January 26, 2019

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Journalists Raise Money, Post Jobs And Buy Beers For Peers After A Week Of Layoffs

Members of the BuzzFeed News team work at their desks at BuzzFeed headquarters on Dec. 11, 2018.

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It’s been a tough week in the journalism industry.

On Wednesday, BuzzFeed announced plans to lay off 15 percent of its overall workforce. The layoffs are expected to affect around 200 employees — many in the company’s news division.

The same day, The Wall Street Journal reported that Verizon’s media group — which includes AOL, Yahoo and HuffPost — will lay off 7 percent of its staff. The layoffs include the entire HuffPost opinion and health sections.

Also on Wednesday, the newspaper giant Gannett started slashing jobs. For Gannett, the company behind USA Today and prominent local newspapers like The Indianapolis Star and The Arizona Republic, this week’s layoffs are part of years of downsizing and cuts for the company.

Many laid off journalists quickly took to Twitter to announce the loss of their jobs.

“Like so many talented and lovely journalists, I was laid off today,” tweeted HuffPost deputy opinion editor Chloe Angyal.

“I’m in shock. Not how I wanted 35 year journalism career to end,” tweeted longtime Indianapolis Star columnist Tim Swarens.

“If you’re hiring, my DMs are open,” tweeted BuzzFeed News investigative reporter Chris McDaniel.

For those who are wondering, @HuffPost Opinion — the entire section — is being eliminated. The beautiful, diverse, inclusive baby we built from scratch is gone.

— Chloe Angyal (@ChloeAngyal) January 24, 2019

I was told a few minutes ago that @indystar has laid me off. I’m in shock. Not how I wanted 35 year journalism career to end.

— Tim Swarens (@tswarens) January 23, 2019

Hey guys, I’m one of the many reporters laid off from BuzzFeed News today. I’m proud of the work I’ve done here, alongside some of the best investigative reporters there are. If you’re hiring, my DMs are open.

— Chris McDaniel (@csmcdaniel) January 25, 2019

On and on it continued.

But amid the Twitter storm of bad news, some supportive tweets emerged.

Following the lead of journalists in Chicago who started a beer fund for laid off colleagues in 2017, BuzzFeed News copy editor Emerson Malone decided to do the same for his own colleagues.

On Friday he tweeted, “A lot of my BuzzFeed News colleagues — and friends — are losing their jobs today. Please buy them a beer.”

Malone started a plumfund page to raise money, which brought in more than $7,800 in a 24-hour time span from hundreds of donors.

“I didn’t anticipate it,” he said. “The support system is so affirming.”

Some BuzzFeed staff in Los Angeles went out for drinks on Friday, but Malone said they plan to use the beer fund money when the group goes out again on Monday, which is many people’s last day.

BuzzFeed LA drowning our tears in beers on a sad lay-off day. ? ? pic.twitter.com/eY0XRmfeoV

— Ken Bensinger (@kenbensinger) January 25, 2019

Since BuzzFeed is an international organization, Malone said he also plans to spread the wealth evenly with laid-off BuzzFeed journalists in other locations. He said the layoffs affected a wide swath of people in his company.

“You could start a new newsroom on Monday with the amount of talent being lost,” he said.

In Washington, D.C., the National Press Club announced that it would offer free drinks and tacos for journalists who lost their jobs on Friday night.

Executive Director of the National Press Club, Bill McCarren, said the intention was to give journalists not only a little relief, but also an opportunity to network and stay optimistic.

“Just because you’re laid off someplace doesn’t mean you can’t get something somewhere else,” he said.

Cheers to new friend @LaurenWeberHP – recently laid off from @HuffPost who came for tacos! Current and potential NPC members – the Club is a great resource for networking and job searching…and a way to get out of the house! Join! #supportjournalists pic.twitter.com/YhSMRIm2j8

— National Press Club (@PressClubDC) January 26, 2019

When looking for their next job, recently laid off journalists might have a little help from supporters. Hundreds started posting on Twitter, creating job posting threads and using #journalismjobs to advertise open positions.

Others took it a step further. Chelsea Cirruzzo, a reporter at Inside Health Policy, decided to create a spreadsheet of jobs that people could add to.

She remembered how it felt when she was looking for a job a few months ago.

“It felt really draining to put in applications again and again and not hear back,” she said.

What helped her keep track of all her applications were spreadsheets. She hopes her spreadsheet can similarly help other journalists. BuzzFeed Senior Manager Kaye Toal also started a spreadsheet of her own, which included both journalism and other media industry jobs.

Many of those offering support for laid off journalists were journalists themselves. McCaren said he isn’t surprised by this, and spoke to a sense of solidarity within the struggling industry.

“A lot of people who are working have been through something like this at some time in their career,” he said.

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Naomi Osaka Of Japan Secures Her Second Grand Slam Title With Australian Open Victory

Japan’s Naomi Osaka reacts to her victory over Petra Kvitova of the Czech Republic in the women’s singles final at the Australian Open tennis championships in Melbourne.

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Naomi Osaka walked off the court at the Australian Open with her second consecutive Grand Slam victory, cementing her rise to the top of the women’s tennis world.

She defeated Petra Kvitova of the Czech Republic on Saturday, edging out a victory after losing the second set — a hitch that nearly derailed the 21-year-old player.

After winning the first set 7-6 (2), a visibly frustrated Osaka put her face in her hand during the second set, then covered her head with a towel as she walked off the court after losing 5-7. But she returned with renewed determination, sealing her victory with a 6-4 win in the third set.

“I felt like I didn’t want to have any regrets,” the Japanese player told reporters in Melbourne. “I think if I didn’t regroup after the second set, then I would have looked back on this match and probably cried or something.”

Saturday’s victory in the women’s singles final will catapult Osaka, ranked 72nd in the world this time last year, to number one in the Women’s Tennis Association rankings.

Naomi Osaka and Petra Kvitova embrace following Osaka’s victory in the match.

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That will make her the first Asian woman to top the rankings, according to the Australian Open, and the first Japanese player of either gender. She’ll also be the youngest woman to reach No. 1 in nearly a decade, following then 20-year-old Caroline Wozniacki’s rise to the top in 2010, the Associated Press reports.

Osaka’s last Grand Slam win — her defeat of Serena Williams at the U.S. Open in September — stirred controversy among fans. The referee issued a point penalty for Williams after she broke a racket, then a game penalty for arguing with him. Spectators booed.

Although that win marked the first Grand Slam singles victory to go to a Japanese player, the victory was bittersweet for Osaka, who idolized Williams. (Williams was eliminated in the quarterfinals of the Australian Open last Wednesday, dashing hopes of a rematch with Osaka.)

This time around, there were no jeers. ESPN’s Howard Bryant says Saturday’s contest saw a meeting of two champions.

“This was a match that … you didn’t want to see anybody lose,” Bryant told NPR’s Scott Simon.

Kvitova, who was playing in her first Grand Slam final since surviving a knife attack in her home in 2016, delivered a gracious and grateful speech during the trophy ceremony.

Petra Kvitova plays against Naomi Osaka in the Australian Open.

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“To my team, thank you for everything, but mostly thank you for sticking with me even [as] we didn’t know if I would [be] able to hold a racket again,” she said, fighting back tears amid booming applause.

“We didn’t even know if I would be able to hold the racquet again.”@Petra_Kvitova‘s comeback story is one in a million ?#AusOpen pic.twitter.com/XLz2tc703i

— #AusOpen (@AustralianOpen) January 26, 2019

“You’ve been through so much,” Osaka told Kvitova in her address. “You’re really amazing, and I’m really honored to have played you in the final of a Grand Slam.”

Osaka broke the top 10 in the WTA rankings just last September and made her top five debut the next month. The Florida-based player’s meteoric rise has been met with enthusiasm from Japanese fans, who see her as an inspiration.

“I never imagined in my lifetime that a Japanese player would reach No. 1,” one fan, Daisuke Aizawa, told the AP. “Tennis is already popular here, but this will just add to its popularity and I’m sure more young people will take up the sport now.”

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe even tweeted his congratulations, along with a picture of the victorious player.

Osaka was born in Japan to a Japanese mother and Haitain father and moved to New York at age 3, the AP reports. After her win, she laughed with reporters and admitted to being shocked by her own victory, but said she’s not focused on the ratings.

“Maybe if I see my sister, you know, I can be like, guess who’s the number one tennis player? Me,” she joked.

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Nicola Cruz Merges Electronic And Folk Music With The Use Of Cave Acoustics

Electronic musician Nicola Cruz’s new album, Siku, releases on Jan. 25.

Hanna Quevedo/Courtesy of the artist


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Nicola Cruz is not afraid to experiment. Well-known in South America and based in Ecuador, the electronic musician released his latest album, Siku, on Jan. 25.

Not only does he mix in the folklore and roots from around South America, Cruz also creates vivid soundscapes using various instruments including wood flutes, percussion and small guitars.

“Living in a place like Ecuador, it just feels natural,” Cruz says. “All around, folklore and roots are quite present. You turn on the radio and you listen to folkloric music.”

When Cruz started to make techno music, he decided to slow down the BPM (beats per minute) and investigate music from there. Never thinking about whether or not it would sell, it led him to create a song called “Sanación,” which he released four years ago on his debut album, Prender el Alma.

“That really made me take a step back and realize what what I was doing,” Cruz says. “It really felt magical. It felt powerful.”

Now, he’s out with his second album Siku, which Cruz says is a reference to a wind instrument from the Andes. “But at the same time Siku means an Andean tradition which means playing in pairs,” Cruz says, “Not necessarily playing like in the physical form, but really being connected with one another while playing.”

Cruz tries to be as “experimental as possible,” which he believes is an advantage of electronic music. In many of his songs, he likes to record outside of a conventional studio where things can be “a bit more chaotic.”

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“So ‘Arka’ was recorded in this cave in this volcano near me,” Cruz says. “It’s not an active volcano, but pretty much all the mountains around here were once a volcano.”

“Arka” was done in collaboration with Esteban Valdivia, a specialist on the world’s ethnic flutes and the study of pre-Columbian aerophones.

“We always wanted to do a song together, and so we thought these caves which are near our homes was the perfect place to to experiment,” Cruz says.

By mixing electronic music with elements from his homeland, Cruz hopes to change the perception of pop music in Latin America. “I, at least, know I’m doing my music with quality and intention,” Cruz says. “I really hope it gets heard and it replaces our concept of popular music.”

Producer Monika Evstatieva assisted with the audio editing of this story.

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Fear Of Deportation Or Green Card Denial Deters Some Parents From Getting Kids Care

Children of Mexican immigrants wait to receive a free health checkup inside a mobile clinic at the Mexican Consulate in Denver, Colo., in 2009. The Trump administration wants to ratchet up scrutiny of the use of social services by immigrants. That’s already led some worried parents to avoid family health care.

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As U.S. immigration enforcement becomes stricter under the Trump administration, more immigrant families are cutting ties with health care services and other critical government programs, according to child advocates who work with these families.

In Texas, researchers studying the issue say it’s a major reason why more children are going without health insurance.

Ana, who lives in Central Texas with her husband and two children, has been increasingly hesitant to seek help from the government. In particular, she’s worried about getting help for her 9-year-old daughter, Sara, who was diagnosed with autism a few years ago.

Ana entered the country without documentation about 10 years ago, which is why NPR has agreed not to use her last name. Both her children were born in the U.S. and have been covered by Medicaid for years. But ever since President Trump took office, Ana has only been using the program for basics — such as checkups and vaccinations for the kids.

This decision to forgo care comes at a cost. Managing Sara’s behavior has been challenging, even after the diagnosis brought some clarity about what was going on. Sara acts out and has tantrums, sometimes in public places. Ana finds it difficult to soothe her daughter, and it’s become more awkward as Sara grows.

“To other people, Sara just seems spoiled or a brat,” Ana says.

After the diagnosis, Ana felt unsure about her next steps. She eventually went to a nonprofit in Austin that guides and supports parents whose children have disabilities. It’s called Vela (“candle” in Spanish).

At Vela, Ana learned about a range of services Sara could get access to via her Medicaid plan — including therapy to help the child communicate better.

However, the thought of asking for more government services for her daughter increased Ana’s anxiety. “I am looking for groups who are not associated with the government,” Ana explains.

Ana is in the middle of the long, expensive legal process of applying for permanent resident status, known informally as a “green card.” Recently, the Trump administration announced that it may tighten part of this process – the “public charge” assessment. The assessment scrutinizes how many government services a green card applicant currently uses — or might use later in life. If a person uses many government services, they could pose a net financial burden on the federal budget — or so goes the rationale. The government’s algorithms are complex, but “public charge” is part of the determination for who gets a green card and who doesn’t.

The rule change proposed by the Trump administration — which may not come to pass — has already led many applicants, or would-be applicants, to be wary of all government services, even those that wouldn’t affect their applications.

“I am afraid they will not give me a legal resident status,” Ana says.

Her husband already has a green card, and the couple is determined to not jeopardize Ana’s ongoing application. So they have decided — just to be safe — to avoid seeking any more help from the government. That’s even though their daughter, who is a citizen, needs more therapy than she’s getting right now.

“I feel bad that I have to do that,” Ana says.

She says she would love to treat her daughter’s autism, but has decided that there is nothing more important than getting that green card, in order to keep the family together in the U.S.

“I’m running into families that, when it’s time for re-enrollment or reapplication, they are pausing and they are questioning if they should,” says Nadine Rueb, a clinical social worker dealing with Ana’s case at Vela.

Reub says a range of fears are behind immigrants avoidance of government services. Some are staying under the radar to avoid immediate deportation. Others are more like Ana — they just want to be in the best position possible to finally get permanent legal status and move on with their lives.

“The climate of fear is so pervasive at this point, and there is so much misinformation out there,” says Cheasty Anderson, a Senior Policy Associate with the Children’s Defense Fund in Texas.

Anderson thinks the parents’ fears have led to an uptick in children going without health coverage in Texas.

A recent study from Georgetown University’s Center for Children and Families found that one out of every five uninsured kids in the U.S. lives in Texas. And a big percentage of those uninsured children are Latino.

The report shows that after years of steady decline, the number (and percentage) of uninsured children in the U.S. increased in 2017, the first year of Trump’s presidency. Nationally, 5 percent of all kids are uninsured — and in Texas the rate rose to 10.7 percent, up from 9.8 percent in 2016.

Joan Alker, the author of the Georgetown report, says the Trump administration’s effort to crack down on both legal and illegal immigration is one of many factors driving up the uninsured rates. And it’s especially perceptible in Texas, where a quarter of children have a parent who is either undocumented, or who is trying to become a legal resident.

“For these mixed-status families, there is likely a heightened fear of interacting with the government, and this may be deterring them from signing up their eligible children up for government-sponsored health care,” Alker said in a phone call with reporters in November, when the report was released.

Anderson says the repercussions fall hardest on kids with disabilities — kids who need services.

“Texas is proud to be Texas in so many ways, but this is one way in which we are failing ourselves,” she says.

From the perspective of Reub, a disability rights specialist, timing is an essential issue for these children.

“The sooner you catch [the diagnosis or condition], the sooner you support the child [and] the sooner you support the family,” Reub says. “I think it’s just a win-win for everybody. You are supporting the emotions of the family, and then that supports the child.”

For now, Ana says she’s relying on the services offered by her daughter’s public school — which aren’t counted in the federal government’s “public charge” assessment. And she’ll keep doing that until she gets that green card.

This story is part of NPR’s reporting partnership with KUT and Kaiser Health News.

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