Inside the Dateline Special on Detroit
April 27 2010
( Harwood Online
)
By Luther Keith
Executive Director, ARISE Detroit!
I have thought long and hard about the
Dateline NBC special on Detroit: America Now:
City of Heartbreak and Hope, which aired April
18. Painfully, all of the heartbreak presented
in the Dateline report is true and it is
incumbent on the residents of Detroit to
rectify the situation. As a former journalist,
I understand we should not hide the facts. I
have no problem with that.
However, what is also painfully clear
is the piece was sorely lacking in balance
while rehashing clichés and presenting Detroit
essentially as a place filled exclusively with
desperately poor struggling people, no middle
class or professional residents, and as a city
that is doing little to solve its problems
other than waiting on Mayor Dave Bing and
Detroit Public Schools Emergency Financial
Manager Robert Bobb. I can draw no other
conclusion after spending nearly four hours
with Chris Hansen and the Dateline crew showing
them, as I was requested, “the good, the bad
and the ugly,” of Detroit but seeing only
the “bad” and the “ugly,” and none of
the good, make it into the final cut..
Starting with the Palmer Woods, which
the camera crew and producers all commented was
“beautiful,” and going through parts of
Sherwood Forest, West Outer Drive and ,
Rosedale Park, I showed Dateline a number of
solid, strong neighborhoods with good, well
cared for homes with strong community
associations and block clubs. This was done to
give them a balanced picture of the totality of
Detroit – not just the well chronicled blight
of the city that was given most of the camera
face time. Dateline reporter Chris Hansen asked
me who lived in these neighborhoods. I told
him, doctors, lawyers, professionals and
business owners among others. None of it was
used.
In great detail, in response to
Chris Hansen’s questions, I talked about why
I and others choose to live in Detroit, I
talked about what many community groups and
foundations were doing to attack the problems
and why I was hopeful about Detroit’s future
in spite of the city’s challenges. None of
my comments, reflecting optimism and hope, were
seen fit to include in the Dateline report. I
also took Dateline to troubled neighborhoods
like the Brightmoor area and showed the
devastating impact of urban decay, as well as
new housing built by non-profit development
groups. At one point, Chris Hansen got out of
the car and asked me which way did I think
Detroit would go in the future, with more urban
decay or more new housing. I said I was still
hopeful that the new housing was in our future
and that Detroiters just needed more help to
get more people involved. None of it was
used.
When we visited my old neighborhood
where I was raised on the west side of Detroit,
we encountered Joe Davis, a wonderful man now
90 years of age, who took myself and other
children in the neighborhood to play baseball
and generally looked out for us.
Our meeting was included as part of the
Dateline special, but even that was edited in
way that did not convey the true nature of our
relationship. Mr. Davis was presented as an
“old timer,” and only his comments about
the sad state of the neighborhood in Detroit
were included. But I also told Dateline Mr.
Davis was an example of adults who cared for
the neighborhood children, something we need
more of now, and why we needed to bring the
city back so senior citizens like Mr. Davis
could live in safe neighborhoods.
Yes, the neighborhood has seen much
betters days. I don’t have a problem showing
it but I do have problem with the lack of
context. Cordette Grantling, who was featured
in the Dateline special, is a saint for her
commitment to adopting and raising abandoned
children. The outpouring of response to her
plight as she struggles is well deserved. But
her situation cannot be used to represent all
Detroiters, or even most of them. The isolated
examples of one person tutoring children and
people picking food in urban gardens cannot
obscure the fact the piece showed a shocking
lack of community—it gave no sense of the
efforts of hundreds of organizations and the
thousands of people involved in mentoring,
tutoring, literacy efforts, cleaning up
neighborhoods, working in schools every day
throughout Detroit.
ARISE Detroit! is a nonprofit
coalition of more than 400 organizations
working on these and other issues, a clear
indication that Detroit is an extremely engaged
community. Dateline deemed the isolated case of
a man killing and selling raccoons, more
important than the efforts of thousands of
people who care for their children, go to
church, go to work and try to do better each
day. Dateline’s explanation for the way the
special was edited, as a producer said to me,
was they had an abundance of good video and
much of the footage had to be edited out to fit
the allotted time for the special...
Detroit has been stereotyped before.
We are an easy target with lots of low hanging
fruit.
Yes, the media has a job to do. Journalists are
not public relation arms for the City of
Detroit, nor should they be. But we have a
right to expect them to tell the truth.
The whole truth.
Comments