0:00:01.341,0:00:03.833 Like most journalists, I'm an idealist. 0:00:03.857,0:00:08.158 I love unearthing good stories,[br]especially untold stories. 0:00:09.126,0:00:11.559 I just didn't think that in 2011, 0:00:11.583,0:00:13.744 women would still be in that category. 0:00:14.538,0:00:18.515 I'm the President of the Journalism[br]and Women Symposium -- JAWS. 0:00:18.539,0:00:19.691 That's Sharky. 0:00:19.715,0:00:21.206 (Laughter) 0:00:21.230,0:00:24.034 I joined 10 years ago[br]because I wanted female role models, 0:00:24.058,0:00:28.257 and I was frustrated by the lagging status[br]of women in our profession 0:00:28.281,0:00:30.926 and what that meant[br]for our image in the media. 0:00:32.086,0:00:34.189 We make up half[br]the population of the world, 0:00:34.213,0:00:36.800 but we're just 24 percent[br]of the news subjects 0:00:36.824,0:00:38.324 quoted in news stories. 0:00:38.752,0:00:42.065 And we're just 20 percent[br]of the experts quoted in stories. 0:00:42.461,0:00:44.533 And now, with today's technology, 0:00:44.557,0:00:47.739 it's possible to remove women[br]from the picture completely. 0:00:48.588,0:00:52.460 This is a picture of President[br]Barack Obama and his advisors, 0:00:52.484,0:00:54.572 tracking the killing of Osama bin Laden. 0:00:54.596,0:00:56.730 You can see Hillary Clinton on the right. 0:00:57.261,0:00:58.581 Let's see how the photo ran 0:00:58.605,0:01:01.453 in an Orthodox Jewish[br]newspaper based in Brooklyn. 0:01:02.327,0:01:04.040 Hillary's completely gone. 0:01:04.064,0:01:06.912 (Laughter) 0:01:06.936,0:01:09.985 The paper apologized,[br]but said it never runs photos of women; 0:01:10.009,0:01:11.941 they might be sexually provocative. 0:01:11.965,0:01:14.075 (Laughter) 0:01:14.099,0:01:16.147 This is an extreme case, yes. 0:01:16.171,0:01:17.338 But the fact is, 0:01:17.362,0:01:21.481 women are only 19 percent[br]of the sources in stories on politics, 0:01:21.505,0:01:24.517 and only 20 percent[br]in stories on the economy. 0:01:26.210,0:01:28.091 The news continues to give us a picture 0:01:28.115,0:01:29.727 where men outnumber women 0:01:29.751,0:01:32.465 in nearly all occupational[br]categories, except two: 0:01:32.489,0:01:34.977 students and homemakers. 0:01:35.001,0:01:36.258 (Laughter) 0:01:36.282,0:01:39.311 So we all get a very[br]distorted picture of reality. 0:01:40.414,0:01:43.520 The problem is, of course,[br]there aren't enough women in newsrooms. 0:01:43.544,0:01:47.449 They report at just 37 percent of stories[br]in print, TV and radio. 0:01:48.006,0:01:51.086 Even in stories on gender-based violence, 0:01:51.110,0:01:54.713 men get an overwhelming majority[br]of print space and airtime. 0:01:54.737,0:01:55.888 Case in point: 0:01:56.999,0:01:59.903 This March, the New York Times[br]ran a story by James McKinley 0:01:59.927,0:02:01.581 about a gang rape of a young girl, 0:02:01.605,0:02:03.943 11 years old, in a small Texas town. 0:02:04.515,0:02:07.570 McKinley writes that[br]the community is wondering, 0:02:07.594,0:02:10.416 "How could their boys[br]have been drawn into this?" 0:02:11.136,0:02:12.540 "Drawn into this" -- 0:02:12.564,0:02:15.644 like they were seduced[br]into committing an act of violence. 0:02:15.668,0:02:17.653 And the first person he quotes says, 0:02:17.677,0:02:20.750 "These boys will have to live[br]with this the rest of their lives." 0:02:20.774,0:02:23.016 (Groans, laughter) 0:02:23.636,0:02:26.620 You don't hear much[br]about the 11-year-old victim, 0:02:26.644,0:02:30.061 except that she wore clothes[br]that were a little old for her 0:02:30.085,0:02:31.497 and she wore makeup. 0:02:32.223,0:02:34.918 The Times was deluged with criticism. 0:02:35.370,0:02:36.949 Initially, it defended itself, 0:02:36.973,0:02:38.694 and said, "These aren't our views. 0:02:38.718,0:02:40.646 This is what we found in our reporting." 0:02:40.670,0:02:42.952 Now, here's a secret[br]you probably know already: 0:02:43.492,0:02:45.090 Your stories are constructed. 0:02:45.114,0:02:48.135 As reporters, we research, we interview. 0:02:48.159,0:02:51.067 We try to give a good picture of reality. 0:02:51.091,0:02:53.836 We also have our own unconscious biases. 0:02:53.860,0:02:57.383 But The Times makes it sound like anyone[br]would have reported this story 0:02:57.407,0:02:58.558 the same way. 0:02:59.175,0:03:00.623 I disagree with that. 0:03:01.083,0:03:02.835 So three weeks later, 0:03:02.859,0:03:04.386 The Times revisits the story. 0:03:04.410,0:03:08.159 This time, it adds another byline[br]to it with McKinley's: 0:03:08.183,0:03:09.659 Erica Goode. 0:03:09.683,0:03:12.585 What emerges is a truly sad, horrific tale 0:03:12.609,0:03:15.568 of a young girl and her family[br]trapped in poverty. 0:03:15.592,0:03:18.267 She was raped numerous times by many men. 0:03:18.703,0:03:21.093 She had been a bright, easygoing girl. 0:03:21.117,0:03:23.679 She was maturing quickly, physically, 0:03:23.703,0:03:26.695 but her bed was still covered[br]with stuffed animals. 0:03:26.719,0:03:28.282 It's a very different picture. 0:03:28.640,0:03:32.327 Perhaps the addition of Ms. Goode[br]is what made this story more complete. 0:03:32.960,0:03:37.070 The Global Media Monitoring Project[br]has found that stories by female reporters 0:03:37.094,0:03:40.863 are more likely to challenge stereotypes[br]than those by male reporters. 0:03:40.887,0:03:42.260 At KUNM here in Albuquerque, 0:03:42.284,0:03:44.419 Elaine Baumgartel[br]did some graduate research 0:03:44.443,0:03:46.712 on the coverage of violence against women. 0:03:46.736,0:03:50.109 What she found was many of these[br]stories tend to blame victims 0:03:50.133,0:03:51.652 and devalue their lives. 0:03:51.676,0:03:54.883 They tend to sensationalize,[br]and they lack context. 0:03:55.423,0:03:56.638 So for her graduate work, 0:03:56.662,0:03:59.559 she did a three-part series[br]on the murder of 11 women, 0:03:59.583,0:04:02.159 found buried on Albuquerque's West Mesa. 0:04:02.183,0:04:05.547 She tried to challenge those patterns[br]and stereotypes in her work 0:04:05.571,0:04:08.412 and she tried to show[br]the challenges that journalists face 0:04:08.436,0:04:11.956 from external sources,[br]their own internal biases 0:04:11.980,0:04:13.279 and cultural norms. 0:04:13.652,0:04:16.375 And she worked with an editor[br]at National Public Radio 0:04:16.399,0:04:18.932 to try to get a story aired nationally. 0:04:18.956,0:04:22.901 She's not sure that would have happened[br]if the editor had not been a female. 0:04:23.472,0:04:24.671 Stories in the news 0:04:24.695,0:04:28.932 are more than twice as likely[br]to present women as victims than men, 0:04:28.956,0:04:32.805 and women are more likely to be defined[br]by their body parts. 0:04:33.562,0:04:35.750 Wired magazine, November 2010. 0:04:36.440,0:04:39.550 Yes, the issue was about[br]breast-tissue engineering. 0:04:40.769,0:04:43.443 Now I know you're all distracted,[br]so I'll take that off. 0:04:43.467,0:04:44.468 (Laughter) 0:04:44.492,0:04:45.646 Eyes up here. 0:04:45.670,0:04:48.922 (Laughter) 0:04:48.946,0:04:50.097 So -- 0:04:50.121,0:04:54.299 (Applause) 0:04:54.323,0:04:55.483 Here's the thing: 0:04:55.507,0:04:58.064 Wired almost never puts[br]women on its cover. 0:04:58.414,0:05:00.391 Oh, there have been some gimmicky ones -- 0:05:00.415,0:05:02.017 Pam from "The Office," 0:05:02.041,0:05:03.950 manga girls, 0:05:03.974,0:05:06.595 a voluptuous model[br]covered in synthetic diamonds. 0:05:07.863,0:05:11.431 Texas State University professor[br]Cindy Royal wondered in her blog 0:05:11.455,0:05:15.446 how are young women like her students[br]supposed to feel about their roles 0:05:15.470,0:05:16.938 in technology, reading Wired. 0:05:16.962,0:05:20.215 Chris Anderson, the editor of Wired,[br]defended his choice 0:05:20.239,0:05:22.628 and said there aren't enough women,[br]prominent women 0:05:22.652,0:05:25.775 in technology to sell a cover,[br]to sell an issue. 0:05:26.581,0:05:27.740 Part of that is true, 0:05:27.764,0:05:30.312 there aren't as many[br]prominent women in technology. 0:05:30.336,0:05:32.334 Here's my problem with that argument: 0:05:32.850,0:05:35.429 Media tells us every day what's important, 0:05:35.453,0:05:37.956 by the stories they choose[br]and where they place them; 0:05:37.980,0:05:39.445 it's called agenda setting. 0:05:40.433,0:05:43.168 How many people knew[br]the founders of Facebook and Google 0:05:43.192,0:05:45.360 before their faces[br]were on a magazine cover? 0:05:45.384,0:05:47.846 Putting them there[br]made them more recognizable. 0:05:48.265,0:05:51.061 Now, Fast Company Magazine[br]embraces that idea. 0:05:51.085,0:05:54.010 This is its cover from November 15, 2010. 0:05:54.371,0:05:58.445 The issue is about the most prominent[br]and influential women in technology. 0:05:58.827,0:06:01.366 Editor Robert Safian[br]told the Poynter Institute, 0:06:01.390,0:06:04.237 "Silicon Valley is very white[br]and very male. 0:06:04.261,0:06:06.555 But that's not what Fast Company thinks 0:06:06.579,0:06:08.943 the business world[br]will look like in the future, 0:06:08.967,0:06:12.643 so it tries to give a picture[br]of where the globalized world is moving." 0:06:13.354,0:06:16.020 By the way, apparently,[br]Wired took all this to heart. 0:06:16.459,0:06:18.008 This was its issue in April. 0:06:18.032,0:06:19.910 (Laughter) 0:06:19.934,0:06:22.751 That's Limor Fried, the founder[br]of Adafruit Industries, 0:06:22.775,0:06:24.449 in the Rosie the Riveter pose. 0:06:25.704,0:06:29.174 It would help to have more women[br]in positions of leadership in media. 0:06:29.198,0:06:30.435 A recent global survey 0:06:30.459,0:06:33.325 found that 73 percent[br]of the top media-management jobs 0:06:33.349,0:06:34.993 are still held by men. 0:06:35.335,0:06:37.968 But this is also about something[br]far more complex: 0:06:37.992,0:06:40.960 our own unconscious[br]biases and blind spots. 0:06:41.817,0:06:43.441 Shankar Vedantam is the author 0:06:43.465,0:06:46.513 of "The Hidden Brain: How Our Unconscious[br]Minds Elect Presidents, 0:06:46.537,0:06:49.199 Control Markets, Wage Wars,[br]and Save Our Lives." 0:06:49.718,0:06:52.845 He told the former ombudsman[br]at National Public Radio, 0:06:52.869,0:06:56.606 who was doing a report[br]on how women fare in NPR coverage, 0:06:56.630,0:06:59.720 unconscious bias flows[br]throughout most of our lives. 0:06:59.744,0:07:02.712 It's really difficult[br]to disentangle those strands. 0:07:03.311,0:07:04.920 But he did have one suggestion. 0:07:05.301,0:07:08.092 He used to work for two editors 0:07:08.116,0:07:11.487 who said every story had to have[br]at least one female source. 0:07:12.099,0:07:13.592 He balked at first, 0:07:13.616,0:07:16.568 but said he eventually followed[br]the directive happily, 0:07:16.592,0:07:18.033 because his stories got better 0:07:18.057,0:07:19.533 and his job got easier. 0:07:20.014,0:07:22.612 Now, I don't know if one[br]of the editors was a woman, 0:07:22.636,0:07:25.013 but that can make the biggest difference. 0:07:25.037,0:07:29.003 The Dallas Morning News[br]won a Pulitzer Prize in 1994 0:07:29.027,0:07:31.630 for a series it did on women[br]around the world, 0:07:31.654,0:07:33.361 but one of the reporters told me 0:07:33.385,0:07:35.734 she's convinced[br]it never would have happened 0:07:35.758,0:07:39.169 if they had not had[br]a female assistant foreign editor, 0:07:39.193,0:07:41.677 and they would not have gotten[br]some of those stories 0:07:41.701,0:07:44.192 without female reporters[br]and editors on the ground, 0:07:44.216,0:07:47.118 particularly one[br]on female genital mutilation -- 0:07:47.142,0:07:49.807 men would just not be allowed[br]into those situations. 0:07:50.220,0:07:52.454 This is an important point to consider, 0:07:52.478,0:07:55.734 because much of our foreign policy[br]now revolves around countries 0:07:55.758,0:07:58.179 where the treatment of women is an issue, 0:07:58.203,0:07:59.568 such as Afghanistan. 0:08:01.578,0:08:05.702 What we're told in terms of arguments[br]against leaving this country 0:08:05.726,0:08:08.590 is that the fate of the women is primary. 0:08:09.701,0:08:13.415 Now, I'm sure a male reporter in Kabul[br]can find women to interview. 0:08:13.835,0:08:17.607 Not so sure about rural,[br]traditional areas, 0:08:17.631,0:08:20.310 where I'm guessing[br]women can't talk to strange men. 0:08:20.858,0:08:24.443 It's important to keep talking about this,[br]in light of Lara Logan. 0:08:24.881,0:08:27.033 She was the CBS News correspondent 0:08:27.057,0:08:29.970 who was brutally sexually assaulted[br]in Egypt's Tahrir Square, 0:08:29.994,0:08:31.760 right after this photo was taken. 0:08:32.133,0:08:34.902 Almost immediately, pundits weighed in, 0:08:34.926,0:08:38.165 blaming her and saying things like, 0:08:38.189,0:08:41.589 "You know, maybe women shouldn't[br]be sent to cover those stories." 0:08:41.613,0:08:44.850 I never heard anyone say this[br]about Anderson Cooper and his crew, 0:08:44.874,0:08:47.482 who were attacked covering the same story. 0:08:48.387,0:08:50.438 One way to get more women into leadership 0:08:50.462,0:08:52.239 is to have other women mentor them. 0:08:52.640,0:08:56.233 One of my board members is an editor[br]at a major global media company, 0:08:56.257,0:08:58.893 but she never thought[br]about this as a career path, 0:08:58.917,0:09:01.425 until she met female role models at JAWS. 0:09:02.425,0:09:04.925 But this is not just a job[br]for super-journalists 0:09:04.949,0:09:06.128 or my organization. 0:09:06.152,0:09:08.782 You all have a stake[br]in a strong, vibrant media. 0:09:09.743,0:09:11.076 Analyze your news. 0:09:11.474,0:09:14.031 And speak up when there are gaps[br]missing in coverage, 0:09:14.055,0:09:16.006 like people at The New York Times did. 0:09:16.030,0:09:19.037 Suggest female sources[br]to reporters and editors. 0:09:19.410,0:09:22.899 Remember -- a complete picture of reality[br]may depend upon it. 0:09:23.480,0:09:25.195 And I'll leave you with a video clip 0:09:25.219,0:09:28.749 that I first saw in [1987][br]when I was a student in London. 0:09:29.137,0:09:30.709 It's for The Guardian newspaper. 0:09:30.733,0:09:34.082 It's actually long before I ever thought[br]about becoming a journalist, 0:09:34.106,0:09:37.288 but I was very interested[br]in how we learn to perceive our world. 0:09:38.823,0:09:43.156 Narrator: An event seen from one[br]point of view gives one impression. 0:09:48.579,0:09:50.331 Seen from another point of view, 0:09:50.355,0:09:52.720 it gives quite a different impression. 0:09:54.982,0:09:57.360 But it's only when you get[br]the whole picture, 0:09:57.384,0:10:00.050 you can fully understand what's going on. 0:10:03.809,0:10:05.801 [The Guardian] 0:10:05.825,0:10:07.747 Megan Kamerick: I think you'll all agree 0:10:07.771,0:10:10.531 that we'd be better off[br]if we all had the whole picture.