In Journalism circles, having a degree from the University of Missouri was often a ticket for success. It is not only the nation’s oldest Journalism school, it is also one of the most prestigious.
When rankings for the best “J” schools in the nation are posted the University of Missouri is almost guaranteed to be in the Top 10 or Top 5. However, that may have all changed due to the actions of a single media professor during the recent student uprising at the school.
A Mass Media Professor, Melissa Click, is shown in a video asking for “muscle” to remove a student photojournalist, Tim Tai, who was working for ESPN and in a public place. It is a horrible act by a college professor and shows a total disregard for the Journalist’s First Amendment rights, which is against what the school has taught for decades.
“Who wants to help me get this reporter out of here? I need some muscle over here,” says Click.
A video of Click’s actions against Tai has gone viral and has well over 500,000 views (LINK) on a single site. The New York Times has written an extensive story about her actions.
What was once a sympathetic media for the protesters has now changed with the actions of students and faculty against them.
Technically some have pointed out Click works in the Mass Media Division of the Department of Communications in College of Arts & Sciences, which is separate from the J-school. However, she is listed on the School of Journalism’s site (LINK), which tars the entire Journalism program whether it deserves it or not.
Click had earlier Tweeted out that she she was looking for coverage of the event by Journalists. Later on she is clearly leading the charge against other Journalists with total disregard for their rights to cover the event.
With the resignation of the school’s President and Chancellor the University of Missouri is clearly being painted as a college where the inmates are running the asylum. Rather than act like a Professor, Click and other faculty members have clearly shown they were behind the student protests against the administration.
If the University of Missouri doesn’t hire a crisis communications team immediately its entire image for producing quality Journalism graduates could likely be tarnished forever. If the school was wise it already had a crisis communications plan in place for such an incident, but that is unlikely.
The first move would be to remove Click. But that would be a stop-gap measure since a faculty member helping foment the disturbance was an indictment on all the faculty. The school hired her, and whether tacitly or not, approved of her actions.
A statement issued today by the Dean of the Journalism School denied she was part of the faculty and sounded as if her days as a professor at Missouri were numbered. Click has also been forced to apologize in an attempt to save her job and resigned her “courtesy” appointment to the J-School.
However, a Kansas City reporter told BLC that the protesters are refusing to speak with local reporters and will only do interviews with national media outlets. That is the kind of move that will turn sympathetic local media against them now and in the future.
It’s a bad move.












MISSOURI PR NIGHTMARE
Concerned Student 1950 turned a sympathetic media against it in record time. What a bozo Media Professor Melissa Click must be to swat at a camera and request “muscle” to help remove a journalist attempting to videotape a protest from a public place.
Have you ever seen a story disintegrate into a PR disaster this quickly?
NO TRIAL BY YOUTUBE
Dear Mr. Landsberg: Thank you for posting this info. The attacks on that reporter at Mizzou reminded me of stories I had heard growing up from people who lived in Germany at the time of Hitler’s takeover. These were people in the democratic parties and press, and they told how Ernst Roehm’s stormtroopers would break up their rallies and attack journalists.
So, what to do? My personal suggestion is to give to Ms. Click the sort of treatment that she probably would deny to others. First, She should not be summarily fired-yes, the video is quite damning but everyone deserves due process; we must not become a nation that tries people on You Tube. The university should fairly and thoroughly investigate the case to see if firing is warranted. Second, I have had the honor to know a number of fair-minded journalists here in the KC area-one of these journalists should interview her to see if there were any extenuating circumstances that are not shown in the video.
Taking these two steps would be the ultimate reply to what those individuals at Mizzou did to that reporter.
Sincerely, Respectfully and In Christ, Dr. Ernest Evans
NOT MUCH OF AN APOLOGY
I don’t think Click’s statement was much of an apology. She says it occurred on a day “full of emotion and confusion.” She was dealing with “spirited” reporters.
Yeah, she’s sorry; but, it really wasn’t her fault. Those darn spirited reporters had her confused. I’m surprised she didn’t cry sexism.
I think the whole sorry saga will haunt MU for years.
DEVELOP A REAL PLAN
They don’t need a crisis plan to restore an image. They need a real plan to address real problems. It is not a question of polishing the image through media spin. Click is not the story - but a nice way to move away from the issues.
KKK TRIED SAME TACTIC AS MIZZOU STUDENTS
Dear Mr. Lawrence: Click is not the only issue, but she is one important issue. I am willing to give her a chance to give her side of the story and don’t believe that she should be fired without due process-it is my firm belief that in our society everyone deserves due process; that it is just as wrong in 2015 to deny due process to a white cop accused of racism as it was in 1915 to deny due process to a black man accused of raping a white woman. But if she really believes that it is legitimate to use violence to destroy a free press then she has no business teaching at a university’s journalism school.
I would suggest that she look at the old videos of the Ku Klux Klan in Alabama in 1961 trying to prevent the press from taking pictures of them violently attacking the Freedom Riders. That is why we have a free press in this nation. Sincerely, Respectfully and In Christ, Ernest Evans