Let’s Talk About Race—or Maybe Not
Coverage of Obama and ethnicity says more about media
Janine Jackson
Fairness &Accuracy In Reporting (FAIR)
http://www.fair.org
Extra! March
2009
There were early indications that corporate media coverage of Barack
Obama’s candidacy would be squirm-inducing, putting on display the
elite (mainly white) press corps’ murky ideas about race much more
than any straightforward reckoning of black Americans’ situation or
what an Obama presidency might mean for their concerns.
Journalists were sometimes embarrassingly frank about how they
interpreted Obama’s blackness and what they hoped his success might
mean. “No history of Jim Crow, no history of anger, no history of
slavery,” declared NBC’sChris Matthews (1/21/07). “All the bad stuff
in our history ain’t there with this guy.” “For many white
Americans, it’s a twofer,” opined the New Republic(2/5/07). “Elect
Obama, and you not only dethrone George W. Bush, you dethrone [Al]
Sharpton, too.” (See
Extra!, 3–4/07.)
Looking to find parallels for the “stuff” they did like, journalists
turned to fiction, as when Jonathan Alter (Newsweek, 10/27/08)
alleged that voters “decided they liked Obama when he reminded them
more of Will Smith than Jesse Jackson,” or when CNN(6/22/08) told
viewers that Michelle Obama “wants to appear to be Claire Huxtable
and not Angela Davis.”
The fondest hope seemed to be that an Obama victory (if not his
strong candidacy alone) would absolve us of any need to talk about
racism any more. Newsweek’sHoward Fineman (5/14/08) wrote that, in
announcing his run for office, Obama was making a statement: that
his candidacy would be the exclamation point at the end of our
four-century-long argument over the role of African-Americans in our
society. By electing a mixed-race man of evident brilliance,
moderate mien and welcoming smile, we would finally cease seeing
each other through color-coded eyes.
It’s not clear if Fineman meant Obama said that exactly, or if it
was just implied by the way he “radiat[ed] uplift and glorious
possibility.” Alas, he continued: “Well, that argument did not end.
He and we were naive to think it would.”
Of course, “we” didn’t all imagine that a nonwhite man running for
president would mean an end to racism; that belief seems endemic
only in a press corps with a myopic understanding of how racial
inequality works.
Thus Fineman lamented, “far from eliminating racial thinking from
politics,” Obama’s campaign actually drew attention to the
subject—in part because Obama let the Finemans of the world down by
having a “message” that was “race-aware, if not race-based.”
Fineman, like many pundits, seemed to think that acknowledging the
distinct experiences faced by people of color is tantamount to
claiming these differences trump all other factors in life. Talking
about race equals harping about race, and, well, that’s being
racist, isn’t it? The goal is to be “post- racial,” which seems to
mean maintaining that racial differences have no impact, all
evidence to the contrary notwithstanding.
For some, last November 4 saw the disappearance of racial inequity
in America (“Promised Land: Obama’s Rise Fulfills King’s Dream”—Oklahomanheadline,
1/19/09), and with it the need for any countervailing measures.
Conservative columnist Jonah Goldberg (Chicago Tribune, 1/22/09)
suggested that “opponents of racial quotas and other champions of
colorblindness on the right should be popping champagne,” not to
mention “rubbing Barack Obama in [the] faces” of all those foreign
“finger-waggers eager to lecture . . . America about race and
tolerance.”
For those who don’t see racial inequity playing out every day in
disparate joblessness, incarceration or mortality rates, the
presence of a brown-skinned man in the White House means there’s no
more structural work to be done; those struggling from now on have
no excuse.
At the very least, the black guy winning proved that there are no
more voting rights concerns. USA Today(1/9/09) wondered whether the
whole Voting Rights Act should be junked “now that a black man has
won the presidency.” And for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution’sJim
Wooten (1/20/09), the Obama victory “plainly” meant that “the
political system that discriminated and the people who designed it
are dead and gone.”
The Obama victory was credited with the existence of a demographic
of “successful” blacks, as illustrated by a magazine (Uptown) that
launched in 2004 (“Magazine for Age of Obama,” New York Daily News,
1/19/09). And the hiring of an African-American to coach the Yale
football team was “particularly significant in light of both the
election of Obama as the nation’s first black president and in the
consistently meager numbers of black head coaches at the top level
of college football,” according to the New York Times(1/8/09)—though
the particular relevance of the former is kind of hard to figure.
If being “post-racial” involves pretending race/ethnicity doesn’t
affect opportunity, acting “post-racial” means renouncing any
measure aimed at ensuring that. Post-election, Obama was called upon
to follow through on his “promise” in this regard in early decisions
on appointments and policy.
The New York Times(1/15/09) gave the New Republic’s Jeffrey Rosen
space to put some questions to new attorney general Eric Holder,
including: “Do you agree with Mr. Obama’s implication that the
Supreme Court needs someone who will side with the powerless rather
than the powerful? What if the best nominee happens to be a white
male?”
The L.A. Timeseditorial page (12/28/08) lauded Obama’s cabinet
picks, in so doing matter-of-factly contrasting the hiring goals of
“quality” and “identity politics”—in this context meaning the hiring
of anyone who is not a white man; Obama, it declared, “has succeeded
on both levels.”
Obama could also prove himself to be the right sort of black
leader—the kind who places responsibility for black people’s
problems largely with black people themselves—with an embrace of the
Bush administration’s No Child Left Behind law. USA Today(1/6/09)
draped the case in appropriately patronizing tones with the
cringe-worthy “How to Turn Obama’s Success Into Gains for Black
Boys”:
You can see the message on brick wall murals in inner cities: Yes we
can. You can hear it in the music of Black Eyed Peas’ frontman will.i.am:
Yes we can.
You can imagine hearing it pass the lips of thousands of black
mothers, perhaps after awakening their sons early to complete
homework before they head off to school, just as President-elect
Barack Obama’s mother did: Yes you can.
Black mothers encouraging their children? Just imagine!
The idea that, in the Age of Obama, a little early morning
encouragement is all that separates black Americans from
socio-economic success was abetted even by less unctuous reporting;
in the midst of a fairly thoughtful, 8,000-word piece (New York
Times, 8/10/08) on complexities in black political leadership, for
instance, one is jarred to read that, now that “legal barriers no
longer exist,” the “inequities in the society are subtler—inferior
schools, an absence of employers, a dearth of affordable housing—and
the remedies more elusive.”
If discriminatory treatment in education, employment and housing are
deemed “subtle,” little wonder that calls for institutional change
are heard as strident and outmoded.
Some journalists’ desire to “not see” racism as an obstacle led them
to downplay the historical significance of Obama’s election. Finding
“all the hoopla” unseemly, press critic Howard Kurtz scoffed
(Washington Post, 1/20/09), “It is hard to envision this level of
intensity if John McCain were taking the oath of office.”
It is indeed unlikely that McCain would have been heralded as the
first black president in United States history; that’s true. Nor
would he have been greeted with the overwhelming relief of those who
wanted above all to see the back of a Republican White House that
has brought endless war and economic havoc.
There are probably a number of multi-layered reasons many
people—including, yes, some in the media—greeted the Obama victory
with some measure of satisfaction. But when rich white pundits start
suggesting that “there’s a lot of advantages to being black. Black
is in” (Larry King, 1/21/09), all you can do is laugh.
As the Obama presidency moves forward, we should expect continued
awkwardness: chin-stroking on how his “loping stride” and “fondness
for pickup basketball” make for “a new White House iconography”
(Washington Post, 1/19/09), and contentless verbiage a la Joe Klein
(Time, 2/2/09): “He came to us as the ultimate outsider in a nation
of outsiders—the son of an African visitor and a white woman from
Kansas—and he has turned us inside out.”
Also unlikely to abate is elite media’s recourse to a litmus,
usefully vague and changeable, as to whether Obama is performing
like the approved sort of black politician, who is, in Howard
Fineman’s words (Newsweek, 1/24/09), “shaped but not limited by
[his] heritage.”
That line between being “shaped” and being “limited,” of course,
will continue to be defined, and vigorously policed, by the elite
white press corps. |