Tuesday, December 24, 2019

Seeing fewer women on the news Theres a reason

Seeing fewer women on the news Tzu siches a reasonSeeing fewer women on the news Theres a reasonThe modern news cycle is a 24/7 ordeal. And at major broadcast companies, someone always has to be ready to go on-air.That means that correspondents can be sent to the latest protest or mass shooting at a moments notice, with no regularity or predictability in the schedule. And though that volatility may put strain on most people, mothers say they bear the brunt of the burden.Moms are expected to do their job like its their only responsibility, even though theyre also working the mom shift, former CBS News correspondent Julianna Goldman recently wrote in The Atlantic. Covering a forest fire or a mudslide is rarely compatible with being home for back-to-school night.In a personal essay, Goldman detailed how, after 15 years in the news business, she cried for the first time in front of one of her CBS bosses when she requested to change her schedule so it welches less uncertain but her manage r would not budge. It was implied that she should feel fortunate her contract had been renewed at all. And so Goldman did not sign on for another few years.Pressed to choose between staying in my career and being a mom, I chose the latter, Goldman wrote. But it didnt really feel like much of a choice.After speaking to 13 mothers in TV news, Goldman identified a trend Broadcast women are held to a standard that few of them can practically maintain as mothers. And like most of the workforce, theyre subject to biases that make their colleagues judge them more harshly than single women and men or fathers.You can be in meetings and the person talking to you firmly believes they dont have working mother in mind when theyre talking to you, but it is there. It becomes a big part of who you are,Robin Sproul, an ABC News veteran, told Goldman.There is a You dont even want to ask the working mom about some assignments because youre afraid if you ask them and they say yes, they wont be able to deliver the way a single man or single woman would - and theyll ask for accommodations.Goldmans essay is backed by research that indicates the progression women have made in news is slipping. In 2016, female anchors, field reporters and correspondents accounted for only 25.2% of broadcast reports, according to the Womens Media Center (WMC) - down from 32% when WMC published its 2015 report. Other journalism professions suffer from similar gender disproportions, though theyre less dramatic In 2017, WMCs annual examination found female-produced work accounted for 37.7% of news reports at major outlets.In 2015, journalism professorScott Reinardy surveyed more than 500 female journalists and found that 67% of women said they either intended to leave journalism or were uncertain about their future, according to a release summarizing his study. Thats up from 62% in 2009.Goldman attributed womens departures from broadcast journalism to two major factors A toxic work culture that pushes e mployees to always prove their sacrifice and hard work (including ending maternity leave early to get back in front of the camera), and a belief that women must fit a particular vision.Even if its unspoken, there is a very clear expectation that you will maintain a certain appearance if youre a woman, former anchor and correspondent Campbell Brown told Goldman. The ability to maintain that appearance flies out the window when you get pregnant.Goldman ended her essay with a plea for more inclusive broadcast news, where she said mothers add to the landscape.The more women there are in TV news - from the top on down - the better and more diverse stories there are for the public to consume, Goldman wrote. And, Goldman added, nearly all the women I spoke with said that once they became mothers, they became better journalists.

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