Monroe Anderson
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Cyber Columnist Monroe Anderson is a veteran Chicago journalist. A published author, he has worked for magazines, newspapers, television and posts his own political blog.
A regular contributor to ebonyjet.com., Anderson is a member of the Trotter Group, a collective of African American columnists representing publications coast-to-coast and of the AfroSpear, a collective of black bloggers.

From February 2006 until July of last year, Anderson was a freelance op-ed page columnist for the Chicago Sun-Times. His political commentary ran every Sunday in the newspaper's "Controversy" section.

He was the editor of Savoy Magazine, until the national publication experienced financial problems in late 2005. Before taking the helm of Savoy in November 2004, he was the editor of N'DIGO, a Chicago weekly publication that has the nation's largest African-American newspaper circulation.

Anderson, the former host of Common Ground at CBS2 Chicago, took over the helm of N'DIGO in March of 2004.

In 2007, Anderson was selected to participate in the Kaiser Family Foundation Traveling Media Seminar in South Africa. He and five other journalists, from the U.S. and U.K., visited South Africa for nine days for an in-depth study of the HIV/AIDS epidemic.

As a career journalist for more than three decades, he has worked for some of America's best-known media corporations—Dow Jones, Johnson Publishing Company, the Tribune Company, Post-Newsweek and Viacom. In 1988-89, he had a stint in municipal government, serving as Press Secretary for Chicago Mayor Eugene Sawyer.

From June, 1989 until December 2002, Anderson was Director of Station Services and Community Affairs at WBBM-TV, a CBS owned and operated station in Chicago. As Director of Station Services, he coordinated WBBM-TV's Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) policies and ensured that the station was in compliance with FCC regulations.

As Director of Community Affairs, he worked closely with a wide range of community organizations including political, church, schools and civic within the CBS viewing area to assure that the station was aware of and gave support to important local issues and events.

For eight of his 13-year tenure at WBBM-TV, Anderson was the executive producer and host of the public affairs television talk show, Common Ground. The show's 30-year run ended in December 1998.

Anderson spent the first 18 years of his professional career as an award-winning print journalist. From 1970 to 1972, Anderson was a staff writer for The National Observer in Washington, D.C. He moved on to accept a position at Ebony in Chicago. After working for two years as an assistant editor for the national magazine, Anderson was hired as a reporter for the Chicago Tribune.

In his 10 years at the Tribune, Anderson worked as a city hall reporter; participated on four award-winning investigative series; worked as a general assignment reporter; did police and court beat reporting; and periodically wrote concert and record reviews.

From September 1983 until January 1985, he wrote a signed political column that appeared every Friday on the Chicago Tribune's op-ed page. The column was transmitted weekly by the Knight-Ridder/New York Daily News/Tribune wire service, where it was available to some 130 newspapers.

Anderson is a co-author of the non-fiction book, Brothers, which was published by William Morrow & Company in the spring of 1988. He is also a contributing author to Restoration 1989: Chicago Elects a New Daley, a book detailing the 1989 Chicago mayoral election, published by Lyceum Books in the fall of 1991. Anderson's chapter is entitled, "The Sawyer Saga: A Journalist, Who Just Happened to be the Mayor's Press Secretary, Speaks."

Anderson has also been a commentator on 848, a public affairs program on WBEZ-FM, Chicago's NPR station.

He is on the boards of the Illinois Arts Alliance, Keep Chicago Beautiful and Gilda's Club. Anderson is a past board director of the National Association of Black Journalists and has served as an officer of the Chicago Association of Black Journalists.

He is also a former a board member of the Chicago chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences and the Illinois Broadcasters Association.

During his career as a print journalist, Anderson appeared on the Today and Donahue shows and was a regular panelist on the Chicago Week in Review on WTTW-TV, the local PBS station.

He also made scores of appearances on other local television and radio programs and lectured at a number of colleges and universities including Indiana University, Northwestern University, the University of Illinois, and Iowa State University.

Anderson taught the MBA 590 class in business presentation for one semester last year at University of Illinois Chicago. From 1984 until 1988, he taught a feature writing class at Columbia College-Chicago.

He earned a B.A. degree from Indiana University in Bloomington in 1970, with a double major; journalism and English Literature. He is married to the artist, Joyce Owens. They have two sons, Scott and Kyle.

Blog Entries by Monroe Anderson

Poor Management Takes CTA to the Poorhouse

Posted February 8, 2010 | 09:49:26 (EST)

Just days before the 2008 Summer Olympics, Richard M. Daley, Chicago's Mayor-For-Life, was in China taking test rides on Beijing's new state-of-the-art subway. With dreams of the 2016 Chicago games dancing in his head, Mayor Daley wanted to have a first-hand look-see at the modern marvel of the Beijing subway...

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Clinton's Racist Comment Quiets Reid's

Posted January 11, 2010 | 15:02:44 (EST)

The blogosphere is all atwitter about Sen. Harry Reid's (D-Nevada) comments about then presidential candidate Barack Obama. At the time, the Nevada senator privately described Obama as "light skinned" and "with no Negro dialect, unless he wanted to have one."

Cries of racism have been seen and heard throughout...

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Much Ado About Hugging

Posted April 5, 2009 | 18:38:59 (EST)

Michelle Obama is a hugger. I know this personally because, the last time I saw Michelle, she gave me a hug.

So Thursday's international incidence with some of the British tabloids tsk-tsking her because she, gasp, may have hugged the Queen, doesn't come as much of a big...

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Chris and Rihanna Show All's Not Fair in Love That Wars

Posted March 24, 2009 | 15:12:36 (EST)

Superstars Chris Brown and Rihanna are the poster children for domestic violence. You know the story. A lover's quarrel in 19-year-old Brown's car led to a beating so brutal that neither were able to make scheduled appearances at the Grammy Awards later that night.

Rihanna ended up with a badly...

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A Holiday to Memorialize the Confederacy? WTF?

Posted February 11, 2009 | 15:02:06 (EST)

In an era that some are trying to bill at post-racial, South Carolina state senator Robert Ford is seeking to take us way back to the post-Reconstruction epoch. Ford, who is of African American descent, is trying to get a bill passed that requires South Carolina to give workers a...

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Obama's No Joke to Al Qaida and KKK

Posted November 20, 2008 | 13:49:17 (EST)

A little more than a year ago, I went to The Second City Theatre to enjoy its side-splitting hit revue at the time, "Between Barack and a Hard Place." The famed improv comedy ensemble, which is the comedic mother of Saturday Night Live, had put together a show that was...

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For GOP, Scary is as Scary Does

Posted November 4, 2008 | 16:47:46 (EST)

Pity the poor right. The party faithful's fear and smear machine that has worked in the past--quicker than you could say Swift boating or Willie Horton--just doesn't possess that same old white magic.

Right wing-imagined Bogey men Rev. Jeremiah Wright and Bill Ayers ain't scarin' 'em this Halloween season....

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Cubs Lose, Cubs Lose, Cubs Lose!

Posted October 6, 2008 | 19:19:40 (EST)

Although I've lived on Chicago's North Side, less than two miles from Wrigley Field, for more than 30 years, I've never been much of a Cubs fan for three reasons.

The first is that I grew up on the far, far Southeast Side--Gary, Indiana--where we were partial to the White...

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Before Obama Was Obama

Posted September 23, 2008 | 19:34:27 (EST)

This is a radio interview with Barack Obama before he was the Barack Obama we now know and are following. This interview ran on March 15, 2004 on WBEZ-FM, Chicago's outlet for National Public Radio.

At the time, Obama was a relatively unknown state senator, running against several better-known...

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Palin, GOP find community challenges a real hoot

Posted September 8, 2008 | 17:49:20 (EST)

At the expense of Barack Obama, community groups and their organizers were a running joke in St. Paul last week at the Republican National Convention.

Sarah Palin, Rudy Giuliani and much of the rest of the GOP apparently believe that small town mayoring is oh-so-important while community...

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Republicans Should Have Been Careful What They Prayed For

Posted September 1, 2008 | 16:23:12 (EST)

Republicans were performing a rain dance this time last week hoping and praying that a thunderstorm might wash out Barack Obama's parade. Had the skies opened up on Thursday night during the Democrat presidential nominee's acceptance speech, the record crowd for the historic event would not have been. The record...

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Hoping Denver 2008 Won't be Chicago 1968

Posted August 26, 2008 | 16:14:09 (EST)

I have the dubious distinction of being one of the first journalists to be beaten by the Chicago police in 1968.

My own personal cop clubbing came in a different era in a different city at a different Democratic National Convention. It was exactly 40 years ago...

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Jon Burge, The Olympics and Torture in Chicago

Posted August 20, 2008 | 01:07:48 (EST)

Richard M. Daley, Chicago's Mayor-for-Life, was duty bound to be in Beijing for the opening ceremony to the Summer Olympics: He had some elbow rubbing and glad-handing to do.

Chicago is an international finalist to be the host city for the 2016 Olympics so the face time and a check...

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