Concern Grows Over 'Metro' Newspaper and Racial Statements
Saturday, January 15, 2005 at 02:36AM
TheSpook
Controversy continues to build today over reports of racial
insensitivity at the company that owns the chain of Metro newspapers,
heightened by the fact that The New York Times Co. just bought a 49%
share in Metro Boston. Two days ago, mediachannel.org reported
that Metro officials had twice made racially offensive remarks at
company events overseas. In one incident, Metro USA President Steve
Nylund used the word "niggers" and referred to the penis size of black
men. (The company apologized for these remarks on Monday.) There are
other allegations that the company fostered a culture of
discrimination. Callie Crossley, a cultural commentator and
program manager at Harvard's Nieman Foundation, told The Boston Globe
that it "is incumbent" on the Times Co. ''not just to say something but
to do something. ... They need to take this very seriously. This is a
publication aimed at young people. What's the message here?" "Instead
of being called Metro, it should be called Retro," New York City
Councilman Bill Perkins told the New York Post. "If this is true, it
seems the Times has some accounting to do. I don't see how they could
embrace that relationship." A Times spokeswoman told the Post the
company is discussing the allegations with Metro USA's management. The
Boston Herald reported today that top executives at the Boston Metro
"routinely joked that the freebie newspaper's team of street hawkers
looked like they belonged in state prison," according to a former Metro
saleswoman. Contacted yesterday by The Boston Globe (which is owned by
the Times Co.)," [more]
Pictured above: "I will not read
garbage like that newspaper anymore, and I will discourage those I
minister to.' - Rev. William E. Dickerson II [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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