questions, please e-mail MediaWatch Chair Jam Sardar.
Reminder of AAJA Media Advisory on Lin Coverage
It’s been a week since this was issued. The Knicks have another game tonight. Let’s do better, fellow journalists.
Via AAJA Online:
Feb. 22, 2012
As NBA player Jeremy Lin’s prowess on the court continues to attract international attention and grab headlines, the Asian American Journalists Association (AAJA) would like to remind media outlets about relevance and context regarding coverage of race.
In the past weeks, as more…
Did you miss the Asian American Journalists Association’s Media Advisory on Jeremy Lin News Coverage? Yahoo didn’t.
(Special thanks to fellow AAJA member Victor Chi for having the presence of mind to save a screenshot for posterity.)
AAJA Media Advisory on Jeremy Lin News Coverage
Posting this from AAJA.org:
AAJA Media Advisory on Jeremy Lin News Coverage
Feb. 22, 2012
As NBA player Jeremy Lin’s prowess on the court continues to attract international attention and grab headlines, the Asian American Journalists Association (AAJA) would like to remind media outlets about relevance and context regarding coverage of race.
In the past weeks, as more news outlets report on Lin, his game and his story, AAJA has noticed factual inaccuracies about Lin’s background as well as an alarming number of references that rely on stereotypes about Asians or Asian Americans.
Please give careful consideration to the following tips to ensure fair, accurate and sensitive portrayals of Lin and others who are Asian American.
AAJA and AAJA MediaWatch stand ready to assist any news organizations that have questions or concerns about news coverage and race. We all have the same goal: good journalism.
OUR GUIDELINES
Stop to think: Would a similar statement be made about an athlete who is Caucasian, African American, Latino or Native American?
Use caution when discussing Lin’s physical characteristics, particularly those that feminize/emasculate the Asian male (Cinderella-story angles should not place Lin in a dress). Discussion of genetic differences in athletic ability among races should be avoided. In referring to Lin’s height or vision, be mindful of the context and avoid invoking stereotypes about Asians.
THE FACTS
Jeremy Lin is Asian American, not Asian (more specifically, Taiwanese American). It’s an important distinction and one that should be considered before any references to former NBA players such as Yao Ming and Wang Zhizhi, who were Chinese. Lin’s experiences were fundamentally different than people who immigrated to play in the NBA. Lin progressed through the ranks of American basketball from high school to college to the NBA, and to characterize him as a foreigner is both inaccurate and insulting.
Lin’s path to Madison Square Garden: More than 300 Division I schools passed on him. Harvard University has had only three other graduates go on to the NBA, the most recent one being in the 1950s. No NBA team wanted Lin in the draft after he graduated from Harvard.
Journalists don’t assume that African American players identify with NBA players who emigrated from Africa. The same principle applies with Asian Americans. It’s fair to ask Lin whether he looked up to or took pride in the accomplishments of Asian players. He may have. It’s unfair and poor journalism to assume he did.
Lin is not the first Asian American to play in the National Basketball Association. Raymond Townsend – who’s of Filipino descent – was a first-round choice of the Golden State Warriors in the 1970s. Rex Walters, who is of Japanese descent, was a first-round draft pick by the New Jersey Nets out of the University of Kansas in 1993 and played seven seasons in the NBA; Walters is now the coach at University of San Francisco. Wat Misaka is believed to have been the first Asian American to play professional basketball in the United States. Misaka, who’s of Japanese descent, appeared in three games for the New York Knicks in the 1947-48 season when the Knicks were part of the Basketball Association of America, which merged with the NBA after the 1948-49 season.
DANGER ZONES
“CHINK”: Pejorative; do not use in a context involving an Asian person on someone who is Asian American. Extreme care is needed if using the well-trod phrase “chink in the armor”; be mindful that the context does not involve Asia, Asians or Asian Americans. (The appearance of this phrase with regard to Lin led AAJA MediaWatch to issue a statement to ESPN, which subsequently disciplined its employees.)
DRIVING: This is part of the sport of basketball, but resist the temptation to refer to “an Asian who knows how to drive.”
EYE SHAPE: This is irrelevant. Do not make such references if discussing Lin’s vision.
FOOD: Is there a compelling reason to draw a connection between Lin and fortune cookies, takeout boxes or similar imagery? In the majority of news coverage, the answer will be no.
MARTIAL ARTS: You’re writing about a basketball player. Don’t conflate his skills with judo, karate, tae kwon do, etc. Do not refer to Lin as “Grasshopper” or similar names associated with martial-arts stereotypes.
“ME LOVE YOU LIN TIME”: Avoid. This is a lazy pun on the athlete’s name and alludes to the broken English of a Hollywood caricature from the 1980s.
“YELLOW MAMBA”: This nickname that some have used for Lin plays off the “Black Mamba” nickname used by NBA star Kobe Bryant. It should be avoided. Asian immigrants in the United States in the 19th and 20th centuries were subjected to discriminatory treatment resulting from a fear of a “Yellow Peril” that was touted in the media, which led to legislation such as the Chinese Exclusion Act.
FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
See AAJA’s “All-American: A Handbook to Covering Asian America”
Special thanks to AAJA members Ji Hyun Lee, Ursula Liang, Danny O’Neil and Jay Wang for their contributions to this advisory.
NOTE: This post was updated Feb. 23, including a correction to the reference about which schools passed on Jeremy Lin.
AAJA Members Talking Jeremy Lin On-Air
The Asian American Journalists Association’s MediaWatch has been vigilant about coverage of the Knicks point guard. Unfortunately, not everything we’ve seen has measured up. On Feb. 18, MediaWatch issued a statement about a racial slur that was used in three separate incidents in one week at ESPN. (ESPN apologized quickly and disciplined its employees, firing a mobile editor and suspending an anchor for 30 days.)
After the AAJA statement, our members were on-air coast to coast, reporting on the issue or invited to appear as segment guests.
Richard Lui of MSNBC reported in three segments — including one on race and blindspots, and another on stats vs. hype. Below is Richard’s report on how Lin transcends race, in three American stories:
In the guest segments, AAJA VP-Print Tom Lee appeared on the Twin Cities Fox affiliate:
Rick Quan was on CNN:
And Ryan Leong was on CBS San Francisco:
Oh, and finally, here’s me (!) with Brent Cannon of NBC Bay Area:
AAJA MediaWatch: Getting Noticed
The Jason Whitlock-Jeremy Lin incident led to plenty of coverage of the Asian American Journalists Association’s statement:
- Deadspin: Jason Whitlock Says He “Debased A Feel-Good Sports Moment” Because Of His Mother And Richard Pryor [NB: accompanying photo slightly NSFW.]
- Inquistr: Jason Whitlock Apologizes For Small Penis Joke Made at Jeremy Lin
- Los Angeles Times: Fox Sports’ Jason Whitlock apologizes for Jeremy Lin tweet
- Orlando Sentinel: Fox columnist Jason Whitlock apologizes for Jeremy Lin tweet
- Sporting News: Jason Whitlock apologizes for offensive Jeremy Lin tweet
- USA Today: Columnist apologizes for racist Lin tweet; is that enough?
- Yahoo Sports: Jason Whitlock apologizes for his unfunny Jeremy Lin comment on Twitter
Plus, there were mentions on media industry blogs:
- FishbowlLA: Jason Whitlock Apologizes for Racist Tweet
- Jim Romenesko: Jason Whitlock apologizes for Lin tweet
- Richard Prince’s Journal-isms: Whitlock “Truly Sorry” for Tweet About Asian NBA Player
Kaimen, a communications and business consulting firm, even turned AAJA’s work into a case study on PR.
Possibly my favorite person to have taken note, though, was playwright David Henry Hwang:
Thanks to AA Journalists Assn @AAJA & all who made J. Whitlock apologize for his racist remark about Jeremy Lin goo.gl/dnKmW@jlin7
— David Hwang (@DavidHenryHwang) February 13, 2012




