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Save the Date: June 18 for What We Should Know for ‘America’s 250th’ (Notices 6-6-26)

Save the Date: June 18 for What We Should Know for ‘America’s 250th’ (Notices 6-6-26)

From the Smithsonian Institution: ‘America 250’ Activities
Photos of ‘Race and the Military’ Roundtable Posted
June 9: Webinar — Black Journalists on Cuba’s Crisis
June 9: From Reveal — Gutting of the Voting Rights Act
June 9: SPJ-DC Honors Its New Hall of Famers
June 11: D.C. Library: Discussing the Bernhard Goetz Case
June 12: How Documentary Storytelling Can Shape Policy
June 13: From NABJ: ‘Inspire Black Men Day’
June 15: Webinar – ‘Michael Jackson’s Missing Chapter’
June 15, 16, 24: From Adam Powell — Civic Engagement, AI

June 19: Deadline for Nominations for Vernon Jarrett Medal
June 25: Eugene Robinson at D.C. Library

June 26: From the Medill School: First, Do No Harm
June 30: How Baldwin Continues to Shape Conversations
June 30: Deadline to Nominate a Student Journalist
July 16: ‘Future of Black Communities’ Summit
Registration Open for International Symposium on Journalism
From USC Annenberg: Fellowship on Data Reporting Skills

JOBS
From these journalist organizations
Rebecca Aguilar’s Journalism Job Openings: The June List”
From Society of Professional Journalists
Apply to the Chauncey Bailey JoC Reporting Fellowship
Subscribe to Our YouTube Channel — and We Can Simulcast There!

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It’s America’s Birthday, and He’ll Be Mad if He Wants To,” reads the headline in the New York Times over a Richard Kreitner review of Eddie Glaude Jr.’s book, AMERICA, U.S.A.: How Race Shadows the Nation’s Anniversaries. “In ‘America, U.S.A.,’ Eddie Glaude Jr. looks back at the country’s past anniversaries with skepticism and pain.”

Professor Glaude will be the lead panelist at our next Journal-isms Roundtable, to be held Thursday, June 18, at 7 p.m. Eastern, in person in Washington, D.C., and by Zoom.

Joining him will be Ray Suarez, the onetime “PBS NewsHour” correspondent who has written books on the history of Latinos in America and has been with us previously,

(video) and, tentatively, Gayle Jessup White, public relations and community engagement officer at the Thomas Jefferson Foundation, the nonprofit that owns and operates Monticello. She serves on Virginia’s Citizens Advisory Council on Furnishing and Interpreting the Executive Mansion, where she is founding chair of the Descendant Committee.

We have extended invitation to those with Indigenous and Asian American perspectives as well. Please check back for updates.

Glaude’s bio reads, “One of the nation’s most prominent scholars, Dr. Eddie S. Glaude, Jr., is an educator, author, political commentator and public intellectual who examines the complex dynamics of the
American experience.

“His writings, including Democracy in Black: How Race Still Enslaves the American Soul; In a Shade of Blue: Pragmatism and the Politics of Black America; his New York Times bestseller, Begin Again: James Baldwin’s America and Its Urgent Lessons for our Own; and We Are The Leaders We Have Been Looking For, take an exhaustive look at Black communities, the difficulties of race in the United States, and the challenges we face as a democracy.

“Glaude is the James S. McDonnell Distinguished University Professor in African American Studies at
Princeton University. He is also on the Morehouse College Board of Trustees. He frequently
appears in the media as an MSNOW contributor on programs such as ‘Morning Joe’ and
‘Deadline: White House’with Nicolle Wallace.’ Glaude is a native of Moss Point, Mississippi.”

Who’s in?

You can RSVP by hitting “reply” to this message, if you’re receiving this by email, or by messaging

< jroundtable5 (at) gmail.com > Please specify in-person or Zoom

Zoom information and D.C. location come after RSVPs.

From the Smithsonian Institution: ‘America 250’ Activities

“Join us at the Smithsonian — and in communities nationwide—for public programs that illuminate America’s story.”

Exhibitions

Events

Photos of ‘Race and the Military’ Roundtable Posted

Sharon Farmer’s wonderful photos of our April 21 Roundtable on “Race and the Military” have been posted on Facebook:

The conversation ties in with this Monday development:

“In a move that disproportionately targets women and minority officers, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth recently blocked the promotions of at nine Navy officers who had been selected by a board of senior Navy admirals,” Greg Jaffe and Kate Kelly reported Monday for The New York Times. It is an issue discussed in April by the Journal-isms Roundtable, in which participants concluded that the rich history of people of color in the military deserves to be amplified, not suppressed.

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3

Video < https://youtu.be/DqY_wfRYJ0I > Column: < https://tinyurl.com/44z8tjzz >

 

June 9: Webinar — Black Journalists on Cuba’s Crisis

Cuba is experiencing one of the most severe crises in its modern history — blackouts, mass emigration, food shortages, and deepening political repression. Yet coverage of the island rarely centers Black voices. The NABJ Global Journalism Task Force convenes four Black journalists from across the geographic and ideological spectrum to examine what is really happening in Cuba, how it is being reported, and what is being left out.

Featuring a documentary filmmaker based in Havana, an independent journalist reporting from inside Cuba, a Caribbean broadcast journalist, and a U.S.-based international journalist and global media strategist as moderator, this webinar offers the kind of nuanced, multi-perspective reporting the Cuba story demands. Free and open to journalists and the general public.

MEET THE PANEL:

🎙️ Rafael Peña (Moderator) U.S.-based international journalist, global media strategist, and founder of BLUX Travel Club, with bylines in Travel + LeisureMiami Herald, and Black Enterprise.

🎙️ Liz Oliva Fernández Havana-based journalist, documentary filmmaker, co-founder of Belly of the Beast, and Gracie Award-winning presenter of The War on Cuba.

🎙️ Romardo Lyons Multi-award-winning Jamaican broadcast journalist at Television Jamaica and 2024 recipient of the Prime Minister’s National Youth Award for Excellence in Journalism.

🎙️ Julio Antonio Rojas Portal Independent journalist and Havana correspondent for Richard Prince’s Journal-isms, reporting from inside Cuba despite decades of pressure from state security forces.

Register now — it’s free and open to all: https://CubaCrisis.eventbrite.com

June 9: From Reveal — Gutting of the Voting Rights Act

Passing along an invite to join an important webinar with our colleagues at Mother Jones about the gutting of the Voting Rights Act. Hope you can join us! —Monika Bauerlein, Center for Investigative Reporting

It’s been just over a month since the US Supreme Court gutted what remained of the Voting Rights Act, and the fallout has been staggering. Southern states have moved with alarming speed to redraw their congressional maps in time for the 2026 midterm election and in the process moved to eliminate majority-Black and Democratic districts in Louisiana, Tennessee, Florida, and Alabama.

To help make sense of the Supreme Court’s decision, the fallout from it, and what people are doing to counter it, I’d like to invite you to join our timely online discussion on Tuesday, June 9, at 4 p.m. PT/7 p.m. ET with Mother Jones national voting rights correspondent Ari Berman and Supreme Court reporter Pema Levy. Register for the webinar here.

Register today

June 9: SPJ-DC Honors Its New Hall of Famers

A science writer covering climate change, its impacts and related politics [Seth Borenstein]. An editor who has led his publication to national renown as the LGBTQ community’s “newspaper of record” [Kevin Naff]. An investigative journalist whose work – individually and with collaborators —  has exposed political corruption, improper conduct among Ohio prosecutors, and U.S. workers dying on the job for lack of shade and water [Cheryl W. Thompson].

These are the 2026 Hall of Fame honorees chosen by the Society of Professional Journalists’ Washington, D.C., Pro Chapter. The honorees will be feted at the chapter’s Dateline Awards dinner on Tuesday, June 9, at the National Press Club. SPJ DC also will announce the winners of its 2026 Dateline Awards competition, honoring the best journalism produced in the District of Columbia and metropolitan Maryland and Virginia. . . .

At the dinner, the DC Chapter also will present its Distinguished Service Award to a journalist whose work and or actions have made a positive difference on our craft and on society.

The 2026 honoree is Karen Attiah, a prize-winning journalist whose work examines the intersections of race, culture, gender, media and international affairs. . . .

July 16: Future of Black Communities Summit

The Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, America’s Black think tank, invites you to save the date for the 2026 Future of Black Communities Summit — taking place July 16, 2026, in Washington, DC.
Each year, the Summit brings together policymakers, researchers, advocates, and community leaders to examine the challenges and opportunities defining the future of Black communities — and to build toward solutions that last.
Details on speakers, agenda, and registration are coming soon. We hope to see you there!
From Knight Ccenter at University of Texas at Austin: We’re excited to announce the first slate of speakers for the 2026 International Symposium on Journalism (ISOJ), a global, hybrid conference focused on the future of journalism.

Representing leading media organizations, universities and innovative ventures, this group brings together some of the most influential voices in the field today. They are newsroom leaders, bold thinkers and innovators helping shape what’s next for journalism.

At ISOJ 2026, they will lead:

  • Insightful keynote sessions
  • Timely, thought-provoking panels
  • Interactive conversations about the most pressing issues facing journalism worldwide

Take advantage of discounted rates for this unique global conference, which will take place online and in person at the University of Texas at Austin from Sept. 17-18, 2026.

Early Bird Registration: March 30 to July 20, 2026

General Admission Rate: US $250

University faculty/staff Rate: US $150

Student Rate: US $30

Virtual Experience: US $20

REGISTER NOW

Meet our confirmed speakers!

JOBS

From these journalist organizations
Rebecca Aguilar’s Journalism Job Openings: “The June List”
From Society of Professional Journalists
JOURNALISM JOBS
The Journal Gazette in Fort Wayne, Indiana, is hiring a local government/general assignment reporter. Bachelor’s degree in journalism or related field and at least two years of daily newspaper reporting experience preferred. Email resume, cover letter, three references and at least six clips. Deadline to apply is June 22.

WFAE-FM, Charlotte, North Carolina’s NPR station, seeks a senior editor. Experience guiding long-term, complex multimedia journalism projects from conception to completion and in a live broadcast environment is preferred.

KFSN-TV in Fresno, California, is hiring a news photographer. At least one year of experience as a photojournalist with live transmission technologies is preferred. A high school diploma or equivalent is required.

Looking for journalism jobs and internships? Check out the SPJ Career Center. And if you have a job you’d like to advertise in Leads, check out the SPJ media kit.

SPJ – Va. Chapter:

Southwest Virginia Accountability Reporter – Cardinal News (Southwest, VA): The independent, nonprofit Cardinal News publication is looking for an accountability reporter to lead coverage in Southwest Virginia. This role is perfect for a journalist passionate about digging into local transparency, governance and community impact. Freelancers are also welcome to inquire. Apply directly by contacting jobs@cardinalnews.org.

Digital Producer & Audience Engagement Editor – The Virginian-Pilot (Norfolk/Virginia Beach, VA): Virginia Media is hiring a dynamic editor to work at the center of the newsroom, collaborating across teams to shape audience engagement strategy and connect local reporting with digital readers. View details and application instructions here.

Reporter/Multimedia Journalist – Lockwood Broadcast Group (Charlottesville, VA): Lockwood Broadcast Group is looking for a full-time, multi-media reporter to join their television news team in Charlottesville. This role involves enterprise reporting, shooting, editing, and delivering compelling visual stories for the local community. Apply via the Virginia Association of Broadcasters.

General Assignment Reporter – The News-Gazette (Lexington, VA): One of Virginia’s oldest and most-awarded local news organizations is seeking a motivated, energetic full-time reporter (36 hours/week). This general assignment role places a strong emphasis on education and fire & rescue beats, alongside regular feature stories. The position offers competitive pay, auto mileage reimbursement, and a full benefits package. Learn more and apply by contacting Matt Paxton at publisher@thenews-gazette.com.

See more job postings via the VPA, here: https://www.vpa.net/job/

From Investigative Reporters & Editors:
Apply to the Chauncey Bailey JoC Reporting Fellowship

IRE is now accepting applications for the Chauncey Bailey Journalist of Color Investigative Reporting Fellowship, a year-long program designed to support and prepare journalists of color for strong careers in investigative reporting.

The fellowship provides extensive training, mentorship and data support, including attendance at an IRE Data Journalism Bootcamp, NICAR Conference, IRE Conference and AccessFest.

The application deadline is Sept. 1.

Learn more and apply.

APPLY

From USC Annenberg: Fellowship on Data Reporting Skills

APPLY

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From Jackie Greene, our Roundtable producer:

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