Disability Rights

Meeting News Producers

In September D-MAP took the next big step and as the current Chair of the Media Advisory Committee, I met with some major US news networks. For as long as I can remember, disability has rarely been seen as a subject that is cool and sexy; however, television and media are seen as cool and sexy. So the plan was to see how we can become compatible. Of course in my back pocket, so to speak, I know those who work in broadcasting, print and online media are human beings, affected by the same things as everyone, including disability. Getting the meetings wasn’t easy.

We decided D-MAP should start with the big players, the US national newspapers, news agencies, broadcasters, both television and radio. Of the 15 or so companies I approached, about eight have not replied--yet. However, enlightened organisations, creative ones (and ones where I’d been given a contact) did agree to meet.

Senator Edward M. Kennedy - Champion of Disability Civil Rights

DREDF has released a new video which includes an interview with the Senator made around the Tenth Anniversary of the ADA in 2000. If you're a facebook member you can watch the entire 16 minute video without interruption. Or you can view it as a YouTube playlist:

___ YEARS OF A NONDISABLED LIFE IS WORTH ___ YEARS OF A DISABLED LIFE

On 7.15.09, the New York Times Magazine published Dr. Peter Singer's article on rationing health care in the US. Unfortunately, Singer's notion of rationing is based on the "worth" of individuals with disabilities when compared to those without disabilities. A NYT graphic accompanying the article was particularly worrying.

Welcome to D-MAP

We established the Disability & Media Alliance Project (D-MAP) to work in alliance with the media industry to change inaccurate public perceptions of disability and replace them with informed and realistic stories and images. We want to broaden the range of popular ideas about disability to go beyond the usual suspects: condescending stares for tragic lives on the one extreme, and admiring awe for superhuman transcendence of obstacles on the other. People with disabilities are neither inspirational heroes nor social parasites, neither courageous underdogs nor charity cases. We are ordinary people with ordinary and highly varied lives. Like everyone else, we'd like to see our lives depicted in the news and in entertainment.

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