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Introduction

0:00

A more nuanced take

4:52

Setting the stage

5:46

Liberal education

7:09

Red blue journalism

10:07

Text journalism

11:17

Headlines

11:49

Journalisms Calling

12:58

Red and Blue

14:05

Massachusetts

14:58

Keep it Simple

16:36

Wearing Red and Blue

17:17

The South Holds Determinative Influence

18:08

Biden Was Weak in Iowa and New Hampshire

19:15

A Journalism Example

20:36

Purple State Coverage

21:24

Local Journalism Has Been Gutted

22:55

Moving About The Country

24:10

Diversity Considerations

24:34

Blind Spots

25:09

Representation Matters

26:25

Mama Carol

29:25

Zarya

30:46

Rukshana

31:50

Conclusion

32:32

Bill

33:37

How will this affect the 2020 election

35:26

What are the concerns

37:35

How could it be used

39:28

Voter Suppression

43:47

Oversimplification

50:20

Desantis

53:42

First Friend

56:54
Covering American Democracy: It's Not a Game (At Least It Shouldn't Be)
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2022May 25
Bernard D. Nossiter '47 Lecture "Covering American Democracy: It's Not a Game (At Least It Shouldn't Be)” Speaker: Bill Barrow, National Politics Reporter, The Associated Press Host: Alexis Jetter, Lecturer, Dartmouth College Lecture Info: Democracy is not a game with a scoreboard or a red carpet to critique celebrity fashion. Yet in this red vs. blue era of American politics, journalism too often advances shallow, oversimplified narratives – sometimes to the point of error. At best, this is lazy and reductive. At worst, this “SportsCenter” brand of journalism exacerbates cultural divisions that are fraying American institutions, including the fourth estate. There’s a better way, even in a marketplace of ideas dominated by cable news and social media. We must reclaim our ability, our responsibility to think in nuance and complexity. Then our journalism—all of it—must follow suit, so that our readers, listeners, and viewers can better understand themselves and the world around them. Speaker Bio: Bill Barrow is a national politics reporter for The Associated Press. Based in Atlanta since 2012 as part of AP’s Washington Bureau, Barrow covered President Joe Biden’s 2020 campaign and the Democratic Party during the Trump era. Previously, he covered the 2016 South Carolina presidential and Super Tuesday primaries, along with tracking political trends in a 13-state region that extends from Maryland to Louisiana. Barrow worked previously for newspapers in Louisiana and Alabama. At The Times-Picayune in New Orleans, he covered the rebuilding of south Louisiana’s health care system after Hurricane Katrina. At the Press-Register in Mobile, he reported on the federal trial and conviction of former Alabama Gov. Don Siegelman. In 2003, Barrow shared in a George Polk Award for Southern Exposure Magazine’s series on predatory lending. As a Harvard Nieman Fellow in 2021-22, he studied the intersections of identity, movement, and establishment politics in the United States. Barrow is an Alabama native and Auburn University alumnus. He lives in Atlanta with his wife, Michelle Krupa, an editor at CNN Digital, and their two sons. Host Bio: Alexis Jetter is a veteran journalist, teacher, and radio commentator with a focus on politics, science, activism, and popular culture. She teaches journalism in the English Department and the Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies program at Dartmouth College. A former metropolitan reporter for New York Newsday, Jetter has written for Vanity Fair, The New York Times Magazine, Vogue, Mother Jones, Science Times, Sports Illustrated, The Guardian (UK), Readers Digest, Health, Prevention, More, Ms., Harpers Bazaar, Life, The Village Voice, Columbia Journalism Review and The Nation, among others. She is also a Pulitzer Prize finalist with top national awards for her writings on education, science, and social justice. She attended Brown University and received her BA in History from Evergreen State College in 1981. She received her Masters degree at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism in 1986. This was filmed on Monday, May 9, 2022 Rockefeller Hall, Room 003 Dartmouth College

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Dartmouth

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