View email in your browser
[link removed]
.
[link removed]
[link removed]
At 10, Pauly Denetclaw found an article in Time Magazine that she’d keep, and read again and again, for years. It was about girls going through puberty at a young age, which she was.
In her Gallup, New Mexico, home, her parents always each bought and brought home a copy of the newspaper. But Denetclaw didn’t see journalism as an option until she was 14 or 15 and discovered the “Gilmore Girls.”
“I truly believe the ‘Gilmore Girls’ created an entire generation of female journalists,” she said.
It was the first time she’d seen women working as journalists, and the first time she saw a real woman who was a journalist thanks to a guest appearance by Christiane Amanpour.
[link removed]
Now, Denetclaw’s own career as a journalist is devoted to making sure Indigenous people are seen and heard. For years, that was through media outlets that served Native communities.
“When I went into journalism, I went in with the intention to report on Indigenous communities because I think there are so many racist narratives that are pervasive through nonnative media outlets,” said Denetclaw, who is a citizen of the Navajo Nation.
In September, she took that approach to The Texas Observer, where she’s the first reporter on its new Indigenous Affairs desk.
“Indigenous communities and stories represent the most underserved by journalists in Texas. In fact, for the last 50 years, the only stories major Texas newsrooms have bothered to look into primarily revolve around casinos and powwows. There has been almost no reporting done on the impact of COVID-19, on law enforcement relationships, climate change impacts, voting access, health care systems, politics, art, sex, or treaty rights to name a few,” publisher Mike Kanin wrote in a press release about the news. “For whatever reason, news organizations in Texas don’t report on Indigenous communities. The Texas Observer intends to be different.”
Denetclaw previously worked for the Navajo Times. Her editors have always been Indigenous and people of color. And they all supported the kind of reporting she wanted to do — embedded in anti-racism and Indigeneity.
She had no intention of working for a nonnative media outlet, she said, until she learned about the job at The Texas Observer and saw they’d hired editor Tristan Ahtone
[link removed]
, who is a member of the Kiowa Tribe.
In September, the Observer published “The Anti-Indigenous Handbook,”
[link removed]
which “reveals some of the most common attacks Indigenous communities face today.”
The Observer does fearless investigative reporting, said Denetclaw, and she was ready to move from breaking news to more long-form reporting with them. She’s already started, with a project looking into the deaths of two Navajo soldiers at Fort Hood
[link removed]
. That piece published online this week.
Denetclaw thinks bringing her work to a bigger audience offers them the opportunity to learn about the issues that matter in Indian Country and beyond.
There’s an opportunity for non-native journalists, too, to make sure the Native American voices in their communities are heard year-round and not just at Thanksgiving and on Indigenous People’s Day, she said.
“I think that we are so forgotten that it perpetuates this narrative that Native people don’t exist anymore.”
You can see how wrong that is by following some other reporters Denetclaw recommends, including Shondiin Silversmith at The Arizona Republic
[link removed]
, Nick Martin at The New Republic
[link removed]
and Graham Lee Brewer at High Country News
[link removed]
. Navajo Times
[link removed]
and Indian Country Today
[link removed]
also do amazing work, she said, on a daily basis.
Denetclaw also recommends turning to resources
[link removed]
from the Native American Journalists Association, which has primers on how to cover the Violence Against Women’s Act, the Indian Child Welfare Act and recommended terminology. There’s also a BINGO card
[link removed]
that, if marked, “may signal cliched storytelling.”
“If you get a BINGO,” Denetclaw said, “you need to rewrite your article.”
Image via NAJA. Pictured at top: Pauly Denetclaw covers Indigenous affairs for the Texas Observer. She's pictured here in photos by Nate Lemuel, left, and Zachariah Ben, right.
FROM OUR SPONSOR:
Looking for an expert source? Find and connect with academics from top universities on the Coursera | Expert Network
[link removed]
, a new, free tool for journalists. Discover a diverse set of subject matter experts who can speak to this week’s trending news stories at experts.coursera.org
[link removed]
today.
While you’re here:
Read about City Cast,
[link removed]
where “the fundamental idea is to build a for-profit network of daily local news podcasts in cities across the country.”
Watch “Essential Journalists: How Coronavirus Changed TV News.”
[link removed]
Follow the work of Prism
[link removed]
, “a news site led by women of color, centers the voices of marginalized people in its reporting.”
Learn from Better News and Scalawag about how to use events to grow diverse audiences.
[link removed]
Apply for an RJI Fellowship
[link removed]
. I’m a current fellow and happy to talk to you about my experience!
I left this book out last week, but check out Nicole Weisensee Egan’s book “Chasing Cosby.”
[link removed]
Apply for Membership 101
[link removed]
from The Texas Tribune’s RevLab and The Membership Puzzle Project.
Read about the local journalist Lee fired
[link removed]
for talking about being a local journalist.
You can read my latest obit for the Tampa Bay Times, on a woman who spent her life feeding people
[link removed]
.
And help my colleague out during this unprecedented election season. Amaris Castillo, a contributor to Poynter.org, would like to hear from brave politics reporters who are willing to share their weirdest election story while on the job. Print, digital, and TV reporters, you can email her at
[email protected].
That’s it for me! Get more sleep!
Kristen
[link removed] on social
[link removed] on social
[link removed] on social
The Poynter Institute
The Poynter Institute & News University
801 Third Street South
St. Petersburg, FL 33701
© All rights reserved Poynter Institute 2020
update subscription preferences
[link removed]
subscribe to this newsletter
[link removed]