Eric Deggans is the first-ever full time Media Critic employed by the St. Petersburg Times. Before taking the media criticism job in August 2005, Eric worked as an editorial writer and columnist for the St. Petersburg Times, specializing in race issues, pop culture, media and national affairs. From 1997 to 2004, he served as television critic for the Times, crafting reviews, news stories and long-range trend pieces on the state of the media industry both locally and nationally.

A Times employee since November 1995, he originally joined the paper as music critic. Now serving as president of the Tampa Bay area chapter of the National Association of Black Journalists, he has also served on the board of directors for the national Television Critics Association and on the board of the Mid-Florida Society of Professional Journalists.

In 2005, he was selected to lecture at Columbia University’s prestigious Graduate School of Journalism as a winner of the school’s Let’s Do It Better! Awards honoring coverage of race and ethnicity. He also spoke at the opening session of the 2005 National Critics Conference in Los Angeles. A recipient of a 2003 ethics fellowship at the Poynter Institute for Media Studies in St. Petersburg, he served as an instructor in the program the following year – helping teach media ethics to a distinguished class of journalists drawn from across the nation. As a past vice president at NABJ chapters in New Jersey and Pennsylvania, he spearheaded creation of minority affairs reporting positions at the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette newspaper in 1993 and the Asbury Park (N.J.) Press newspaper in 1994. He has also developed a training program on racial sensitivity for recruits at the Pennsylvania State Troopers Academy.

As a guest lecturer and adjunct professor, he has taught at the University of Tampa, the University of South Florida, Eckerd College, St. Petersburg College, Indiana University and many other schools. Additionally, he worked as a professional drummer in the 1980s, touring and performing with Motown recording artists The Voyage Band throughout the Midwest and in Osaka, Japan. He continues to perform with area bands and recording artists as a drummer, bassist and vocalist.

Talking Points:
The TV industry, music industry, pop culture, minority affairs and media ethics.

Education: Bachelor of Arts in political science and journalism from Indiana University.

Awards: Winner, Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism’s Let’s Do it Better! Award for excellence in race and ethnicity coverage, 2005; First Place, Criticism, Florida Society of Newspaper Editors, 2003; Best Newspaper Columnist, Weekly Planet magazine, September 2000; Award of Excellence, Criticism, Mid-Florida Society of Professional Journalists, May 2003, 2001, 2000 and 1999; Finalist, Criticism, Green Eyeshade Awards, Atlanta SPJ Chapter, April 2003 and 1999.

Background: Born in Washington D.C. but raised in Gary, Ind., Eric came to the Times after serving as music critic for the Asbury Park Press newspaper in New Jersey. He also held municipal reporting jobs at the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and Pittsburgh Press newspapers in Pennsylvania. His work also has appeared in the Washington Post, Village Voice, VIBE magazine, Detroit News, Chicago Sun-Times, Seattle Times, Hispanic magazine, Smart Computing magazine, Rolling Stone Online and the MusicHound series of album guides.

He has appeared as a pundit on many media outlets, including: MSNBC; “The Tavis Smiley Show” (Black Entertainment Television); “All Things Considered,” “The Tony Cox Show” and “News and Notes with Ed Gordon” (National Public Radio); “Livelyhood” and “The Calling” (PBS); and “Crosscurrents” (the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation). Eric has also appeared on a host of local and regional TV and radio shows.

Eric and his wife Barbara live in St. Petersburg with their four children, two dogs and a house they lovingly call “the Money Pit.”

Blog Entries by Eric Deggans

As Anchors Change at ABC and MSNBC, Will Executives Ignore Diversity Again?

11 Comments | Posted December 15, 2009 | 05:30 PM (EST)


When NBC needed a new anchor for Meet the Press, I hoped.

After Lou Dobbs finally jumped off CNN, I wondered.

And now, with major anchor changes underway at ABC News and MSNBC, I'm certain.

The TV industry has a fresh chance to build anchor lineups which look more like...

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Rethinking David Letterman: Exactly How Are We Supposed to Feel About All This?

171 Comments | Posted October 8, 2009 | 01:30 PM (EST)


I want to believe Maureen Dowd when she says the whole David Letterman affair is simply about "the erotic pull of proximity." But I'm not sure I'm there yet.

After a week of breathless reportage about the comic's admitted flings with female staffers -- and it's a sign...

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Jimmy Carter's Words Give Media Outlets a Gigantic Excuse to Look Hard at Racism and Some Obama Critics

206 Comments | Posted September 17, 2009 | 11:51 AM (EST)


Thanks to Jimmy Carter, America is having a dialog about race that has been long overdue.

It took a former president using blunt language to get the nation's chattering class to focus on an issue that has troubled some since the first first Tea Bag protestor tossed...

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Why Hasn't the Media Cut Through the Gates Nonsense?

376 Comments | Posted July 30, 2009 | 10:18 AM (EST)


As media outlets keep chewing over the arrest of Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates, a few things are readily apparent.

Gates overreacted to a cop who was trying to make sure his home was safe. And the police officer, Sgt. James Crowley, overreacted by arresting a guy just for yelling...

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NBC's Today Focuses on Obama's Remarks About the Gates Arrest, Not Health Care

738 Comments | Posted July 23, 2009 | 10:30 AM (EST)


President Obama took an hour of prime time Wednesday to try explaining one of the most complex notions in government today -- why America needs to substantially change and expand its national health care system.

So why did the Today show -- by far TV's most-watched morning show -- spend...

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For This Wise African American, Sotomayor Hearings Reveal the Heart of Race Conflict in America

62 Comments | Posted July 14, 2009 | 09:40 AM (EST)


Never have I wanted more to throw a brick through the screen of my television.

Watching Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor sit stoically through a succession of white men, perched at the head of the whitest, malest, most powerful political institution in the country -- the U.S. Senate -- telling...

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If She's Seeking Higher Office, Sarah Palin May Already Be Failing Her First Test: Mastering the Media

46 Comments | Posted July 7, 2009 | 10:36 AM (EST)


If Sarah Palin wants to a be a serious candidate for president, she must master one thing above all else: above knowing the issues, above building her base and above reconciling with the corner of Republican leadership who see her as a toxic mix of ambition and self-destructive unpredictability.

She...

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A Fellow Gary Native and Ex-Motown Recording Artist Remembers the King of Pop

5 Comments | Posted June 26, 2009 | 12:32 PM (EST)


You wouldn't think a fortysomething journalist would have much in common with the late King of Pop.

But my life and Michael Jackson's have run along somewhat parallel lines for years, back to our earliest days growing up in the shadow of steel mills in Gary, Ind. (See photos of...

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Should President Obama's First Prime Time TV Discussion About his Health Care Plan Belong Solely to ABC News?

104 Comments | Posted June 16, 2009 | 12:45 PM (EST)


Barack Obama is a president who has no problem playing the media game.

From allowing two dozen NBC cameras access for a largely complimentary, two-night profile, to a lighthearted cameo in Stephen Colbert's week of shows from Iraq, Obama has shown a willingness to appear on camera in ways more...

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The Fight Over Sonia Sotomayor: Why Were So Few Hispanics on TV Debating the First Hispanic Supreme Court Nominee?

173 Comments | Posted June 2, 2009 | 01:36 PM (EST)


I've figured out what annoys me most about the media circus that has erupted in the wake of Sonia Sotomayor's nomination to the Supreme Court.

It's not watching a long procession of white males -- and a few females -- dissect what Sotomayor meant when she said eight years ago...

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American Idol Vote Controversy Proves Fox Should Release Totals After Competition is Done

18 Comments | Posted May 28, 2009 | 11:33 AM (EST)


A few over-excited Arkansas AT&T; employees gave fans of American Idol finalist Adam Lambert something new to grouse about, helping supporters of winner Kris Allen place "power texting" votes for him during the singing competition's widely-watched finale.

They also provided a another argument for something I've been advocating since...

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American Idol May Need an Adam Lambert Win More than Lambert Does

19 Comments | Posted May 20, 2009 | 01:20 PM (EST)


Watch a supremely confident Adam Lambert navigate the final moments of the biggest competition on network TV, and you begin to wonder if this American Idol finalist knows something you don't.

For sure, part of surviving the juggernaut that is Idol involves grace under pressure; keeping...

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If Adam Lambert Loses American Idol, It May Be Because the Show Wants Him to Win so Badly

87 Comments | Posted May 13, 2009 | 03:11 PM (EST)


If Adam Lambert doesn't win American Idol, it won't be because he's too theatrical. Or because it seems likely that he's gay -- though I'll talk more about that in a moment.

I'm convinced a Lambert loss may come simply because the show wants him to win so badly,

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Why the New York Post's Crazed Chimp Cartoon Matters

Posted February 20, 2009 | 11:29 AM (EST)


It's a refrain I heard a lot while fielding responses and offering commentary on the New York Post's awful cartoon depicting the authors of the Obama administration's economic stimulus package as a crazed chimp killed by police:

This doesn't really matter.

Indeed, when the New York...

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Are we all to Blame for the Rise of the Crazy Octuplet Mom?

Posted February 11, 2009 | 05:37 PM (EST)


Minutes into watching the crazy octuplet mother calmly explain to news actress Ann Curry the totally nonsensical reasons why she thinks a single mom with no job and a small house can raise 14 kids by herself, I got an odd feeling -- like watching an accomplice get away with...

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Will It Take a Democratic President to Leave the Digital TV Switch to the Free Market?

Posted January 9, 2009 | 01:44 PM (EST)


It took staunch anti-Communist Dick Nixon to forge a relationship with Communist China and anti-interventionist George W. Bush to engineer the biggest experiment in nation building of this century.

So maybe it will take a Democratic president to let the free market handle America's switch to digital TV.

Most of...

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Don't Expect Obama Election to Improve Media Diversity Just Yet

Posted December 5, 2008 | 03:55 PM (EST)


A long time ago, I heard a TV critic talk about how most media follows society, they do not lead it.

What that means, is because outlets such as television depend on the purchase of advertisements, they must offer content that both the advertiser AND the viewer find compelling...

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My First Racist Letter Arrived Today

Posted November 4, 2008 | 12:05 PM (EST)


It came to my office at the newspaper, as so many of these missives do, with no return address or signature -- the first proof that whoever sent it wasn't convinced enough of their words to put their own name on the line.

"Congrats all niggers of the world" read...

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Selling Obama: Pitch-Perfect Infomercial More Clintonesque than Kennedy-Like

Posted October 30, 2008 | 12:35 AM (EST)


Some media critics already have compared Barack Obama to John F. Kennedy when it comes to the way he handles himself on television, especially when measured against some of the Nixonian, less TV-friendly visuals of his rival, John McCain.

So on Wednesday, when Obama made history by spending millions to...

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America Finally Gets a Presidential Debate, Because Candidates Gave Them One

Posted October 16, 2008 | 10:07 AM (EST)


Viewers Thursday night finally got something closely resembling a debate between the two candidates for president -- though moderator Bob Schieffer, good as he was, didn't have a lot to do with it.

I'm crediting instead all the complaints about the last two debates between John McCain and Barack Obama,...

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