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Detroit journalist accuses CBS of firing him over his Arab heritage

Award-winning journalist Ibrahim Samra claims he was fired Feb. 28 by CBS News TV following his coverage of the Israel-Gaza conflict and owing to his Muslim and Palestinian Arab heritage. (Supplied)
Award-winning journalist Ibrahim Samra claims he was fired Feb. 28 by CBS News TV following his coverage of the Israel-Gaza conflict and owing to his Muslim and Palestinian Arab heritage. (Supplied)
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Updated 24 March 2024

Detroit journalist accuses CBS of firing him over his Arab heritage

Detroit journalist accuses CBS of firing him over his Arab heritage
  • Samra charged he was also interrogated ‘about his views of US-designated terrorist organizations’

CHICAGO: Award-winning journalist Ibrahim Samra said he was fired Feb. 28 by CBS News TV following his coverage of the Israel-Gaza conflict and owing to his Muslim and Palestinian Arab heritage.

Samra, 27, filed the lawsuit Wednesday, March 20, accusing CBS TV editors in Detroit of treating him “differently” following the outbreak of the Israel-Gaza war and subjecting him to “offensive and inflammatory accusations,” including calling his coverage “one-sided.”

Samra charged he was also interrogated “about his views of US-designated terrorist organizations,” prevented from carrying out his reporting job and removed from his beat as punishment, before being fired on Feb. 28, 2024.

“When Mr. Samra complained that he felt singled out and unable to do his job, Defendants (CBS News TV Detroit) fired him,” the lawsuit alleges.

“All Mr. Samra ever wanted to do was his job: to cover the stories that mattered to his community. Defendants suppressed Mr. Samra’s voice, and the voices uplifted by his reporting, because of his race, national origin, religion, and because he dared to raise concerns about differential treatment of Palestinian-Americans in media.”

Samra worked for Detroit TV station WKBD Inc., based in Southfield, Michigan. WKBD is owned by CBS Broadcasting Inc. and its parent company Paramount Pictures Corp.

Originally from Chicago, Samra began working in 2018 as a multimedia journalist at WNDU-TV in South Bend, Indiana, where he was nominated for his first Emmy in 2021. In the fall of 2022, CBS/Paramount News recruited him for the CBS TV bureau where he was assigned to cover news in the Metro Detroit area including Dearborn, which is home to one of the nation’s largest Arab-American populations.

His troubles began while he was on leave visiting his family in Chicago to care for his mother who was ill around Oct. 7, 2023, when the Hamas attack provoked an Israeli military siege of Gaza.

According to the lawsuit, Paul Pytlowany, a CBS supervisor, called him, asking if he “could provide insight into how Palestinian-American families were being affected by the war.”

As he was in the Chicago suburbs, which has one of the largest concentrations of Palestinian-Americans, Samra offered to end his leave early and help. In the lawsuit, however, Samra says his editors “switched gears and encouraged other reporters to cover stories about Israeli families and perspectives.”

Remaining in Chicago, Samra felt he needed to provide balance to his station’s coverage. He attended a protest in the city on Oct. 21, where over 25,000 activists had gathered to protest the war.

Samra posted a video of the event to his Instagram account. He returned to work on Oct. 23 and expressed his concerns that coverage of the conflict was imbalanced, following which he was subjected to intense interrogation by Pytlowany and an employee of CBS’ human resources department. Over the next week, his supervisors grilled him about his views on the conflict, his lawsuit states.

Instead of addressing his concerns, “they bombarded him with a series of accusatory and offensive questions about the ‘intention’ behind the video Mr. Samra had posted to his personal Instagram account several days prior,” according to the lawsuit obtained by Arab News.

Bewildered at “the sudden hostility,” Samra said he was “simply documenting what was happening in the community where he had been located at the time, and that he had not reported, analyzed, or offered any opinion about the demonstration or the underlying political conflict.”

Samra charges that Pytlowany asked him “a series of inflammatory and offensive questions, including ‘How do you view Hamas?’,” suggesting Samra “had a positive view of a group designated by the United States as a terrorist organization, for no other reason than because of Mr. Samra’s racial, ethnic, and religious background.”

Pytlowany, according to the lawsuit, “questioned Mr. Samra regarding every post he had shared on his personal social media accounts regarding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, all of which were simply re-posts of reliable news and media reporting on events occurring in the region.”

In an email he sent to his supervisors on Dec. 5, 2023, Samra wrote: “As a Palestinian-American employee, I believe it is crucial to address the issues I’ve faced during this period. I have felt singled out by CBS Detroit’s management and limited in my ability to express my perspective on this topic. While I understand the sensitive nature of the topic, I believe that a diverse range of viewpoints should be encouraged to ensure fair and balanced reporting … I believe I received unfair treatment and have been mistreated during this time. It is essential that all employees, regardless of their background or ethnicity, are treated with respect and given equal opportunities to voice their opinions and concerns … I would like to be able to do my job without interference or bias and to be treated fairly in the same manner as other employees.”

In response, Jennifer Gordon, then vice president of employee relations for Paramount Pictures Corp., opened an investigation into Samra’s complaints, according to the lawsuit. But less than two weeks later, Gordon was “no longer at Paramount Global.”

In his lawsuit, filed by attorney Amanda Ghannam, a principal at Michigan Worker Law LLC in Detroit, Samra alleges Gordon was dismissed because she had expressed sympathies with his concerns.

Gordon had sent Samra an email, in which she diplomatically wrote: “Based on the information available, we were able to confirm that some of the concerns (Samra) raised constituted missed opportunities as to news coverage by the station … We have confirmed that management intends to be more transparent and flexible in scheduling and assigning stories, as well as providing clarity as to why pitches are or are not approved.”

On Feb. 27, Samra covered, with the approval of an editor, the protest led by the #AbandonBiden campaign, which was organized first in Minnesota and then expanded into Michigan and other states to encourage Arabs to reject President Joe Biden’s re-election bid.

Samra was then replaced by three other reporters and told that he had “violated CBS News policies” with his social media posts.

Several hours after expressing his disappointment in a second email to his supervisors, Samra’s employment was terminated.

Attempts by Arab News on Saturday to reach CBS officials, Samra, and his attorney Ghannam went unanswered.


What is Bluesky, the fast-growing social platform welcoming fleeing X users?

What is Bluesky, the fast-growing social platform welcoming fleeing X users?
Updated 16 November 2024

What is Bluesky, the fast-growing social platform welcoming fleeing X users?

What is Bluesky, the fast-growing social platform welcoming fleeing X users?
  • Bluesky said in mid-November that its total users surged to 15 million, up from roughly 13 million at the end of October, as some X users look for an alternative platform to post their thoughts and talk to others online

SAN FRANCISCO: Disgruntled X users are again flocking to Bluesky, a newer social media platform that grew out of the former Twitter before billionaire Elon Musk took it over in 2022. While it remains small compared to established online spaces such as X, it has emerged as an alternative for those looking for a different mood, lighter and friendlier and less influenced by Musk.
What is Bluesky?
Championed by former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, Bluesky was an invitation-only space until it opened to the public in February. That invite-only period gave the site time to build out moderation tools and other features. The platform resembles Musk’s X, with a “discover” feed and a chronological feed for accounts that users follow. Users can send direct messages and pin posts, as well as find “starter packs” that provide a curated list of people and custom feeds to follow.
Why is Bluesky growing?
Bluesky said in mid-November that its total users surged to 15 million, up from roughly 13 million at the end of October, as some X users look for an alternative platform to post their thoughts and talk to others online. The post-election uptick in users isn’t the first time Bluesky has benefited from people leaving X. The platform gained 2.6 million users in the week after X was banned in Brazil in August — 85 percent of them from Brazil, the company said. About 500,000 new users signed up in one day in October, when X signaled that blocked accounts would be able to see a user’s public posts.
Across the platform, new users — among them journalists, left-leaning politicians and celebrities — have posted memes and shared that they were looking forward to using a space free from advertisements and hate speech. Some said it reminded them of the early days of Twitter more than a decade ago.
Despite Bluesky’s growth, X posted after the election that it had “dominated the global conversation on the US election” and had set new records.
Beyond social networking
Bluesky, though, has bigger ambitions than to supplant X. Beyond the platform itself, it is building a technical foundation — what it calls “a protocol for public conversation” — that could make social networks work across different platforms — also known as interoperability — like email, blogs or phone numbers.
Currently, you can’t cross between social platforms to leave a comment on someone’s account. Twitter users must stay on Twitter and TikTok users must stay on TikTok if they want to interact with accounts on those services. Big Tech companies have largely built moats around their online properties, which helps serve their advertising-focused business models.
Bluesky is trying to reimagine all of this and working toward interoperability.

 


Media group IMI and UAE Media Council sign deal to recruit and train local talent

Media group IMI and UAE Media Council sign deal to recruit and train local talent
Updated 14 November 2024

Media group IMI and UAE Media Council sign deal to recruit and train local talent

Media group IMI and UAE Media Council sign deal to recruit and train local talent
  • Collaboration is part of the Media Apprenticeship Program launched last year by the Media Council and the Emirati Talent Competitiveness Council
  • It targets existing Emirati media professionals, as well as graduates and final-year students in media-related studies

DUBAI: IMI, a media group in the UAE formerly known as International Media Investments, has signed a cooperation agreement with the UAE Media Council to train and recruit local talent and develop media infrastructure in the country.

The initiative is part of the Media Apprenticeship Program, an initiative launched in May 2023 by the UAE Media Council and the Emirati Talent Competitiveness Council. It targets existing Emirati media professionals, as well as graduates and final-year students in media-related studies, with the aim of developing the next generation of talent in the nation’s media sector.

The agreement was signed at IMI’s new headquarters in Abu Dhabi by Mohammed Saeed Al-Shehhi, secretary-general of the UAE Media Council, and Rani Raad, CEO of the recently rebranded IMI Group, which owns several news outlets including Sky News Arabia, The National newspaper, Al-Ain News and CNN Business Arabic.

“We are proud to be the first global media group in the UAE to partner with the UAE Media Council on this initiative,” said Raad.

IMI Group, he added, can offer “aspiring Emirati talent unique opportunities to learn about the best media assets and standards” through its network of companies and the IMI Media Academy.

Launched in September, the IMI Media Academy employs the latest learning methodologies and offers an advanced curriculum focusing on the media industry, journalism and content creation.

Al-Shehhi highlighted the need to forge stronger partnerships with private media companies, and for cohesive country-wide efforts to develop the sector.

He said the partnership with IMI demonstrates the Media Council’s “commitment to empowering the media sector to attain global leadership by investing in the development of national skills and talents and equipping them with the latest media tools and technologies.”

It also aligns with the council’s desire “to nurture a new generation of talents capable of spearheading the sector and achieving significant accomplishments in the future,” he added.


Spotify introduces ‘Fresh Finds Saudi: Class 2k24’ residency program for emerging talent

Spotify introduces ‘Fresh Finds Saudi: Class 2k24’ residency program for emerging talent
Updated 15 November 2024

Spotify introduces ‘Fresh Finds Saudi: Class 2k24’ residency program for emerging talent

Spotify introduces ‘Fresh Finds Saudi: Class 2k24’ residency program for emerging talent
  • Initiative covers songwriting and music production, music marketing, music rights and industry knowledge, and touring and performing
  • The Kingdom is an ‘incredibly exciting market’ for Spotify, says platform’s regional managing director

DUBAI: Spotify this month introduced Fresh Finds Saudi: Class 2k24, the first iteration of a program dedicated to the promotion and development of the emerging music scene in the Kingdom.

“We’re incredibly thrilled to launch Fresh Finds Saudi: Class 2k24 and are eager to see the impact it will have on the career growth of the selected artists,” Akshat Harbola, managing director of Spotify in the Middle East and North Africa region, told Arab News.

The program, which ran from Nov. 6 to 11, represented “a long-term investment in nurturing up-and-coming talent, starting with a residency format this year,” he added.

It brought together four local talents who feature on Spotify’s Fresh Finds Arabia playlist, a showcase of the best new music by independent artists and labels from the region: BrownMusic, known for merging Arabic and English lyrics with contemporary experimental electronic beats; hip-hop artist Grzzlee; Kali-B, a singer, songwriter and producer; and Seera, an all-female Arabic psychedelic rock band.

They were chosen by Spotify’s local editorial team as “standout talent” that had “already made an impression on our Fresh Finds Arabia playlist,” Harbola said.

Spotify seeks to showcase different musical genres through the program, he added, and so “we took special care to prioritize a diverse range of styles that highlight the new generation of creators” from Ƶ. The selected artists “have proven they can connect with listeners and are ready to elevate their careers.”

The residency program provided them with support, mentorship and a host of resources aimed at accelerating their growth as artists and expanding their presence in the Saudi music industry, Spotify said.

The program’s curriculum focused on four topics: songwriting and music production; music marketing; music rights and industry knowledge; and touring and performing.

Experts such as lyricist, writer and creative director Menna El-Kiey, and musicians and producers Ntitled, El Waili, Soufiane Az and Ismail Nosrat, offered guidance to the participants on songwriting, beat-making, mixing and mastering.

Amin Kabbani, vice president of Arabic talent at entertainment company Live Nation Middle East, provided insights into planning and executing a successful tour, managing logistics and engaging with fans.

Sony Publishing MENA led the session on music rights and industry knowledge, during which the participants learned about intellectual property, and how to protect their work and navigate the business side of their art.

Spotify also worked with the artists to record new tracks at creative hub Merwas in Riyadh, and the results will be released by the end of the year. Nada Al-Tuwaijri, the CEO of Merwas, said the studio is “committed to nurturing talent and providing artists with the tools and environment they need to unlock their creative potential.”

She added: “The Fresh Finds Saudi: Class 2k24 initiative aligns perfectly with our vision of supporting emerging talent in the Kingdom, the region and beyond.”

Harbola said that the Kingdom is “an incredibly exciting market” for Spotify and although he was “unable to share specific listenership rankings, the level of engagement in Ƶ is truly remarkable.”

The company is seeing a “strong surge” in the popularity of pop music, especially Egyptian pop, and Khaleeji music, “which remains central to Saudi listeners,” he added.

The platform’s focus on the Kingdom has grown in recent months through initiatives such as “Tarab,” a campaign that celebrated Khaleeji music and spotlighted Saudi-based RADAR Arabia artist Sultan Al-Murshed in New York’s Times Square.

Harbola said that the burgeoning local music scene and audience engagement on Spotify is driving the company’s efforts to introduce initiatives such as Fresh Finds Saudi: Class 2k24 and commit to them on a long-term basis

“While we don’t have set dates for future iterations (of the residency), our focus remains on curating unique experiences tailored to artists’ needs in different markets, whether through this initiative or other Spotify Music Programs across MENA,” he added.


Lebanese journalist Soukaina Mansour Kawtharani killed in Israeli strike on Joun

Lebanese journalist Soukaina Mansour Kawtharani killed in Israeli strike on Joun
Updated 14 November 2024

Lebanese journalist Soukaina Mansour Kawtharani killed in Israeli strike on Joun

Lebanese journalist Soukaina Mansour Kawtharani killed in Israeli strike on Joun
  • Her death brings the toll of Lebanese media workers killed to 12

LONDON: Lebanese journalist Soukaina Mansour Kawtharani was killed alongside her two children and other family members in an Israeli airstrike on a three-story residential building in Joun, near Sidon in southern Lebanon.

Kawtharani, who worked as a correspondent for Radio Al-Nour, a station seen as close to Hezbollah, was reported dead on Wednesday by the radio station.

The airstrike targeted the building, which was housing displaced families, on Tuesday.

Joseph Qosseifi, president of the Lebanese Press Editors’ Association, condemned the attack, calling it a “crime” and urging international human rights organizations, the International Criminal Court, the General Federation of Arab Journalists and UNESCO to take action.

In a statement issued through the official National News Agency, he said: “The Israeli enemy makes no distinction between civilians and combatants in its bombardments, violates every law, charter and pact, and speaks only the language of fire and blood.”

The building, reportedly owned by the Ghosn family — relatives of Carlos Ghosn, the Brazil-born French Lebanese businessman and former automotive executive — was completely destroyed in the strike, which killed 15 people, including eight women and four children, and injured 12, according to the Health Ministry.

Kawtharani’s death brings the number of Lebanese journalists and media workers killed since the beginning of the Israeli-Hamas conflict to 12, according to the Lebanese Press Editors’ Association.


Parody news website the Onion buys Alex Jones’ Infowars out of bankruptcy

Parody news website the Onion buys Alex Jones’ Infowars out of bankruptcy
Updated 14 November 2024

Parody news website the Onion buys Alex Jones’ Infowars out of bankruptcy

Parody news website the Onion buys Alex Jones’ Infowars out of bankruptcy
  • Families of victims of the Sandy Hook school shooting backed the Onion’s bid

NEW YORK: The parody news website the Onion bought conspiracy theorist Alex Jones’ Infowars brand and website in a bankruptcy auction, according to court documents filed on Thursday.
Jones filed for bankruptcy protection in 2022 after courts ordered him to pay $1.5 billion for defaming the families of 20 students and six staff members killed in the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut. Jones, unable to pay those legal judgments, was forced to auction his assets, including Infowars, in bankruptcy.
The Connecticut families of eight victims of the school shooting backed the Onion’s bid, saying it would put “an end to the misinformation machine” that Jones operated.
The Onion said it aims to replace “Infowars’ relentless barrage of disinformation” with the Onion’s “relentless barrage of humor.” “The Onion is proud to acquire Infowars, and we look forward to continuing its storied tradition of scaring the site’s users with lies until they fork over their cold, hard cash,” the Onion CEO Ben Collins said in a statement. Everytown for Gun Safety, the largest gun violence prevention organization in the country, said it will serve as the exclusive advertiser on the new Infowars.
The Onion will acquire Infowars’ intellectual property, including its website, customer lists and inventory, certain social media accounts and the Infowars production equipment, the families said in a statement.
“They’re shutting us down,” Jones said on social media site X. “I’m going to be here until they come in here and turn the lights off.”