BMSG in the news

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TikTok accused of breaching child privacy regulations

by Isra Shams | Monthly Brands
Friday, November 19, 2021

BMSG has joined a range of privacy, consumer, and health groups in urging the Federal Trade Commission to investigate TikTok’s practices, which advocates say violate children’s online privacy protections. “We found that TikTok currently has many regular account holders who are under age 13, and many of them still have videos of themselves that were uploaded as far back as 2016, years prior to the consent decree,” the groups said in their complaint to the FTC.

Where Are the Older Black Women Guests on Cable News Shows?

by Gwen McKinney | Next Avenue
Thursday, September 30, 2021

New research from BMSG reveals a dearth of older Black female voices in primetime cable news programs. In this commentary for Next Avenue, which also appears in Forbes, Gwen McKinney from the Unerased | Black Women Speak initiative makes the case that diversifying the speakers on cable TV would strengthen our national discourse and attract more viewers, benefiting news producers and consumers alike. The research received additional coverage in journal-isms.

 

Junk food ads are still targeting kids of color

by Elena Gooray | VICE
Thursday, September 16, 2021

For Black and Latino communities that already have higher rates of diabetes and obesity, fast-food advertising adds another layer to intergenerational health inequities. However, the issue extends beyond food companies, reaching into the world of Big Tech, explains BMSG Director Lori Dorfman: “The biggest marketers to kids right now are Google and Facebook.” Dorfman’s words have also appeared in the blog Food Processing.

Dear Gannett: Great start! Now go the distance.

by Jane Ellen Stevens | ACES Too High
Wednesday, August 18, 2021

Following an announcement from  Gannett that it would rework its coverage of crime, former BMSG consultant Jane Ellen Stevens laments that the change has taken so long and urges the news giant to go even further to serve its community with prevention-oriented coverage. In collaboration with Stevens, BMSG has developed several resources to help journalists report more effectively on crime as a public health issue and end distorted coverage that fuels racial and gender-based stereotypes.

Q&A: Fighting the war against vaccine misinformation and fear

by Maya Mirsky | J Weekly
Tuesday, August 17, 2021

In this interview, BMSG’s director and health equity coordinator share insights for communicating more effectively about COVID-19 and vaccines. They discuss how to address misinformation, what voices we need uplift, and why companies like Facebook and Google need to be held accountable.

The importance of precision in language to inform and give context, with Pamela Mejia

by Gina Baleria | News in Context
Friday, May 21, 2021

In this podcast, BMSG Head of Research Pamela Mejia discusses the power of language to influence how people perceive important issues and events, such as the January 6 insurrection at the United States Capitol. Mejia analyzed news coverage related to the coup, looking for how often terms like “riot,” “mob,” or “insurrection” were used versus sanitized terms like “protest” or “demonstration.” Only about 1/5 of stories used the former terms, while a full 40% referred to the latter. Such language choices can minimize the gravity of the situation, Mejia said, noting that neutral-sounding words like ‘demonstration’ may lead people to conflate an attempted government overthrow with legitimate protests, like those for Black Lives Matter.

‘It’s a minefield’: COVID vaccine safety poses unique communication challenge

by Ariana Remmel | Nature
Friday, May 21, 2021

A new survey on vaccine hesitancy shows the difficulty researchers face in communicating risk information during a pandemic. BMSG Health Equity Coordinator Kathi Schaff notes that it’s not unusual for the public to have questions. However, as we’ve noted previously, barriers to vaccine access may still outweigh communication challenges, despite news coverage to the contrary.

Let’s thank taxes for our vaccines and the programs keeping California afloat during COVID

by Lori Dorman and Veronica Carrizales | The Sacramento Bee
Wednesday, May 19, 2021

As tax season comes to an end, BMSG Director Lori Dorfman and Veronica Carrizales of California Calls used this year’s filing deadline as a news hook to elevate the role of taxes in supporting community health and health equity. Appealing to values like interconnection and can-do spirit, they reframe taxes from a place of strength and positivity, offering examples of how taxes allow us to accomplish so much more together than we ever could alone. “The public health response to the COVID-19 pandemic has been a monumental showing of what we can do when we pool our resources,” they write. “It’s a reminder that we need each other, that our fates are inextricably linked.”

Food companies’ tech ties pose harm to kids, consumer group says

by Ilya Banares | Bloomberg
Wednesday, May 12, 2021

A new report from the Center for Digital Democracy, developed in collaboration with Color of Change, BMSG, and UnidosUS, is bringing significant media attention to the issue of junk food marketing targeted at kids and youth online. The problem is especially concerning for Black and Brown kids and teens who are targeted more aggressively despite being at higher risk for nutrition-related diseases like diabetes. The report, which has received coverage MediaPost and CampaignUS, among other outlets, provides a policy framework for addressing the issue and better protecting the health of young people. Additional coverage has appeared in CommonDreams, PR Week, The Counter, Crain’s Chicago, Medium, Law360, and El Norte.

COVID-19 is ‘probably going to end my career’

by Theresa Brown | The New York Times
Thursday, February 25, 2021

In this op-ed for the Times, a nurse discusses the grueling shifts, labor shortages, and other COVID-related challenges that she and others like her have been facing amid the pandemic. These problems are as underreported as they are severe. The author notes research from George Washington University and BMSG, which underscores the disconnect: As of 2017, nurses were quoted as sources in only 2% of health care articles; that’s down from 4% in 1998.

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