Saturday, September 24, 2011

Youtube videos of our Jasper Dragging interviews

Cassy Burleson and I interviewed key people about the 1998 Jasper Dragging incident that killed James Byrd Jr.
Interviewees include Walter Diggles, R.C. Horn, Herman Wright, Brent Meaux, Eddie Hopkins, Bettie Boatner and Clara Taylor.
Here is a link to the videos:

Thanks to Brewer, Texas Inmates Can No Longer Pick Last Meal


Thanks to Lawrence Brewer, Texas, on Sept. 15, 2011, ended the practice of letting a condemned inmate choose his final meal. The edict came after Brewer asked for and got an enormous array of food and then didn't eat any of it.

The state's decision came in response to a complaint from Sen. John Whitmire who objected to the request of Brewer who ate none of the food, which included two chicken fried steaks, a triple-meat bacon cheeseburger, a large bowl of fried okra, a pound of barbecue, three fajitas, a meat lover's pizza, a pint of ice cream and a slab of peanut-butter fudge with crushed peanuts.

Lariat Coverage of our Jasper research

Jade Mardirosian, a Lariat staff writer, interviewed us today about our research on the Jasper dragging. The story ran a day after Lawrence Russell Brewer, 44, a  white supremacist, was executed after being convicted of taking part in the murder of James Byrd Jr. 13 years ago.

Jade's story was one of the better ones in reflecting Jasper realistically. http://baylorlariat.com/2011/09/22/8955/


Dr. , assistant professor of journalism, believes that intial coverage of the dragging murder unfairly stigmatized the city of as racist.
Matt Hellman | Lariat Photo Editor

The article included the photo above.

Sunday, September 18, 2011

List of coverage

Terry Goodrich put together this list of coverage we received based on her news release.

Jasper Coverage





























Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Small East Texas Town Branded As Racist After 1998 Hate Crime Has Only Partly Recovered



On September 12, 2011, Terry Goodrich of Baylor PR, posted the following news release on Newswise:

Newswise — As a Sept. 21 execution date looms for a man convicted for his role in chaining and dragging a black man to his death, attention again will be focused on the small East Texas town of Jasper, vilified worldwide as racist after the murder in 1998.

But a study done over a 13-year period by researchers Cassy Burleson, Ph.D., and Mia Moody, Ph.D., in Baylor University’s department of journalism and media arts, shows that the reputation of Jasper — population of about 8,000 — was fueled largely by stereotyping of the town by major global media. In contrast, the community’s weekly newspaper — The Jasper Newsboy — had a head start in understanding the city’s true politics and culture, which helped other journalists report the event more realistically relatively soon after the coverage began.

However, by the time major media began to portray the tragedy as an exception to the rule in Jasper, the damage had been done — and continues to affect the city’s reputation and cultural and political climate today, the researchers said. An article about their study of how media globally handled coverage will be published in November in the Journal of the American Studies Association of Texas.