Different take on Pendleton coverage.
Jarvis, John
Before the nation heard of Hadiya Pendleton, the grim realities of
Chicago's gun violence had been largely overlooked by American
media outlets.
Not anymore.
The 15-year-old's tragic shooting death in Chicago Jan. 29
highlighted the impact gangs and gun violence have had on the
nation's third-largest city. News coverage revealed that Pendleton,
a high school honors student and majorette, had performed with her
school's band in the parade at President Obama's inauguration
just a week earlier. With that angle, the story immediately gained
prominence over other similar incidents involving innocent teens being
caught in gang members' crosshairs.
The subsequent news coverage of one mainstream daily newspaper and
an ethnic weekly in the Windy City framed the event differently. The
differences were subtle but distinct.
The Chicago Tribune had 10 stories listed on its website from Jan.
30 through Feb. 21 that dealt with the events surrounding
Pendleton's death, with multiple writers' bylines appearing on
the articles. The historically African-American weekly newspaper the
Chicago Defender, which was founded in 1905, had a half-dozen
staff-written reports (the majority by managing editor Rhonda Gillespie,
with others by Kalia Abiade) combined with more articles from the
Associated Press that covered the story as it developed.
The Defender's staff and wire coverage mixture makes sense in
the context of recent staff cuts. "State of the News Media
2013," an annual report on journalism in the United States recently
released by the Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in
Journalism, said the Defender had cut its staff to four, laying off two
editors "because of reduced advertising."
The difference between the two publications was in how information
was presented to their respective audiences. For the Tribune, that meant
including a national angle to its stories, while the Defender's
coverage focused much more on its surrounding community.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
When news first broke about Pendleton's death, the Tribune
surveyed the developing story with an eye on the national furor over her
senseless death. A story posted Jan. 31 on the Tribune's website
and written by Jennifer Delgado, Bridget Doyle and Jeremy Gorner noted
that outrage over the long College Prep sophomore's death was
spreading "from City Hall to the White House." The report,
headlined "Teen girl's killing ignites widespread outrage:
'Why did it have to be her'," contained quotes from
President Obama and his spokesman, Jay Carney, as well as from Chicago
police superintendent Garry McCarthy and the city's mayor, Rahm
Emanuel. All of these officials are instantly recognizable by Chicago
residents, and all but McCarthy are well-known to citizens across the
country.
The story noted that McCarthy "stressed that neither Hadiya
nor anyone in the group she was with were involved with gangs. But it
appears the gunman mistook the students for members of a rival
gang."
The Defender's Feb. 6-12 weekly edition, meanwhile, used its
cover page to feature photographs of five black Chicago youths who had
been killed in similar fashion, with Pendleton's photo prominent in
the center of the page. The focus for the Defender was the impact that
each of these youths' deaths--and the gun- and gang-related
violence that accompanied them--has had on the African-American
community within Chicago. The cover was a lead-in to an editorial on
page 10 that carried the headline "Gang members have no turf."
The editorial took issue with some people who said that Pendleton was in
the wrong place at the wrong time, noting that she was "in a city
park decompressing after a day of final exams at school. It's what
the park is for, recreation and temporary retreat." The same issue
also contained a story, written by staff writer Rhonda Gillespie,
headlined "Teen's death a call for action." In it,
Gillespie wrote of other mothers who have lost children to gang
violence, and noted that Pendleton's death "locally reignited
many calls that law enforcement, faith and community leaders, and other
victims' families have been making for gun violence to stop and for
Obama to come to Chicago and speak out on the issue."
Another story by Gillespie, posted online Feb. 9, noted that
"a who's who of Chicago notables attended the (visitation)
service, the first in a two-day final farewell to the teen. Among the
attendees were City Treasurer Stephanie Neely and Rev. Jesse
Jackson." Both Neely and Jackson are prominent members of the
city's African-American community.
Over the course of the next few weeks, both newspapers continued to
follow developments in the story, including a $40,000 reward on
information on who had done the shooting followed by the arrest of two
suspects in Pendleton's shooting death. In a Feb. 12 story posted
online under the headline "2 charged with murder in Hadiya
Pendleton slaying," the Tribune's Jason Meisner and Gorner
reported that "two reputed gang members were out for revenge from a
previous shooting when they opened fire on a group of students in a
South Side park last month, killing 15-year-old Hadiya Pendleton in a
heartbreaking case that has brought national attention to Chicago's
rampant gun violence, police said."
The Defender and the Tribune next reported on the news of first
lady Michelle Obama attending Pendleton's funeral. The
Defender's Gillespie quoted Pendleton's father, Nathaniel
Pendleton, in a Feb. 7 story as saying: "I feel supported. When
(Michelle Obama) gets finished with being the first lady, she's
still a parent."
Both publications also noted that the slain teen's parents
were the guests of the president and first lady in Washington during
President Obama's State of the Union speech, in which he said:
"Just three weeks ago, she was here, in Washington, with her
classmates, performing for her country at my inauguration. And a week
later, she was shot and killed in a Chicago park after school, just a
mile away from my house."
On March 7, a story written by Tribune reporter Kim Geiger and
posted on the paper's website carried the headline "Gun
trafficking bill carrying Hadiya Pendleton's name clears Senate
panel." The story noted that the bill was "co-sponsored by
Sens. Dick Durbin and Mark Kirk of Illinois," and that it
"contains a section named for Pendleton and Nyasia Pryear-Yard, a
teenage victim of gun violence in New York." (Pryear-Yard was a
17-year-old Catholic honors student who was shot and killed in January
while dancing at a Brooklyn teen club.)
The Defender's coverage on March 8, meanwhile, focused instead
on U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush, a Democrat from Illinois' 1st
Congressional District, and his introduction of "the Hadiya
Pendleton and Nyasia Pryear-Yard Stop Illegal Trafficking in Firearms
Act of 2013 to limit straw purchases or firearms and reduce illegal
trafficking of firearms across state lines." Rush, who is
African-American, gained national notoriety in 2012 when he wore a gray
boodle and sunglasses on the House floor as he gave a speech urging a
full investigation into the shooting death of Florida teen Trayvon
Martin.
"Hadiya's death will not be in vain," the Defender
story quoted Rush as saying Feb. 9 outside the church where her funeral
took place.
In an interview conducted by the Tribune's Dahleen Glanton,
with Pendleton's parents, Cleopatra Cowley-Pendleton said that
"my life has been forever changed of what someone else did.
I'm not going to be extremely political, but if I can help someone
else not go through what we've gone through, then I have to do what
I can. These are the cards we have been dealt. If these are the shoes I
need to walk in, I don't mind walking in them."