Poynter Online
Go


Top Story

Bill Keller Explains NYT's Handling of Rangel Letter, Reporter Response
Most Recent Articles
Most E-mailed
Recent Comments
Recent Tags
Community Activity

Poynter Training
Poynter Seminars
Small, in-person training experiences.
News University
Today's most popular courses on NewsU, Poynter's e-learning site for journalists.
Webinars
Our online classroom is just a click away. Learn more.
All Webinars

Diversity at Work

Home > Ethics & Diversity > Diversity at Work
Tools: Text Sizeor, Print, RSSRSS, Subscribe via e-mail
Aly Colón
New, fresh and alternative ways to encourage and enhance journalistic storytelling from different perspectives.
--"Black Brokers on Obama," National Public Radio
-- "Civil Rights' Leaders Wish List of Issues for New President," the Black Press of America
-- "Not Black President Obama, Just President Obama," New America Media

FEATURED COLUMNS/BLOGS
-- Poynter en Espanol -- Poynter Online's Spanish language page
-- Richard Prince's "Journal-isms," The Maynard Institute
-- Racialicious -- Blog about the intersection of race and pop culture
-- Immigration Chronicles -- The Houston Chronicle's Immigration blog
-- Color Lines, Magazine on race and politics
-- New America Media: Expanding the News Lens Through Ethnic Media, Aggregated content from more than 700 ethnic media partners

DEL.ICIO.US PAGE FOR DIVERSITY AT WORK

DIVERSITY TIP SHEETS/RESOURCES

DIVERSITY BIBLIOGRAPHY

FEEDBACK GUIDELINES


Heroes in Black and White: Diversity in the World of Games
By Aly Colon

RELATED
"Why Journalists Should Develop Video Games," by Paul Grabowicz.

"Testing News Game Concepts," by Kathleen Hansen.
The search for diverse stories requires journalists to go to diverse sources of information.

Sometimes that means going to diverse institutions. Sometimes that means seeking out diverse people. And sometimes it benefits us to look at places that may not seem diverse in the stereotypical way we think of diversity, but that lead us in diverse directions.

Recently, I found such an opportunity for a diverse story idea at Slashdot, which has the slogan "News for nerds. Stuff that matters." An April 13 post by kdawson, which generated about 600 comments, noted that an anonymous reader raised an issue about African Americans and video games.

"African Americans spend more money and time playing video games than whites, yet only 2 percent of game developers are black," the reader wrote.  

The post points to two other sites with more information. One of the sites is Intelligent Gamer, which prints highlights of MTV's Multiplayer blog featuring interviews with black gamers and their views on stereotypes in the games.

In a Multiplayer blog post, Morgan Gray, a senior producer at Crystal Dynamics, an American video game developer, said: "I am sick of playing the average white dude character. I'm just done with it. And I'm sick of playing a black stereotype." He notes he did come across a black police officer in a game. "But as a player I want to have more experiences other than the futuristic super soldier white guy to the unlikely hero white guy."

On the Multiplayer blog, you'll find other people with a variety of insights about the diversity of the games and the stereotypes they see.

The real world we inhabit offers a window into just one stereotypical reality. Other worlds with other realities present their own diversity issues and opportunities for a different type of diverse story.
Posted by Aly Colón 11:53 AM
Tools:
Comment, e-mail, Permalink, Share
Username
Password
New User? Signup Now
Poynter Careers
More media jobs