In Rapid City the television crew is
allowed to perch above a path where prisoners walk from one building to
another. Nearly every night, adapting the television adage that ‘if it
bleeds it leads,” inmates are captured by the media in handcuffs and
leg irons shuffling from one building to another. The inmates in Rapid
City are, for the most part, Native American and those in Albuquerque
are mostly Hispanic. What subliminal message does this convey? To the
white population, particularly the very young, it sends the message
that all criminals are either Native American or Hispanic. To the
Native American and Hispanic viewers it is a source of humiliation
because it spotlights the criminal element within their race. At least
one night of every week this is the message sent out to viewers in
South Dakota and New Mexico and if you carry it a step further, you
will see the same kind of reporting in the metropolitan cities of
America only their focus is on African Americans. Although the vast
majority of Native Americans, Hispanics and African Americans are not
criminals, this does not translate as factual on the evening news. In
fact, just the opposite message is conveyed. This “unconscious
discrimination” is prevalent in the message conveyed by the advertising
agencies where people living far from the racial demographics of the
local communities usually create local ads. For example, two of the
major colleges in South Dakota are advertising the benefits of
attending school on their campuses. One commercial is a voice over by
the retired anchorman of NBC Nightly News, Tom Brokaw. His ad, for his
alma mater, the University of South Dakota, is a collage of photos
showing graduates of USD. This ad has one thing in common with the ads
by rival college South Dakota State University. All of the graduate
achievers are white. In fact, the SDSU ad shows the achievers and asks
the question, “What do these folks have in common?” The first thing
that crossed my mind is “they are all white.” Now that is a shame
because there have been many achievers of Native American extraction
who are graduates of these fine institutions. [more]