OK Bloomer: How Women Shaped Journalism
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- Опубліковано 1 чер 2024
- Breaking the News on Independent Lens: www.pbs.org/independentlens/d...
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In 1850s America, one women-led newsroom blazed a trail for women's rights, shifting the media landscape and ultimately affecting how we see and cover "women's" issues today.
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Breaking the News: Press Pass is a four-episode digital series digging into how early journalism in America laid the foundations for the noteworthy topics, opinions, investigations, and stressors embedded in the news today.
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Executive Producers: Carrie Lozano, Lois Vossen
Director/Host: Danielle Bainbridge
Producer: Hilary Giorgi
Writer: Keahnan Washington
Assistant Researcher: Linnea Valdivia
Senior Creative Producer: Andrea Bloom
Creative Director: Carol Paik
Vice President, Marketing and Communications: Lisa Tawil
Director of Programming (PBS): Gabrielle Ewing
Executive in Charge (PBS): Maribel Lopez
Director of Photography: Erik Ljung
Teleprompter: Philip Aronson
Assistant Camera: Corey Clark
Editor: Dave Yim
Motion Graphics: Matt Dunne
Fact Checker: Yvonne McGreevy
Sound Mixer: Pavel Sinev
Additional Footage:
Library of Congress
Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture
Detre Library & Archives at the Heinz History Center
The William H. Walker Cartoon Collection
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National Endowment for the Arts
Breaking the News: Press Pass is a co-production of Elleinad, Inc and Independent Television Service (ITVS), with funding provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) and the Park Foundation. This program was produced by Elleinad, Inc and Independent Television Service, which is solely responsible for its content.
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Hey originauts! Thanks for all of your really kind messages on the first episode of "Breaking the News: Press Pass"! It feels great to be back on my virtual home at PBS Origins sharing nerdy content with all of you wonderful folks! I see some of you have been wondering where I've been so I just wanted to give a quick life update: I've been hard at work teaching classes and writing my first book, which will come out on NYU Press in the next year or so. I also directed my first short film and am currently in post production. I'm also working on a memoir (more on that later as things develop.) I'd love to keep in touch with you all as I continue sharing updates so feel free to follow me on Instagram (@quirkyprofessor_) and Twitter/X (@quirkyprofessor). There you'll find the run down on what I'm up to both on and offline!
Peace, love and learning internet friends!
❤ Danielle
so good to see you again, Dr Bainbridge!
May we all be badly behaved enough to have a revolutionary clothing article named after us
Yay Dr. Bainbridge is back!!!! This makes me so happy!🎉
PBS and Democracy Now! are easily my favourite news publications.
@5:50 Pew Research did a piece in 2018 about how US news-based (rather than entertainment or sports) journalism is one of the least diverse fields, with 91 percent Yt radio newsrooms and about an 80 percent Yt newsroom overall. Considering Yt ppl are about 61 percent of the US population, newsrooms don't at all represent the people or areas they cover. Additionally, class, which is never mentioned in demographics, is also an issue. Newsrooms, especially the higher up the ladder you go, are made up of people who were raised in wealth and privilege with higher SES (socio economic status through their familial lines) than lower tier staff. This creates a gap in issues that are covered. They tend to ignore the issues of the middle class, poor and rural populations, which is why so many newsrooms got the Trump landslide wrong in 2016.
That is a good point about the SES!
Long time no see! Where have you been young lady?
I've heard that Danielle Bainbridge has been working as a professor of journalism at Northwestern University for several years now, if this is what you are referring to. Maybe DB is going back to PBS because I've also heard NU has experienced a shake up due to the drama surrounding colleges and universities whereby staff are being monitored for their social and political views (i.e. the recent congressional hearing w/ presidents of universities and colleges). Many have left or decided to pick up other supplemental income in case they are fired for signing a petition 20 years ago in college or being part of a movement 10 years ago.
@@Pou1gie1thanks for the scoop
Wow! So happy that you’re back Dr. Bainbridge! This is so well produced!
I watched the PBS documentary about the 19 yesterday. It gave me hope that, at least on some things, the US will be OK!
Yes!!! So glad you are back!!! 😃
This is one of my favorite channels.
She's back!!!
Learned about a person with the last name Bloomer and the pants that are named bloomer. 2 things in one shot! Love that!
So glad you’re back!!!!
Good to see you again Dr.Bainbridge! I have to say, as a white, hetro male, it's great to see the scales starting to balance out in my lifetime. There's still a ways to go for truly balanced representation across the board, but we're getting there! I've lost track of how many of these PBS channel's I'm subscribed too! I love them ALL, and all the host's! Until next time! 🤘😁🖖🇨🇦❤️
The Doctor is in! As edifying as ever. 😊👍
So happy to see you back!!!
I am so happy for you!
Welcome back!
You’re back!!!! ❤❤❤
Thank you, this is brilliant! I must admit I'm at least as grateful to this woman for her impact on women's clothing as for the journalism... I only ever wear trousers.
Amazing video 😆 thank you!
I'm so grateful for your work. I value the information and share it with my own students. Sadly, there are so many misinformed women who run negative campaigns and damage democracy. We had them in the 1900s, but now? It seems we are regressing.
Love that Dr. Bainbridge is back!
But did anyone else find the background music in this video to be really distracting?
Love this! Thanks for the great content, from a great presenter.
Have you ever seen the musical “the bloomer girls”
Thank you
can anyone ID the music in this? it's really good
Love this!
I wish I could feel any enthusiasm about female heads of news organizations, but most of these cater to a "centrist" position that is quite conservative and not really changing anything about how the problems of women are represented in the press. Poverty, domestic abuse, sexual assault, ageism, lookism, lack of reproductive freedom and discrimination are problems today as much or more than 50 years ago.. You wouldn't know that from the headlines.
Your hair is so beautiful 😍 always hair goals
Love your content!
This feels like the prequel to ‘The Newsroom’ or ‘Spotlight’. So excited!
NPR and WGBH 👌🏼
Thank you PBS and Dr. Bainbridge! Eat my shorts, AI journalism
My favourite newspaper was actually the supplement of the bigger newspapers called Telekids. It had comics, games and information on pop culture.
Ok Bloomer
0:39 That version of Bloomers remind me of Salwar/Patialas.
Yeah, especially since English colonization of India was going on at the time. Although I don’t think they would have been able to sell it as a good idea if it was considered similar to what Indian women were wearing! Since these white womens seem to have had a racism problem.
makes one want to stay and distribute a zine 🤔🤔🤔
Useless pandering at the end, plus an unsubstantiated claim at 1:00 about her contribution to journalism, in comparison to her foremothers.
Thumbs down. There are better sources of knowledge than this.
Have the integrity to call it prohibition. Don't hide behind some bullshit euphemism.
Ngl agreed, tho Temperance is what it was called at the time leading to Prohibition, historically speaking.
The Temperance Movement started before Prohibition was enacted.
@@stilettodivah The "temporence movement" was the movement advocating for prohibition.
What are you talking about?
Temperance and Prohibition are different words for a reason. Temperance advocated a reduction in drinking, particularly of the higher ABV content drinks (liquor). Americans in the 1830s were consuming 7 *gallons* of pure alcohol per year per person. That's nearly 3x the current modern consumption (2.5 gal per capita in 2021). Also, Prohibition only lasted from 1920-1933 and the Temperance movement began in the early 1800s. Do you think slavery and Jim Crow are the same thing, despite being separated by over a century?