L.D. Thomas, Dallas City Council candidate joins Blog Talk Radio Thursday night

Join us on Shawn P. Williams Now when our guest will be Lavar “L.D.” Thomas who is running for Dallas City Council in District 8.  We will also discuss the NAACP’s 100th Anniversary and the status of the economic stimulus package.

Click here to listen to the show which airs Thursday night at 9:00 p.m. Central.

AUDIO: Shawn on 570 KLIF with Jeff Bolton discussing violent crimes in Dallas

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Shawn P. and Jeff Bolton

Many thanks to Jeff Bolton and Producer Clint Granberry for having me on their program (early) Wednesday morning. The discussion centered around violent crime statistics released by the Dallas Police Department detailing the crime “hot spots” in the city.

Also thanks to Andrew Harvey with the Dallas Police Department for sharing those statistics to Dallas South. I’m looking forward to working more with Mr. Harvey and DPD Public Relations in the future.

Wanna hear it? Hear it goes.

Part One – February 4th with Jeff Bolton

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Part Two – February 5th interview with Jeff Bolton

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Dallas’ worst violent crime hot spots in North Dallas: Shawn on KLIF 570′s Jeff Bolton Show Wednesday Morning to discuss

According to statistics released by the Dallas Police Department, the three areas in Dallas that have the most violent crimes are all north of downtown. While that may be surprising to some, it’s should not come as a shock to the Dallas South Family.

I’ll be on KLIF 570′s Jeff Bolton Show in the morning to discuss these findings. The segment will air around 6:15 a.m., so you’ll have to be an early bird if you want to catch the Shawn.

For years now we have been relying on data provided by the Williams Institute to try to break the myth that Southern Dallas leads the city in crime. The data that they have cited in their “Wholeness Index – Crime Rate” is in line with the statistics provided by the DPD.

According to the Dallas Police Department, the three worst crime “hot spots” are:

1. Five Points: 357 violent crimes
2. Forest at Audelia: 305 violent crimes
3. Northwest Highway at Harry Hines: 286 violent crimes

The most violent spot in South Dallas is Hatcher at 2nd (#4) with 202 violent crimes, and the first location to show up in Oak Cliff is the Jefferson Corridor (#9) 173 violent crimes.

One of the things that developers use as an excuse for not building in Southern Dallas is the threat of crime. I doubt you would hear crime as excuse not to build in the Cedar Springs at Wycliff area which came in at #8 with 175 violent crimes.

We’ve got to stop making up truths and believing in falsehoods. The city and its leaders have to do their part to rebrand Southern Dallas. It’s not the crime ridden spot that everyone wants to make it out to be.

For more on this story check out Channel 11′s story on Dallas Violent Crime areas.

Shawn P. Ranting on Channel 8′s Sunday Daybreak

I received a call last week from Brad Watson asking me if I would have any interest in participating in a new feature on WFAA News 8′s Sunday Daybreak.  The political portion of the program just launched a new segment called “The Rant,” where local media types will have a chance to provide commentary content of their choice.

Of course I said yes, and recorded my first rant that will air this Sunday (Feb. 1) morning.  The show starts at 8 a.m., but my rant will probably run between 9 and 9:30.  Don’t blink you may miss me.  It’s a rotating feature, so I may be on once ever 8 weeks or so.

Thanks to Brad, Berna Dean Steptoe and all the good folks at Channel 8 who helped me out.  I felt like a cobination of Rickey Bobby from Talledaga Nights and The Anchorman.  Set your DVR if you’re headed to the 8 o’ clock service and let me know what you think.

If you really like it, shoot Brad and email at bwatson@wfaa.com.

Best Show to date: Vincent Tucker’s appearance on Shawn P. Williams Blog Talk Radio

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Check Kristin and I on Blog Talk Radio -Shawn P. Williams Now when our guest was Vincent “Young Heartbreak” Tucker, founder of CWC Entertainment Group and host of the Vincent Tucker Radio Sh0w.  It took us a little while to get back into the swing, but we eventually knocked it out of the park.

Kristin and I added a few bells and whistles to the show, including our first sponsor.  Click here to listen to  an archived version of Shawn P. Williams Now.  We had a record number of live listeners Thursday night and we’re shooting to accomplish the same with the archived version as well.

My volume level is a little low and I’ll work on that for next week. Try to give me a pass on that one and enjoy the rest of the show.  We’ll be back on the air next Thursday night a 9:00 p.m Central.

Shawn Williams for Paris News: Meeting not time well spent

Here’s an article that I wrote for my hometown rag about the 2nd Racial Dialogue meeting that was held in Paris last week.  Thanks to Mary Madewell for allowing me to express my views.

January 13, 2009

It’s hard to believe the momentum built from the first U.S. Department of Justice racial dialogue meeting could be lost so quickly.  After the successful session that took place in December, I was excited about a return trip to Lamar County.

But at Thursday’s gathering, the Department of Justice’s Community Relation Services duo, Carmelita Pope-Freeman and David Penland, spent too much time priming the pump and too little time in harvest mode.

For a group so into structure, Thursday’s meeting seemed to ramble. After about an hour I thought about heading back across Lake Ray Hubbard, wondering if I would have been better off sitting in front of my television set watching Oklahoma and Florida in the national championship game.

Besides the inordinate amount of time spent on set up, there was entirely too much of this meeting devoted to review and bringing newcomers up to speed. Freeman stressed the importance of timeliness, but the limited amount of time set aside for discussion was not used wisely.

A positive moment came when Freeman opened up the floor for reflections on the tragic fire at the Christians in Action shelter. One of the attendees provided an excellent synopsis of what the heartbreaking catastrophe meant to the community.

The closeness of the Calvary fellowship hall was lost in the much more cavernous Love Civic Center. Where attendees in December tended to sit with people they didn’t know, those who came out last Thursday sought the comfort of familiar faces. It’s hard to find a perfect venue, and the intimacy of the church was a necessary loss in order to add capacity.

The body language of attendees showed that Freeman’s call and response facilitation style was wearing thin. Since Dec. 4, I had prepared myself to hunker down and listen to folks pouring out their hearts with concerns regarding their city.

Citizens were to bring the worksheets that had been assigned to them and be prepared to speak uninterrupted for three minutes. This would allow everyone to have their say and then work towards crafting solutions in subsequent meetings. Instead a group exercise was revisited and each table was asked to select a spokesperson.

Once Parisians actually got the microphone back, the meeting took a turn for the better. There were points made regarding getting parents more involved in the schools, shutting down drug houses and bootleggers, and ensuring criminal justice is enforced equally across racial lines.

But many of the groups on Thursday — as was the case at the previous dialogue meeting — turned their discussion towards education. That’s fitting, since many of the racial tensions that have existed in recent years sprang out of local schools.

If Paris discovers the magic potion that solves the education problem, then you should bottle it and sell it. But the fact that sub par public education is an American pandemic shouldn’t preclude the people of Paris from setting goals related to reforming their school systems.

I think the Diversity Task Force should go back to the Community Relations Service Office and ask for a do over. I would suggest Marva Joe and Mary Clark ask Freeman and Penland to come back and conduct the meeting many of us thought we were heading in to. Yet to do so would set the process back.

At the very least, Joe and Clark should make sure the Department of Justice folks follow their own prescribed guidelines at these meetings. If not, a drop in participation will inevitably be blamed on lack of community interest when in actuality it may be something else entirely.

Chatterbox PR 2008 Social Media Socialites

jonnice.jpgJonnice Slaughter, principal of ChatterBox Publicity LLC, released her list of 2008 Social Media Socialites. Also check out a guest post Jonnice provided to Black paPR Report titled 2009 Business New Year Strategy: PR Examination.

Jonnice Slaughter’s 2008 Social Media Socialites

1. Angela Benton and Markus Robinson / Black Web 2. 0 Founder
2. Ava DuVernay / The DuVernay Agency/ The Urban Collective
3. Baratunde Thurston / Jack and Jill Politics Blog
4. Brian Solis / PR 2.0
5. CBP’s Social Media & PR Circle: Robin Caldwell / The J Standard, Christal Jordan-Mims/ Enchanted PR, Nicole Garner/ The Garner Circle, Dee Dee Cocheta-Williams/ ABC Publicity, Danielle Armstrong/ Organic PR, Keisha McCotry/ Prominence PR, Candice Reese/ Envision Global
6. Cedric “Big Ced” Thornton / Freelance Writer with Social Media Swagger
7. Dove Clark / AllHipHop.com & Tyger Eye Entertainment
8. Gina McCauley / Blogging While Brown Founder
9. HBCU Roundup Creators / Rustin & Bryndan Moore
10. Hill Harper / ForRealSolutions.com
11. James Andrews / Key Influencer
12. Jason Kintzler / Pitch Engine
13. Kevin Ross / 3 Baas Media
14. L. N. Rock / African American Political Pundit Blog
15. Marco Hansell / Fan Force, LLC
16. Maurice Cherry / The Black Weblog Awards
17. Necole Bitchie / The Urban Blogger
18. Pam Spaulding / Pam’s House Blend Blog
19. President- Elect Barack Obama, The Country’s First Social Media President and his Social Media Strategy Team: Blue State Digital, Rahaf Harfoush, Chris Hughes, and those we missed.
20. Shawn P Williams / The Dallas South Blog
21. Tamera Reynolds / Glam Media / Black Life
22. Todd DeFren / PR Squared
23. Twitter Founders: Jack Dorsey, Biz Stone, and Evan Williams
24. Wayne Hicks / BDPA Education Technology Foundation
25. Wayne Sutton / Social Media Evangelist, Guru

Dallas South featured in On the Black Hand Side’s Black Blogger Spotlight

Vanessa Woodard Byers selected Dallas South as the first blog featured in On the Black Hand Side’s revamped Black Blogger spotlight. In 20 Questions with Shawn P. Williams, Vanessa asked a few things that most of you guys already know. But go check out the interview and see if you find out anything new.

And no teasing about Star Wars.

Press Release: Publisher of Dallas South launches new media venture

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE January 6, 2009

PRESS CONTACT Shawn Williams

(214)923-5013

shawn@dallassouthblog.com

Shawn P. Williams Launches New Age Media Firm

Dallas Blogger Announces Social Media Consulting Venture

Dallas, Texas (January 5, 2009) – On Monday, Shawn P. Williams announced the launch of a new business venture – Dallas South New Media. Dallas South New Media is a social media consulting and public relations firm focusing on politics, community groups, and non-profit organizations.

Williams is the publisher of the popular blog Dallas South. Dallas South was named one of Dallas’ Top 5 blogs by Outside.in, and finished 2008 ranked #49 of over 1,500 blogs tracked on the Black Blog Rankings by Electronic Village (electronicvillage.blogspot.com).

DallasSouthBlog.com is the backbone of everything we plan to do,” said Williams of the new endeavor. “But I want to help others get their message out so they won’t have to always wait for other media outlets to do it for them.”

While Williams understands the value of social media tools like Facebook, Twitter, and Ning, he also realizes that traditional media is still a driving force. “Dallas South New Media will work to bridge the gap between traditional media and new media; seasoned journalists and citizen journalists,” he said. “We all need one another.”

Shawn started his website Dallas South in June 2006 after reading an article in Men’s Health magazine. Since then, it has been featured on the NBC Nightly News as well as in major news outlets like The Chicago Tribune, The Toronto Star, NPR, BBC, and MSNBC. Dallas South was also one of three blogs from Texas to receive press credentials for the historic Democratic National Convention in Denver last year.

“For the first quarter, I think Dallas South New Media will spend quite a bit of time trying to identify a publisher for my book,” said Williams. “But I’m already busy with an engagement this month at a church in my hometown (Paris, Texas) discussing how to use social media to achieve social justice.”

Shawn is also a freelance writer and a frequent columnist for The Dallas Morning News, The Paris News, and Friendship-West Praise and Power Pages. He credits his readers -who he refers to as the Dallas South Family- for all of the blogs success. “I couldn’t do any of this without the people who log on to Dallas South day in and day out.

While he did not release the number of daily visitors, Williams reports that Dallas South receives over 1 million hits per month.

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Dallas South Blog is located at dallassouthblog.com. It features items on politics, sports, current events, and serves as a media watchdog.

Press Release by Dallas South New Media, specializing in social media, politics, and non-profits.