Mike Bivins

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Mike Bivins is a multimedia journalist based out of Portland, Oregon,[1] whose reporting about civil unrest in the United States has itself been the object of news coverage.[2][3][4][5][6][7]

Early life and education[]

While he was born in Washington's Tri-Cities, Bivins has lived in Portland for most of his life.[8] Bivins attended Benson High School.[9]

Journalism career[]

Bivins was interviewed by the Washington Post about his coverage of the 2016 Portland, Oregon riots, where car windows were smashed and fires were lit in protest of Donald Trump winning the 2016 presidential election.[3]

In an interview with Spokane's alt-weekly, The Inlander, about his coverage of the 2016 riots, Bivins said that via his use of social media applications such as Periscope he is able to compete directly with large news organizations, some of whom have purchased his footage.[5] Bivins is quoted in The Inlander as saying: "I've put my phone in my mouth.... And I'll crawl up onto high spots and get a better vantage point easier, because I don't have a big camera weighing me down."

on July 7, 2016 Bivins captured Periscope footage of subsequently jailed conservative blogger Michael Strickland pointing a gun at numerous protesters during a Black Lives Matter protest in Portland.[6][10] In a televised interview with KGW the following day, Bivins described the incident as "surreal," and said that he was unsure of how to react once the gun was put away by Strickland.[7]

Bivins' coverage of an open-carry protest at the Oregon Statehouse,[2] where supporters of Malheur Refuge occupier Ammon Bundy hung and burned an effigy of Oregon Governor Kate Brown, was mentioned in Eugene Weekly's Slant column:

As Bivins points out in his story this week, the effigy of Brown that was burned made reference to the Malheur occupation; when angry people flaunting weapons go stomping around the halls of government, we need to take note, especially since Oct. 1 marks the first anniversary of the Umpqua Community College shooting in which nine people, as well as the shooter, died as a result of gun violence.[4]

KXRY program 5 Quadrants of PDX had Bivins on as a guest to talk about an article he co-wrote for Willamette Week covering the uptick in incidents involving white supremacists in the Portland area. On the program, Bivins talked about recent Ku Klux Klan activity at a local rally for president Donald Trump, as well as a group of self-described National Socialists being kicked out of a Portland bar.[11] United States Senator Ron Wyden cited Bivins' Willamette Week article on March 16, 2017 when announcing his support for recently introduced anti-hate legislation.[12]

References[]

  1. ^ "Gone with the Winds". The Baffler. Retrieved 2017-03-08.
  2. ^ a b Staff, KOIN 6 News (2016-09-23). "Pro-gun rally in Salem burns Gov. Brown in effigy". KOIN 6. Retrieved 2017-03-08.
  3. ^ a b "'Not my president': Thousands protest Trump in rallies across the U.S." Washington Post. Retrieved 2017-03-08.
  4. ^ a b "Slant 9-29-2016". www.eugeneweekly.com. Retrieved 2017-03-08.
  5. ^ a b Walters, Daniel. "The Live Wire". Inlander. Retrieved 2017-03-08.
  6. ^ a b "Video: Counter-Protester Pulls Gun on Don't Shoot PDX March". www.eugeneweekly.com. Retrieved 2017-03-08.
  7. ^ a b http://www.kgw.com/news/crime/man-with-gun-at-portland-protest-charged-with-2-felonies/267984309
  8. ^ Tri-Cities, About Mike Bivins Originally from Eastern Washington's; journalist, Mike is a freelance; Portl, has lived most of his life in; on, He enjoys telling the news via social media with a smartphone About Corey Pein Corey Pein has been a WW staff writer; State, off since 2006 He grew up in rural Eastern Washington; Olympia ♬, ♬ went to school / in. "A Klansman Surfaces in the Portland Area, Where Neo-Nazi Activity Is Already Bubbling". Willamette Week.
  9. ^ Ruiz, Amy J. "High Alert". Portland Mercury.
  10. ^ "Footage Shows Counter-Protester Pulling Gun on Portland's Black Lives Matter March". Willamette Week. Retrieved 2017-03-08.
  11. ^ xray.fm/broadcasts/16393
  12. ^ "Wyden, Merkley Join Congressional Members to Introduce "NO HATE" Act | U.S. Senator Ron Wyden of Oregon". www.wyden.senate.gov.
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