One in four TV stations in the top 20
markets have no Asian American women on air
Just one percent of broadcasters are Asian
American men
Seven recommendations offer medium to
long-term solutions
NEW
YORK, Aug. 6, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- A
groundbreaking analysis by the Asian American Journalists
Association (AAJA) reveals significant challenges for Asian
American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander (AANHPI) reporters,
anchors, meteorologists, and hosts on-air.
"The State of Asian American Female and Male TV Broadcasters"
will be released during the organization's annual national
convention in Austin, Texas
(Aug. 7-11). You can preview it
here.
"Both female and male AANHPI broadcast journalists face career
challenges, but often in different ways that aren't widely
understood, which is particularly challenging given stereotypes and
biases towards AANHPIs." says Naomi Tacuyan
Underwood, AAJA Executive Director. "For instance, data
shows that despite improvements in recent years, AANHPI men are far
from reaching full representation, while AANHPI women are seldom
given full-time roles."
"This new analysis shows how far we still have to go," says
Chris Nguyen, AAJA Governing Board
Member and Co-Chair of AAJA's Broadcast Task Force, which will
release the study's findings during its pinnacle reception. "Every
day these reporters face stereotypes like demasculinization for
AANHPI men or sexualization for AANHPI women that heighten the
challenge for AANHPI TV broadcasters."
Rep. Judy Chu, chair of the Asian
American Congressional Caucus (CAPAC), has engaged the issue of
AANHPIs in the news industry in her work on the Hill. Chu says,
"For our community to be seen as the contributors they are in towns
across the country and to our democracy, we have to reach full
representation in journalism. That means including the faces of all
our AANHPI community—parity based on origin and gender—on and off
air."
UNIQUE FINDINGS
5 Challenges for Female AANHPI TV Broadcasters
- No AANHPI women are on-air in 25 of 94 stations.
- Half of TV stations underrepresent AANHPI female broadcasters
(in the top 10 TV markets; based on the AANHPI female
population)
- 1 AANHPI Woman represents the only AANHPI broadcaster at 18 of
94 stations.
- In communities where AANHPI population is below the national
average, on-air AANHPI women are 46% underrepresented
- 162 of 3,297 (5%) broadcasters in the top 20 DMAs are AANHPI
women
5 Challenges for Male AANHPI TV Broadcasters
- No AANHPI men are on-air in 67 of 94 stations.
- 1% of 3,297 broadcasters are AANHPI men.
- 70% Underrepresented: If AANHPI male market population is
considered, only 3 AANHPI male broadcasters work where 10
might.
- 1 in 10 TV stations hires as many AANHPI male broadcasters as
is representative of their market's AANHPI male population
- 170% Improvement. In 2002, 17 AANHPI men were on air. In 2021,
there were 46.
7 Recommendations
- COLLABORATION. Create partnership action plans between Media,
Academia, Government and NGO communities.
- TAP AFFILIATES. Uplift affiliate talent to national, and
smaller market affiliate talent to medium- large markets. Deploy
programs to identify candidates.
- POSITION EXISTING TALENT. Assign and choose AANHPI women and
men to prominent on-air positions, beats and stories.
- AANHPI PRODUCERS. Hire and develop AANHPI producers, who can
help mitigate challenges AANHPI broadcasters face on camera.
- LAYERED APPROACH. Engage the pipeline: a) middle school, b)
high school, c) community college, d) four-year education, e)
entry-level job, f) early career, g) mid-career, h) late career, i)
career transition, j) retirement.
- TOUGH QUESTIONS. Engage third-party research to ask core
questions that media presidents and CEOs want to ask on diverse
broadcaster gaps but cannot.
- ANNUAL CONVENING. An annual, pinnacle, public discussion and
status evaluation. This panel or salon will huddle leaders and
decision makers from multiple sectors.
ABOUT "THE STATE OF ASIAN AMERICAN FEMALE AND MALE TV
BROADCASTERS"
AAJA released the "Broadcast Snapshot" in 2022 in the absence of
publicly available diversity data. "The State of Asian American
Female and Male TV Broadcasters" includes new analysis done in 2024
based on the data from the "Broadcast Snapshot." The 2022 and 2024
releases build on AAJA's mission to advance diversity in newsrooms
and ensure fair and accurate coverage of communities of color.
The base data comes from July to September 2021, when AAJA staff and member
volunteers surveyed 94 local, English-language commercial TV
stations in the top 20 DMAs. Project staff used resources such as
station websites, AAJA membership, and public pages to find on-air
staff who either looked AANHPI or self-identified as AANHPI.
Information collected included the number of AANHPI on-air staff,
the AANHPI population, and station ownership. This effort revealed
a total of 201 AANHPI on-air staffers across the top 20 DMAs.
"The State of Asian American Female and Male TV Broadcasters" is
a release from the AAJA Broadcast Task Force; with contributions
from AAJA National Office Staff; Alex
Lo, AAJA Member; Karen
Narasaki, former Commissioner of the US Commission on Civil
Rights; Doris Truong, former AAJA
president; Andrew Tran, AAJA Member;
and PRISCA.
The Broadcast Snapshot (2022) can be
found here. The 2024 analysis from "The State of Asian
American Female and Male TV Broadcasters" can be found here. For
more information or interviews, please email
broadcast@aaja.org.
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SOURCE Prisca; Asian American Journalists Association's
Broadcast Task Force