I post this as we are pushing to produce the third season of 18 Degrees North. One story will feature Mr. Vybz Kartel. Stay tuned.
I post this as we are pushing to produce the third season of 18 Degrees North. One story will feature Mr. Vybz Kartel. Stay tuned.

A moody shot of Hope Gardens.
It seems that the government’s main tourism web site has been revamped. This list is circulating on social media; 100 Reasons to Visit Jamaica.
Check it out here.

We took another trip to the zoo this weekend and the crocodile was out. I was not convinced it was real, however. They were. 

Any takers? From an enterprising gentleman in Jamaica.

Being a journalist can be a lonely, discouraging and thankless profession. People are suspicious of you and your motives. They don’t want to talk to you. They don’t want to be quoted. Or they want free publicity, and negotiating that can be tough.
That’s a lot of negativity coming at you, day after day, as you make phone calls and try to dig up information that is essential to you doing your job successfully. I think I was in this kind of a discouraged mood a year or so ago when I watched the movie Spotlight. It is an Oscar-winning film that tells the tale of the Boston Globe’s Pulitzer Prize-winning revelation of widespread, systemic sexual abuse of minors but priests from the Catholic Church in Boston. Over 1,000 victims eventually came forward and 249 priests were implicated. This story lead to a global falling away of the norms and taboos that protect the church: similar cover-ups were discovered across the world.
The sheer dedication, motivation and drive of the reporters in the story, who were lead by editor Walter Robinson, was inspiring. Not to mention the small measure of justice that was earned for the victims (if there can ever be justice for victims of sexual abuse). I was in tears at the end of the movie, resolved to forge ahead as an investigative journalist.
This past Friday, I received a further injection of inspiration as Walter Robinson himself was visiting Kingston. He was hosted by Global Reporters for the Caribbean and the U.S. Embassy. There were two screenings of the movie Spotlight, and after the second on Friday, I had the privilege of engaging in a Q&A session with Mr. Robinson. He is a lovely man, warm and generous, but there is a sadness surrounding him. I suspect it has to do, in part, with what he has seen as a reporter. In fact, he alluded to this during his comments, when he said that he has seen some of the worst things one can expect to see in over forty years as a reporter. He has covered wars, as well as heard the horrific tales of sexual abuse from countless victims.
I was not able to take notes as I was conducting the interview, but I will paraphrase some of what he said.
For a journalist, this was a privilege and an honor, as well as a learning experience. Thank you Mr. Robinson for your service and your wisdom.
There is a haze over Kingston right now, floating above the mountains and filtering the sunlight. It is apparently a dust storm that has made its way over from Africa. The Washington Post wrote a story about this relatively regular weather event last year. Check it out here. Meanwhile, we haven’t heard much from local authorities about it. Shouldn’t there be warnings for the elderly, young children and those with illnesses? Apparently it can cause respiratory distress and has been known to exacerbate asthma in young children.
Pulitzer-prize winning Boston Globe editor Walter Robinson is in Kingston. Global Reporters for the Caribbean and the U.S. Embassy is hosting Mr. Robinson, who was also the subject of the Oscar-winning film Spotlight, which highlighted Robinson’s work (along with the Spotlight team) exposing the Catholic Church’s cover-up of sexual abuse by priests in Boston. Over 1,000 victims were abused. About 250 priests were identified. I will post more, as there was also a Q&A at the screening of the movie last night and Mr. Robinson’s comments are worth hearing.