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Episode Title:
Episode Audio Link: https://podcast.ablackexec.com/episode/fairness-is-not-protection-
Episode Video Link:
Dr. Burton examines the controversy surrounding the National Association of Black Journalists, the decision to engage Donald Trump during an election year, and the broader dilemma facing Black journalists and identity-based organizations.
Should institutions always follow tradition in the name of fairness? Or should they prioritize the people, communities, and legacies they were created to serve?
This episode explores Black media, political accountability, journalistic neutrality, representation, institutional protection, and the consequences of extending grace to people who have not extended it to your community.
What You’ll Learn
• Why access to political power must come with strategy and safeguards
• How journalistic neutrality can conflict with organizational responsibility
• Why Black institutions must protect their people, purpose, and legacy
• What leaders can learn about fairness, boundaries, and accountability
▶︎ In This Episode00:00 – Introduction: What Black Journalists Need to Know
00:35 – Why NABJ Invited Donald Trump
02:18 – Fairness Versus Culture and Protection
04:02 – When Political Access Becomes a Risk
05:18 – Journalism, Neutrality, and Community Accountability
07:40 – Why the Interview Went Wrong
09:18 – Kamala Harris, Rules, and Missed Opportunities
11:05 – Put Your Membership and Mission First
13:05 – Protect Your Neck: The Final Lesson
15:00 – Closing
🔗 ResourcesLinks and resources mentioned in this episode:
🔔 Listen and SubscribeListen to this episode and subscribe for future updates
subscribe to A Black Executive Perspective podcast onif you like what we're doing and would like to support us, here's some ways you can help us continue the uncomfortable conversations that drive change
This episode was produced by TonyTidbit ™ . Copyright © 2024 A BLACK EXECUTIVE PERSPECTIVE LLC. All rights reserved. No part of this podcast may be reproduced without prior written permission. For permissions, email [email protected] .
By TonyTidbit ™Episode Title:
Episode Audio Link: https://podcast.ablackexec.com/episode/fairness-is-not-protection-
Episode Video Link:
Dr. Burton examines the controversy surrounding the National Association of Black Journalists, the decision to engage Donald Trump during an election year, and the broader dilemma facing Black journalists and identity-based organizations.
Should institutions always follow tradition in the name of fairness? Or should they prioritize the people, communities, and legacies they were created to serve?
This episode explores Black media, political accountability, journalistic neutrality, representation, institutional protection, and the consequences of extending grace to people who have not extended it to your community.
What You’ll Learn
• Why access to political power must come with strategy and safeguards
• How journalistic neutrality can conflict with organizational responsibility
• Why Black institutions must protect their people, purpose, and legacy
• What leaders can learn about fairness, boundaries, and accountability
▶︎ In This Episode00:00 – Introduction: What Black Journalists Need to Know
00:35 – Why NABJ Invited Donald Trump
02:18 – Fairness Versus Culture and Protection
04:02 – When Political Access Becomes a Risk
05:18 – Journalism, Neutrality, and Community Accountability
07:40 – Why the Interview Went Wrong
09:18 – Kamala Harris, Rules, and Missed Opportunities
11:05 – Put Your Membership and Mission First
13:05 – Protect Your Neck: The Final Lesson
15:00 – Closing
🔗 ResourcesLinks and resources mentioned in this episode:
🔔 Listen and SubscribeListen to this episode and subscribe for future updates
subscribe to A Black Executive Perspective podcast onif you like what we're doing and would like to support us, here's some ways you can help us continue the uncomfortable conversations that drive change
This episode was produced by TonyTidbit ™ . Copyright © 2024 A BLACK EXECUTIVE PERSPECTIVE LLC. All rights reserved. No part of this podcast may be reproduced without prior written permission. For permissions, email [email protected] .