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Ashley R. Parker (born 1982) is an American journalist and a Washington-based politics reporter for The New York Times (since 2011) and photojournalist. She lives in Bethesda, Maryland, where she grew up. She has appeared on Gwen Ifill's Washington Week in Review on PBS, and she has also written for The New York Times Magazine. She covers many Republican Party candidates, elected officials, and topics. She also covers routine New York City topics and the White House. She also covered Chelsea Clinton's wedding for the New York Times . Parker's photographs have appeared in Vanity Fair, and her writing has appeared in other publications including The New York Sun, Glamour, The Huffington Post, Washingtonian, Chicago Magazine, and Life magazine. She also has worked as a researcher for Maureen Dowd, a columnist for The New York Times. Except during her college years and a few years of her work with The New York Times, she has lived in Bethesda, Maryland, where she was born and where her immediate family still resides.
Nieman Reports, 2002
Cynthia Ann Parker is one of the most well-known Indian captives in America history. She was born to two white parents; Silas M Parker and Lucinda ‘Lucy’ Duty. Ann Parker’s family initially lived in Illinois but they later moved to Texas where they established a settlement at Groesbeck. Moving to Texas was disadvantageous to them because at the time, the Texas Republic was constantly under threat of an attack from the Comanches who had already launched attacks against other neighboring communities.
This case study explores gender stereotyping by comparing the ways in which vice presidential candidates Sarah Palin and Joe Biden were portrayed on Internet blogs. Results suggest Palin did not suffer from a lack of attention. While she did receive a considerable amount of coverage focusing on her personality and personal life in comparison to Democratic candidate Joe Biden, that was likely a result of her unique candidacy and persona. Perhaps most important, the blogs did not play to traditional gender stereotypes concerning issue coverage even as a stereotypically male issue dominated the political agenda.
Social Semiotics, 2008
This essay examines media coverage of the rise of Sarah Jessica Parker, from jobbing movie actress to A-list television superstar and fashion icon, following her starring role as sex-columnist fashionista Carrie Bradshaw in Sex and the City (HBO, 1998Á2004). Significantly, during this same period Parker also became a mother, giving birth to her son by actor Matthew Broderick in 2002. If motherhood in the twentieth century at least has conventionally been constructed as at odds with glamour, style and trend-setting, Parker's fortunes indicate a changing cultural landscape. Celebration of the ''celebrity mom'', twinned with the emergence of the aspirational ''yummy-mummy'', have become highly visible preoccupations widely evident across contemporary representations of motherhood, the ramifications of which are explored here. Examining interviews conducted with the star in women's magazines drawn largely from the United Kingdom and United States through 2002Á2006, the essay explores Parker's role as a ''celebrity mom'' and how this coverage of her consistently adopts a confessional mode and intimate address in order to dispel any apparent conflict wrought to her prior celebrity by her new maternal status.
In a digital age in which the First Lady’s image is captured and disseminated by many different outlets, this article proposes the development of a coding instrument using Goffman’s (1979) gender displays as a new method for exploring the visual frames of the First Lady. Given the manner in which photographs are disseminated via the Internet by both official and journalistic sources, this new coding instrument takes into consideration the different vantage points that these image capturers have. Until recently, visual gender display frames of the First Lady from differing outlets have not been easily studied separately, given the fact that images disseminated by the White House had to go through the journalistic gate prior to dispersion. Ultimately, the study of photos of the First Lady as she appears in the “media” was mixed and confounded journalistic and official framing. The Internet has changed all of this and opens opportunities to study these framing sources separately. As a test of a new coding instrument to study these different framing sources, this article assesses Michelle Obama in her gender portrayal from two different framing sources: journalists and the White House. This visual content analysis demonstrates and supports the use of a new context-independent coding instrument, borrowing from Goffman’s gender displays as a method for visually studying the First Lady.
Media History Monographs, 2013
This is the story of Eleni Epstein, a significant fashion editor who reported from a city where clothing was important: Washington, D.C. Her section reflected changes in not only textiles but gender and race roles, society changes and economics. In her 30 years at the Washington Star, she grew to become a well regarded expert on fashionan overlooked part of newspaper history. Information for Epstein came from her personal papers at the National Women and Media Collection, as well as from other archives across the country. Furthermore, her articles were collected for examination. The article concludes with a recommended list of other fashion editors worthy of study.
honors-white-house-correspondent-april-ryan-ifill-forum 2/8 bringing together "important national voices for a public conversation about issues of the day," said Simmons University President Lynn Perry Wooten. White House Correspondent April Ryan was this year's invited guest. In her talk, "Leadership and Democracy: The Enduring Power of Black Women," Ryan memorialized historic Black women in the media and recounted how she overcame personal struggles. NBC News' Chief Education Correspondent Rehema Ellis '74, '00HD, a past recipient of the Simmons Lifetime Achievement Award, moderated the discussion. April Ryan with NBC News' Chief Education Correspondent Rehema Ellis '74, '00HD https://www.simmons.edu/news/simmons-honors-white-house-correspondent-april-ryan-ifill-forum 8/8
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