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Like most journalists, I'm an idealist.
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I love unearthing good stories, especially untold stories.
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I just didn't think that, in 2011,
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women would still be in that category.
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I'm the President of the Journalism & Women Symposium,
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JAWS. That's Sharky. (Laughter)
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I joined 10 years ago because I wanted female role models,
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and I was frustrated by the lagging status of women
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in our profession, and what that meant for our image
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in the media.
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We make up half the population of the world,
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but we're just 24 percent of the news subjects
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quoted in news stories,
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and we're just 20 percent of the experts quoted in stories,
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and now, with today's technology,
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it's possible to remove women from the picture completely.
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This is a picture of President Barack Obama
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and his advisors tracking the killing of Osama bin Laden.
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You can see Hillary Clinton on the right.
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Let's see how the photo ran
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in an Orthodox Jewish newspaper based in Brooklyn.
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Hillary's completely gone. (Laughter)
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The paper apologized but said
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it never runs photos of women.
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They might be sexually provocative. (Laughter)
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This is an extreme case, yes, but the fact is,
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women are only 19 percent of the sources
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in stories on politics,
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and only 20 percent in stories on the economy.
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The news continues to give us a picture where men
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outnumber women in nearly all occupational categories
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except two: students and homemakers. (Laughter)
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So we all get a very distorted picture of reality.
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The problem is, of course,
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there aren't enough women in newsrooms.
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They reported just 37 percent of stories
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in print, TV and radio.
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Even in stories on gender-based violence,
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men get an overwhelming majority of print space
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and airtime.
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Case in point,
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this March, the New York Times ran a story
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by James McKinley about a gang rape of a young girl,
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11 years old, in a small Texas town.
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McKinley writes that the community's wondering,
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"How could their boys have been drawn into this?"
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"Drawn into this," like they were
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seduced into committing an act of violence.
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And the first person he quotes says,
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"These boys will have to live with this the rest of their lives."
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(Crowd reacts)
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You don't hear much about the 11-year-old victim,
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except that she wore clothes that were a little old for her
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and she wore makeup.
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The Times was deluged with criticism.
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Initially, it defended itself, and said, "These aren't our views.
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This is what we found in our reporting."
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Now, here's a secret you probably know already:
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Your stories are constructed.
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As reporters, we research, we interview.
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We try to give a good picture of reality.
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We also have our own unconscious biases,
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but the Times makes it sound like
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anyone would have reported this story the same way.
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I disagree with that.
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So three weeks later, the Times revisits the story.
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This time, it adds another byline to it with McKinley's:
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Erica Goode.
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What emerges is a truly sad, horrific tale of a young girl
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and her family trapped in poverty.
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She was raped numerous times by many men.
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She had been a bright, easygoing girl.
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She was maturing quickly, physically,
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but her bed was still covered with stuffed animals.
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It's a very different picture.
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Perhaps the addition of Ms. Goode
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is what made this story more complete.
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The Global Media Monitoring Project has found that
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stories by female reporters are more likely
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to challenge stereotypes than those by male reporters.
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At KUNM here in Albuquerque, Elaine Baumgartel
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did some graduate research on the coverage
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of violence against women.
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What she found was many of these stories
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tend to blame victims and devalue their lives.
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They tend to sensationalize, and they lack context.
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So for her graduate work, she did a three-part series
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on the murder of 11 women
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found buried on Albuquerque's West Mesa.
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She tried to challenge those patterns and stereotypes
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in her work, and she tried to show the challenges
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that journalists face, from external sources,
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their own internal biases, and cultural norms,
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and she worked with an editor at National Public Radio
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to try to get a story aired nationally.
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She's not sure that would have happened
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if the editor had not been a female.
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Stories in the news are more than twice as likely
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to present women as victims than men,
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and women are more likely to be defined
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by their body parts.
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Wired magazine, November 2010.
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Yes, the issue was about breast tissue engineering.
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Now, I know you're all distracted, so I'll take that off. (Laughter)
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Eyes up here. (Laughter)
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So -- (Applause)
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Here's the thing.
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Wired almost never puts women on its cover.
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Oh, there have been some gimmicky ones.
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Pam from The Office.
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Manga girls.
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A voluptuous model covered in synthetic diamonds.
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Texas State University professor Cindy Royal wondered
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in her blog, "How are young women like her students
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supposed to feel about their roles in technology reading Wired?"
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Chris Anderson, the editor of Wired, defended his choice
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and said, there aren't enough women, prominent women
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in technology to sell a cover, to sell an issue.
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Part of that is true. There aren't as many
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prominent women in technology.
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Here's my problem with that argument.
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Media tells us every day what's important,
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by the stories they choose and where they place them.
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It's called agenda-setting.
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How many people knew the founders of Facebook
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and Google before their faces were on a magazine cover?
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Putting them there made them more recognizable.
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Now, Fast Company Magazine embraces that idea.
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This is its cover from November 15, 2010.
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The issue is about the most prominent and influential women
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in technology.
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Editor Robert Safian told the Poynter Institute,
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"Silicon Valley is very white and very male,
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but that's not what Fast Company thinks the business world
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will look like in the future, so it tries to give a picture
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of where the globalized world is moving."
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By the way, apparently Wired took all this to heart.
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This was its issue in April. (Laughter)
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That's Limor Fried, the founder of Adafruit Industries,
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in the Rosie the Riveter pose.
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It would help to have more women in positions of leadership
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in the media. A recent global survey found that
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73 percent of the top media management jobs
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are still held by men.
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But this is also about something far more complex:
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our own unconscious biases and blind spots.
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Shankar Vedantam is the author of "The Hidden Brain:
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How Our Unconscious Minds Elect Presidents,
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Control Markets, Wage Wars, and Save Our Lives."
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He told the former ombudsman
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at National Public Radio, who was doing
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a report on how women fare in NPR coverage,
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unconscious bias flows throughout most of our lives.
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It's really difficult to disentangle those strands.
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But he did have one suggestion.
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He used to work for two editors who said
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every story had to have at least one female source.
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He balked, at first, but said he eventually
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followed the directive happily because his stories got better
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and his job got easier.
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Now, I don't know if one of the editors was a woman,
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but that can make the biggest differences.
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The Dallas Morning News won a Pulitzer Prize in 1994
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for a series it did on women around the world,
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but one of the reporters told me she's convinced
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it never would have happened if they had not had
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a female assistant foreign editor,
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and they would not have gotten some of those stories
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without female reporters and editors on the ground,
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particularly one on female genital mutilation.
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Men would just not be allowed into those situations.
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This is an important point to consider,
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because much of our foreign policy now revolves around
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countries where the treatment of women is an issue,
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such as Afghanistan.
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What we're told in terms of arguments against leaving
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this country is that the fate of the women is primary.
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Now I'm sure a male reporter in Kabul can find women
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to interview. Not so sure about rural, traditional areas,
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where I'm guessing women can't talk to strange men.
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It's important to keep talking about this
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in light of Lara Logan.
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She was the CBS News correspondent who was
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brutally sexually assaulted in Egypt's Tahrir Square
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right after this photo was taken.
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Almost immediately, pundits weighed in
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blaming her and saying things like, "You know,
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maybe women shouldn't be sent to cover those stories."
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I never heard anyone say this about Anderson Cooper
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and his crew who were attacked covering the same story.
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One way to get more women into leadership
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is to have other women mentor them.
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One of my board members is an editor at a major
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global media company, but she never thought about this
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as a career path until she met female role models at JAWS.
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But this is not just a job for super-journalists,
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or my organization. You all have a stake in a strong,
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vibrant media.
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Analyze your news, and speak up when there are gaps
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missing in coverage like people at the New York Times did.
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Suggest female sources to reporters and editors.
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Remember, a complete picture of reality
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may depend upon it.
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And I'll leave you with a video clip that I first saw in [1987]
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when I was a student in London.
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It's for the Guardian newspaper.
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It's actually long before I ever thought about
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becoming a journalist, but I was very interested
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in how we learn to perceive our world.
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Narrator: An event seen from one point of view
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gives one impression.
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Seen from another point of view,
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it gives quite a different impression.
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But it's only when you get the whole picture
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you can fully understand what's going on.
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"The Guardian"
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Megan Kamerick: I think you'll all agree
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that we'd be better off if we all had the whole picture.