Where is soledad obrien now
Because to me, my people are absolutely everything. They will help you get to where you want to be. Find great people and ask them for help. On prioritizing: My mom had a great saying: Everybody gets the same 24 hours. You just have to figure out how you want to spend yours. What do you want to do with the time that you get?
Go decide. And then go do it. And if you change your mind a few years in, go do that. Already a subscriber? Newswire Powered by. Close the menu. Rolling Stone. Log In. To help keep your account secure, please log-in again.
Jackson is adept at lip reading, which he did naturally in early childhood as his hearing diminished. The family has experimented with sign language and also looked at cochlear implants—small devices that transform sound vibrations into nerve signals—but is holding off for now.
At 12, Jackson is a thriving seventh-grader who plays soccer and lacrosse and has a wide circle of friends and teammates. Unlike most of his classmates, however, he also has to remember to wear his hearing aids and carry his personal wireless hearing system.
Most challenging of all for an early adolescent, Jackson must have the courage to sometimes say, "I can't hear you," to teachers and classmates. Jackson has already acquired his mom's instinct for activism. When a doctor asked if he'd consider speaking to groups of parents whose children are losing their hearing, he didn't think twice before agreeing.
As his proud mother explains, "He talks to parents about his experience, and he makes them think, 'It's going to be okay. More than 48 million Americans experience some form of hearing loss; sensorineural hearing loss is the most common, according to estimates from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Genetic factors; trauma from blunt force or excessive loud noise; viruses and autoimmune diseases; malformations such as tumors and sclerosis, a progressive hardening of tissues that prevents proper sound conduction; aging; and Meniere's disease are all possible causes, says Frank Robert Lin, MD, PhD, assistant professor of otolaryngology and epidemiology at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore.
A wide array of genetic factors may affect the complex biochemistry of the inner ear. Hain says a connexin 26 mutation is the most common form of genetic hearing loss, accounting for 49 percent of people with inherited hearing loss. A rarer genetic mutation expressed in the cochlea, eyes, kidneys, and pancreas, Wolfram syndrome is linked not only to hearing loss but also to diabetes, kidney disorders, and visual impairment, he adds.
Some temporary forms of sensorineural hearing loss, such as those caused by loud noise or head trauma, may be treated with corticosteroids to reduce inflammation, says Dr.
But the most common form is irreversible and must be compensated for with hearing aids or cochlear implants. Doing good for others, whether it's her own children or her television audience, is a priority for journalist Soledad O'Brien. She has established a foundation called PowHERful that mentors and supports young women from minority backgrounds in their efforts to attend college and enter the corporate world.
On her syndicated news show Matter of Fact , O'Brien tackles topics that touch lives in some of America's struggling communities. Last fall, she co-hosted a two-hour special on Fox that examined the murders of legendary New York City rappers Tupac Shakur and Biggie Smalls, both of whom were killed in drive-by shootings.
By signing up, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms. She has dedicated her life to produce and tell stories about social issues like race relations in America. But that day, the former CNN anchor wasn't just watching the news. She was analyzing how her former colleagues and fellow journalists presented the insurrection, which was the first time the Capitol had been breached in more than two centuries.
Over the last four years, O'Brien, who now anchors and produces Matter Of Fact - a political magazine program on Heart Television - and owns her own production company, Soledad O'Brien productions , has become known for something else. She uses her wide-reaching platform, specifically on social media, to unapologetically call out wrongdoing by politicians and elected officials, and take journalists and media organizations to task when she feels news coverage has been harmful to the public.
Regarding the riot at the Capitol, O'Brien believes the day-of coverage was done well; she says most media outlets typically cover breaking news effectively. The problem, O'Brien says, lies in the after-the-fact analysis, and how media outlets have covered the Trump presidency over the last four years. Because I feel like there have been so many people, myself included, who have pointed out the dangers of this kind of language from the president.
What have you been reporting on? Since the insurrection, O'Brien has called out outlets and reporters for their continuing coverage. Many other journalists normalized this dangerous bigotry. Shame on them all. But for O'Brien, her insistence on holding people, specifically journalists and media, accountable on social media is nothing new and wasn't necessarily a conscious decision.
It's just an extension of what she says she's been doing since she became a journalist. For journalists everywhere, covering Trump and his administration has been no easy task. The president has lied an astronomical amount, according to the Washington Post fact-checker , which has chronicled over 29, false claims Trump has made during his four years in office.
He has also been consistent in fear-mongering when it comes to Democrats, immigration, and other issues. I think most journalists would be like, 'yes, that's the goal,'" O'Brien explained.
But also, how do you not run a press conference by the President of The United States? These were questions newsrooms and reporters grappled with since Trump's election in Some newsrooms would run Trump's press conferences un-edited, as they have for other presidents. Many journalists, in every newsroom, who are expected to remain "unbiased" and "objective," would sometimes falter at how to inform the public of the president's outrageous lies as his team came up with terms like "alternative facts" and as an army of people in government and elsewhere tried to normalize his behavior.
And some journalists would fall into the trap of seemingly normalizing Trump's behavior, too.