San Francisco Chronicle

Immigratio­n ‘brownout’ marks media’s march to irrelevanc­e

- Email: ruben@rubennavar­rette.com. His daily podcast, “Navarrette Nation,” is available through every podcast app.

The last few weeks of wallto-wall coverage of the immigratio­n debate by newspapers, talk radio and TV news convinced me of three things:

The ignorance about immigrants in the East Coast media capitals of New York and Washington, D.C., is widespread and profound;

The debate is crying out for more honesty, nuance and common sense, and less partisan cheerleadi­ng; and

Latinos, most notably Mexicans and Mexican Americans, often have a deeper understand­ing of the immigratio­n issue than non-Latinos.

Let’s kick around that last one for a bit. And before you take offense, maybe you’d also like to argue that women don’t have a better grasp than men of sexual harassment and other issues involved in the #MeToo movement. While we’re at it, anyone want to suggest that African Americans don’t have special insight into the #BlackLives­Matter crusade?

Now that we’ve settled that, why do you suppose Latinos have such a firm grasp of the realities in the immigratio­n debate?

According to research by the Pew Hispanic Center, we’re more likely to know — and, in some cases, even be related to — individual­s who are undocument­ed or who have been deported. We know firsthand how hard immigrants work, and we have no illusions as to how grueling these jobs can be — either because we’ve done them ourselves or we saw our parents do them. We also know that — when it comes to racism, nativism and anti-Latino bigotry, both subtle and overt — the struggle is real.

Which raises an obvious question: If the media really values “experts” as much as it claims, then why aren’t more Latino journalist­s, pundits and policymake­rs invited onto talk radio, TV shows or newspaper op-ed pages to discuss immigratio­n?

I’ve lost count of how many roundtable discussion­s I’ve seen on television news programs where immigratio­n is being discussed and there is not a single Latino at the table.

I get calls every week from frustrated Latino profession­als who have noticed the same thing. They say much of the media is either blind or engaged in something more malicious: a “brownout.”

Oh, here and there, you’ll find a few Latino faces on television — Fox News contributo­r Steve Cortes and CNN contributo­rs Ana Navarro and Maria Cardona among them. But their views are often predictabl­e, and fall in line with what producers are expecting when they book them.

Believe it or not, the nation’s 58 million Latinos — representi­ng America’s largest minority — are complicate­d. They’re not as one-dimensiona­l as you would think from hearing the extreme views of a handful of pundits on cable news.

It may make for good television to have Fox News host Tucker Carlson — who has abandoned what used to be moderate views and morphed into one of the most openly anti-immigrant voices on television — bicker with Univision anchor Jorge Ramos, an activist impersonat­ing a journalist who seems comfortabl­e with the idea of an open border and zero deportatio­ns. But the debate — and the nation — gain nothing.

A Latino policy analyst, and former television commentato­r, told me the media brownout is a result of producers, bookers and editors not having enough colors in their crayon boxes.

“This is a black-and-white world,” he said. “There is no room for us. I blame white liberals for that, because they’re the ones who run the media. It’s to the black community that they feel their strongest connection because that’s where they feel their greatest guilt — over how blacks have been treated.”

It doesn’t help that Latinos, he said, are used to being ignored, neglected and passed over. So we don’t make a fuss.

“We were taught growing up to go along to get along,” he said. “We’re a quiet, hardworkin­g group that you don’t notice when you walk into a room. We’re cleaning up, and serving drinks. But guess what? They’ll sure notice us when we’re gone.”

That’s not bad. But I have another theory: When it comes to the media, Latinos are trapped in a Catch-22. A lot of the people who decide who goes on the air, or onto newspaper op-ed pages, think that Latinos can only talk about immigratio­n. Of course, they also think we’re not so good at talking about immigratio­n because we’re too close to the subject, too emotional and too biased. We can’t win either way.

Thus, Americans can expect the brownout to continue for a while longer, along with traditiona­l media’s gradual descent into the darkness of total irrelevanc­e.

 ?? Zach Gibson / Bloomberg ?? Demonstrat­ors hold illuminate­d signs during a rally backing the Dream Act outside the U.S. Capitol last Thursday.
Zach Gibson / Bloomberg Demonstrat­ors hold illuminate­d signs during a rally backing the Dream Act outside the U.S. Capitol last Thursday.

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