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Veteran Black Journalists Exit Washington Post

Editors Consider New Format to Replace Local Columns
Marilynn Bailey Dies, Knew What Her Mission Was
Al Jazeera Journalist Killed in Israeli Air Strike
Medill Faculty Helps Inmates Earn College Degrees
Members of News Leaders Group Vote to Dissolve
$500,000 Grant to Serve Communities of Color
‘Watchdog’ Editor Rochester to Lead Fla. Newsroom
Black Media as ‘One Big Cookout’
MSNBC Attracts Most Diverse Cable Audience
Cuba Said to Use U.S. Media to Tarnish Candidates

Short Takes: Ava DuVernay and Isabel Wilkerson; new talks to sell BET; paucity of Asian characters in leading roles; CCNMA: Latino Journalists of California and USC; Soledad O’Brien and “the End of Affirmative Action”; David Ono; Carlos Watson vs. Ben Smith; Joe Madison; Kaity Tong; N.Y. police reporters’ legendary “Shack”; transforming crime reporting; abusive prison guards going free; GBH News race and equity unit; Ted Cruz vs. diversity requirements; Women’s Media Center and news leaders of color; AAJA wants experiences of journalists of color; Brian Bull; Tommy Cummings; growth in “journalism of the displaced.”

Homepage photo: Washington Post Guild announces tentative settlement

Updated Dec. 28, Jan. 4, Jan. 5]

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Courtland Milloy interviewed Dorothy Gilliam, another Post veteran, at the Journal-isms Roundtable Holiday Party in December 2018. Gilliam, who spent 35 years at the Post, was releasing her memoir, “Trailblazer; A Pioneering Journalist’s Fight to Make the Media Look More Like America.” (Credit: Sharon Farmer/sfphotoworks)

Editors Consider New Format to Replace Local Columns

The Washington Post and the Post’s News Guild unit announced Friday they had reached a tentative contract settlement. That news came after longtime Black Post journalists Courtland Milloy, Vanessa Williams, Sydney Trent, Ovetta Wiggins and Darryl D. Fears said they were leaving the newspaper as it sought — and reached — its headcount reduction goal through voluntary buyouts.

Readers will feel the loss of all of those exiting, but the departure of Metro columnists Milloy and John Kelly leaves a particular hole in local news, coverage that Executive Editor Sally Buzbee told Journal-isms that the Post is “committed to maintaining,” though perhaps through a different format.

“We are immensely grateful to Courtland Milloy and John Kelly for their work chronicling this community, its changes and its challenges through the years. Their reporting helped create an ongoing dialogue with our readers that we are committed to maintaining, whether through columns or other formats that deepen our engagement with the Washington region,” Buzbee said Thursday.

Remaining are local columnists Theresa Vargas and Petula Dvorak. Asked whether that means they will continue, spokesperson Kathy Baird said Thursday, “We don’t have any other changes to announce at this time.”

The Post Guild’s tentative contract agreement comes “after a year and a half of protracted and, at times, contentious talks that spilled into public view,” Liam Reilly reported for CNN.

 “The new contract, the union said, guarantees employees’ essential rights, secures raises across the board, and nearly doubles salary floors for the lowest-paid employees at The Washington Post. . . .”

A study by the Guild last year found that “women and people of color are still paid less compared with their male and White colleagues.”

Raising pay minimums would be a boost for people of color, the Guild argued.

Each of those departing brought something unique. Fears (pictured) is one of few environmental journalists of color, as he pointed out in a 2020 interview with Shayna Greene at George Washington University: “I don’t want to disparage all white environmentalists or conservationists or white journalists. It’s just, they have serious blind spots and they don’t see everything and they don’t write with urgency about some of the things that people of color care about,” Fears said then.

Wiggins covered Maryland state politics. “This hurts. Local/state reporting lost another gem,” wrote one admirer on X, formerly Twitter. “A big loss for Maryland voters,” wrote another. “Thanks for your thoughtful, thorough and fair reporting. Wish we had many more like you!”

Wiggins told Journal-isms Saturday, “I hope that I’m remembered for informing and enlightening readers and telling the stories that might not otherwise have found their way into the pages of The Post. In the newsroom, to be remembered as a trusted and generous colleague.”

Trent (pictured) had been an innovative Post editor or reporter since 1999. “I plan to begin work on a book project after getting in some eagerly-awaited R&R. Then we’ll see what’s next. No plans to retire just yet,” she messaged Journal-isms on Saturday.

“Highlights over 24 years: co-leading the Post Magazine during a time when it won two Pulitzers; editing an investigative series that won a Polk and other awards; earning my bonafides as one of the Post’s best narrative editors; Orchestrating and editing coverage for the 2015 papal visit in three cities; creating the popular Inspired Life blog and giving historical and present day Black people their turn in the sun as a writer at the end of my tenure.” 

With a mere 16 years at the Post, David Betancourt wasn’t as senior as some of these other journalists, but as staff writer for the Style section and the Comic Riffs blog, and as daily comics editor, he had his own niche. Earlier this year, Betancour published his first book, “The Avengers Assembled: The Origin Story of Earth’s Mightiest Heroes.”

In promoting the book, Betancourt explained how his perspective as an Afro-Latino informed writing for Afro-Latina superhero Billie Morales. (video)

Paulina Villegas, a Hispanic staff writer on the general assignment desk, where she covers national and breaking news, announced on X that she planned “to pursue other opportunities. It has been an honor to work at a news organization that believes in journalistic excellence as much as it does in diversity and equal opportunity,” she said.

[Dec. 28 update: Shannon Croom (pictured), a Hampton University graduate and a three-time Dow Jones News Fund intern who in 2010 became the first intern on the Post’s Multiplatform Desk, confirmed Dec. 28 that she also is taking the buyout.

[Editors said in their announcement, “Shannon has always had a clear vision of what work and life outside work should look like, nurturing both without being consumed by either. She has also had an unwavering commitment to diversity and to speaking truth about all matters — especially where The Post’s historical lack of diversity leaves us open to making errors and ignorant assumptions about people of color, women or gender identity. Shannon has saved us from these types of miscues many times over the years while also helping colleagues broaden their worldviews, even though that’s not her responsibility. We’re a better news organization because Shannon spent almost half her life with us, and we will miss her both personally and institutionally.

[“Shannon’s standout editing includes her work on the Black sperm donors series in 2022; a pair of stories this year about Black women who have had traumatic birthing experiences; and Helena Andrews-Dyer and Krissah Thompson’s Black motherhood project in 2019. Shannon played a crucial role in ensuring the on-time launch of By the Way and its many city guides and has worked across the newsroom on multidepartment projects such as ‘The Afghanistan Papers.’ . . . .”]

Milloy is leaving after 48 years at the Post, the last 40 as a columnist. His is one of the nation’s longest-running local columns. “I’m not retiring, just moving on, ” Milloy told readers Tuesday. “Maybe your eyeballs will cross paths with my written words in another place at another time. I hope so.” Milloy has been writing on contract with the Post since 2006, after he accepted a previous buyout offer.

In 2001, then-ombudsman Michael Getler wrote, “Milloy’s column is one of the things I like best about the newspaper. He writes a reportorial-style column. He goes to places and talks to people and writes down what they say and do and why they do it. He writes mostly about black people. But they could be white or Hispanic.

“What is important is their humanity and dignity. He takes us to places and people that many of us don’t get to, and he often finds things there that are restorative. He reminds us, through reporting, that at a time when we are surrounded by so much ugliness — an out-of-control gun culture, rampant violence on television and in movies — many people are out there who are not headline-makers but who do things that make us less despairing about where we are headed.” [Milloy even wrote about this column.].

A note from Post editors called Williams (pictured) “an accomplished journalist and cherished colleague who has been a fierce advocate for diversity in our coverage and on our staff” ‘ who has decided to leave The Post after a 27-year career here.

“Vanessa has held numerous writing and editing roles across the newsroom, most recently as a deputy National politics editor steering coverage of voters and the changing American electorate. She has guided illuminating reports about the country’s shifting political terrain and the issues and candidates that animate disparate groups of voters.

“Vanessa has helped surface important stories about Black voters in particular, chronicling the Democratic Party’s most loyal constituency and the ways President Biden and his party work to galvanize their support, as well as the Republican Party’s efforts to recruit Black candidates and appeal to voters of color. . . .”

The editors added, “Vanessa has long been committed to elevating the voices of disenfranchised Americans and to advocating for those from diverse backgrounds within our newsroom. She has been a mentor to countless young journalists, helping them hone their skills, shaping their careers and guiding them on navigating newsroom culture, noting, “She is a former president and board member of the National Association of Black Journalists.”

In offering its own congratulations, the new NABJ-Philadelphia chapter of the national organization noted that Williams was president of the Philadelphia Association of Black Journalists for two terms in the late 1980s and early 1990s, when she worked at the Philadelphia Inquirer. She was NABJ president from 1997 to 1999.

Asked what she’d like to do next, Williams messaged Journal-isms, “Gonna take some time to rest, reflect and refresh. And then figure out the best way to continue the work.”

Among others leaving the Post is Alma Martin Gill (pictured), who worked for the National News and Politics editor, and, separately, writes an advice column, “Ask Alma,” for the National Newspaper Publishers Association, trade organization for the Black press.

[Added Jan. 4: Transportation reporter Luz Lazo (pictured) also took the buyout. “I am exploring options in journalism and outside of journalism. It’s a tough market for journalists so I am open to changing careers if the right opportunity arrives,” she told Journal-isms.]

[Added Jan 5: Justin George (pictured), who covered transit, posted Jan. 2 on Facebook: “Last week I left the Washington Post after nearly 4.5 years covering transit. Why would I leave my dream workplace? To go home. I spent my first 23 years in Colorado, and my last 23 outside of it. It was time — something I’ve wanted badly since the pandemic. A serious health scare the last few months only underlined my desire to be near family. It was a difficult decision to take a buyout but I didn’t see a path where I could have both anytime soon. I was tired of waiting. So I chose Denver.

[“What will I do next? I have no plans to leave journalism & will be looking for opportunities to get back to telling stories, writing more about people & helping younger journalists pursue their dreams the way many helped me. If you know of any remote-based opportunities, I’d be grateful if you send them my way.”]

The Post’s cost-cutting “came in the wake of a brutal financial year for the paper and ahead of the official start of a new CEO,” Kerry Flynn and Eleanor Hawkins reported Tuesday for Axios.

“Flashback: In October, the Post announced its plan to eliminate 240 jobs through voluntary separation packages. The company already had cut 20 positions, axing its gaming vertical and kids section, back in January.

“Earlier this month, about 750 Post staffers participated in a 24-hour strike after the paper’s management and The Post Guild failed to agree on a contract after 18 months of negotiations.”

Asked how the downsizing would affect newsroom diversity, Post spokesperson Baird indicated that interested parties would have to wait and see.

“On the diversity front we do publish our workforce demographics here , which we update annually,” she said.

On Facebook Friday, Fears said he had no regrets about not being one of those in the next count. “After I signed the [voluntary separation package] a week ago today, the sun rose and the sky was a brilliant blue. During the weeklong grace period that allowed me to change my mind, I felt a weight lifting and a feeling that gravity was giving way. Close friends and colleagues who also asked for eligibility before accepting said they felt it too.”

Marilynn Bailey Dies, Knew What Her Mission Was

Marilynn Bailey (pictured), an “eternally upbeat and optimistic” journalist who counted the legendary Bob Maynard as a mentor, served on the board of the National Association of Black Journalists and became managing editor of the Gannett-owned Virgin Island Daily News, died Dec. 15 in Mesa, Ariz., where she was being cared for after a stroke, family members and friends said. She was 76.

Bailey once messaged Journal-isms that, like many of her generation, “I, too, got into the business to give ‘the voiceless’ a voice. My motivation, even when editors were giving me hell, NEVER dimmed. I knew who I was and why I was there!!!

“. . . . It was an junior high school teacher who lit the light for me … when she told me I was a good writer.
I was off and running! Junior high, senior high, and university school newspapers.”

Veteran broadcaster Barbara Rodgers recalled: “It was Marilynn (pictured with daughter, Favinn, in 1989) who called a group of us Bay Area Black journalists together one Sunday morning in 1981 to tell us that she wanted to form a chapter of the NABJ. So BABJA was conceived in her living room and was officially incorporated as an NABJ Chapter the next year in 1982.”

As for Maynard, the former publisher of the Oakland Tribune, news industry leader and namesake of the Robert C. Maynard Institute for Journalism Education, Bailey said, ” We met in Chicago at an NABJ conference … I sat in on an editorial writing session. Had no intention of ever being an editorial writing … just wanted to hear what the icon Bob Maynard had to say.

“We became fast friends and he was not only my mentor in the biz, but I could talk to him about anything. He often confided in me about stuff, too. . . .”

A memorial service is planned for 10:30 a.m. on Jan. 20, at the Jesus Christ Church of Latter Day Saints, 19730 E. Ocotillo Rd. Queen Creek, AZ 85142, the Virgin Islands Daily News reported.

More in the Virgin Islands Daily News.

The Mehdi Hasan Show” tweeted Sunday on X: “In tonight’s final edition of the #handover, @MehdiRHasan and @AymanM remember Al Jazeera journalist, Samer Abu Daqqa, who was killed in Gaza this week. @AymanM: “He was truly a remarkable guy and an amazing friend.” (video)

Al Jazeera Journalist Killed in Israeli Air Strike

Al Jazeera Arabic journalist Samer Abudaqa has been killed and his colleague Wael Dahdouh was wounded in an Israeli attack in Khan Younis, southern Gaza, Al Jazeera reported Dec. 15.

“Cameraman Abudaqa and correspondent Dahdouh were reporting at Farhana school in Khan Younis when they were hit . . . 

“Rescue teams were unable to immediately reach Abudaqa and others at the site due to Israeli bombardment,”  leaving him to bleed to death for hours, NPR added, quoting Al Jazeera. 

“Rescuers just managed to retrieve the cameraman Samer Abudaqa’s body,” a spokesperson for the media network said.

The Committee to Protect Journalists said Thursday, “As of December 21, 2023, CPJ’s preliminary investigations showed at least 68 journalists and media workers were among the more than 20,000 killed since the war began on October 7 — with more than 19,000 Palestinian deaths in Gaza and the West Bank and 1,200 deaths in Israel.” The group said the war has led to the deadliest period for journalists since CPJ began gathering data in 1992.

On NPR and on MSNBC’s “Medhi Hasan Show,” Abudaqa’s former colleague and MSNBC host Ayman Mohyeldin discussed his slain friend. “He was a very dedicated cameraman, somebody who loved his job. He was, as we say, a journalist’s journalist, somebody who loves to shoot and film and then would come back and tell you the best pictures that he captured. He knew Gaza extremely well.


“He was a very funny, very witty but also a very serious cameraman who took his job with a tremendous amount of professionalism. . .  .” Mohyeldin told NPR’s Ayesha Rascoe.


Abudaqa’s colleague Dahdouh was hit by shrapnel on his upper arm, and managed to reach Nasser hospital where he was treated for minor injuries.

Separately, Democratic Sens. Cory Booker of New Jersey, Brian Schatz of Hawaii, Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, Peter Welch of Vermont and Tim Kaine of Virginia called on President Biden Dec. 15 to urge the governments of Israel and Egypt to allow journalists into Gaza to cover the war and protect press freedom.

“They also condemned Hamas’s use of propaganda and harassment, obstruction, and use of physical violence against journalists in Gaza. In their letter to the president, the senators underscored the importance of safe access into Gaza for journalists and the need for accurate and independent reporting from inside the warzone. . . .”

Meanwhile, according to a poll earlier this month from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, Black adults were more likely than white and Hispanic adults to say the U.S. is too supportive of Israel — 44% compared to 30% and 28%, respectively. However, Black Americans weren’t any more likely than others to say the U.S. is not supportive enough of the Palestinians, the Associated Press reported.

In addition, a late October survey of Black American attitudes on the Israel-Hamas war, previewed Nov. 19 at the Journal-isms Roundtable by author Christopher Shell, was officially released Dec. 13.

The “October 20–25 survey found that 43 percent of Black Americans supported some form of ceasefire in Gaza, while 24 percent believed the United States should not be involved in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,” the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace said.

Medill Faculty Helps Inmates Earn College Degrees

“The men in Northwestern University’s Prison Education Program have been called many things — mostly inmates. But these residents of a maximum security state prison in Illinois have been adding new titles: student, scholar, author, and now, college graduate,John Yang reported Dec. 16 for “PBS News Weekend.” Yang was introducing a report from Brandis Friedman of WTTW Chicago. She told viewers that last month the men became the first class of incarcerated graduates from Northwestern University’s Prison Education Program, and that more are on the way.

Four faculty members from the Medill School of Journalism, Media, Integrated Marketing Communications teach in thee program, though the students do not receive a Medill degree, Dean Charles F. Whitaker told Journal-isms. “(Theirs is a degree in ‘general studies/liberal arts’.) We are looking for a way to clear a path for NPEP alums to enroll in our graduate program upon release. It’s a complex issue, however, and we haven’t quite figured out how it might work.”

Members of News Leaders Group Vote to Dissolve

Members of the News Leaders Association, the leading journalism organization for news editors and whose predecessor group for more than four decades monitored diversity progress at newspapers through its annual survey, have voted to dissolve, the association announced Dec. 11.

“We are thrilled to announce that the Joseph L. Brechner Freedom of Information Project at the University of Florida is now officially in charge of Sunshine Week,” which celebrates the First Amendment, “continuing this decades’ old tradition for the foreseeable future,” NLA said in a statement. During an electronic membership meeting in November, 84 percent of the NLA members who participated voted to follow the board’s recommendations and dissolve NLA by June 30, 2024, the group said.

“The NLA Awards program has now been transferred to the prestigious Poynter Institute, as part of NLA’s winding down of programs as we proceed with dissolution. For more information on the Poynter Journalism Prizes, click here.

“All other NLA assets, including the diversity survey, leadership training programs, and historical records of NLA (formed in 2019 in a merger of ASNE, the American Society of News Editors, and APME, the Associated Press Media Editors) will be transferred to other non-profit journalism organizations in 2024 as we finalize work to secure a home for these important programs.”

“We are still working on placing the diversity survey,” NLA President Alison Gerber, editor of the Chattanooga (Tenn.) Times Free Press, reiterated Dec. 11 in response to a question from Journal-isms.

The URL Media team. (Credit: Zamani Feelings).

$500,000 Grant to Serve Communities of Color

“URL Media, a network of media organizations that serve, support and center communities of color and whose leadership and teams represent these populations, secured a one-year $500,000 grant from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation to provide URL the resources to expand its editorial capacity and support the formation of URL’s non-profit arm, URL Collective,” the company announced Monday.

” ‘We are excited to be one of MacArthur’s grantees at this critically important time,’ Sara M. Lomax, co-founder and president of URL Media and president and CEO of WURD Radio, said. ‘URL’s network of more than 25 Black and Brown newsrooms will be pivotal in informing and engaging our communities while addressing misinformation and disinformation in the upcoming presidential election. . . .

“URL Media has grown from its inaugural 8 media partners to now over 25 – a group of influential media organizations that include Black Girl Times, Black Voice News, Epicenter-NYC, Immigrantly Podcast, La Noticia, Native News Online, Our Body Politic, palabra., Pulso, Prism, PushBlack, Sahan Journal, Scalawag, Scroll Stack, TBN24, The Haitian Times, The Oklahoma Eagle, Watch the Yard, and WURD Radio.

“ ‘This grant is a recognition of our collective success,’ said S. Mitra Kalita, co-founder and CEO of URL Media . . . .”

‘Watchdog’ Editor Rochester to Lead Fla. Newsroom

Investigative journalist Mark J. Rochester has been named executive editor of the Sarasota (Fla.) Herald-Tribune, “with a focus on watchdog journalism,” Derek Gilliam reported Dec. 12 for the Gannett newspaper.

Rochester (pictured), who starts Jan. 2, will be one of the few leaders of mainstream newspapers with such a background in investigative journalism. He has held editor positions at the Indianapolis Star, Newsday, Denver Post, Associated Press, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and Detroit Free Press. He also has served as vice president of Investigative Reporters & Editors Inc.

Rochester most recently was managing editor for California-based nonprofit inewsource, where he managed a team of reporters and editors in San Diego.

Rochester told the Herald-Tribune newsroom “that he plans to focus the newsroom’s resources on watchdog reporting, which he called accountability journalism, while highlighting past examples of his newsroom projects’ community impact,” Gilliam wrote.

” ‘Thousands of people count on us to learn about the world, help them make better decisions, get involved in their community, and enjoy the rich culture and resources Southwest Florida offers,’ Rochester said. ‘This is an amazing opportunity we have here at the Herald-Tribune to positively impact the region by doing high-impact journalism and storytelling for our community.’ “

In 2020, Gannett, owner of USA Today and more than 260 local news operations, announced a broad initiative to make its workforce as diverse as the country by 2025.

Black Media as ‘One Big Cookout’

The image of Black media as “One Big Cookout” — ” ‘cookout’ being the go-to metaphor for African American consensus” — shapes an upbeat piece by Gene Seymour in a special media issue of The Nation.

Seymour, in addition to being a noted journalist in his own right, is a nephew of the venerated Chuck Stone, an editor and columnist in both the Black and white press and founding president of the National Association of Black Journalists.

The “cookout” includes everything from “Black Twitter” to Black websites to the legacy Black press.

A provocative passage quoting Byron Allen, media mogul whose properties include TheGrio: “You have to have a seat at the table,” Allen says. “You have to control your image and your likeness and how you’re depicted around the world…. Media is so powerful — it can be weaponized to the point where you had people on January 6 so wound up and angry, they’re trying to overthrow a country that they already control.” But, he adds, “media can be used to unite us. Media can be used to introduce ourselves to each other.”

This columnist is quoted on the nuances involved in seeking to provide “positive news” and the need for high journalistic standards.

MSNBC Attracts Most Diverse Cable Audience

“MSNBC’s programming attracts the most diverse cable audience in America,” the network announced Dec. 13. “In 2023, MSNBC was the #1 network across all of cable among Black viewers for the 6th consecutive year and in Asian viewers. Among Hispanic viewers, MSNBC was #1 across cable news and #2 across all of cable (behind ESPN). MSNBC is home to the Top 20 highest-rated cable news programs among Black Americans. MSNBC’s “PoliticsNation with Al Sharpton” had the highest concentration of Black viewers (41%) of any program on cable news.”

Source: Nielsen, L+SD. 2023 averages through 12/3. Rank based on impressions of regularly-scheduled programs, excluding titles like “special coverage”, “press conference”, “debate analysis”, indictment”, etc.

Cuba Said to Use U.S. Media to Tarnish Candidates

The Cuban government conducted influence operations in the United States ‘aimed at denigrating specific U.S. candidates in Florida’ during the 2022 midterm elections, the U.S. intelligence community said in a report published Monday evening,” Michael Wilner reported Monday for the Miami Herald.

“The report, released by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, said that Cuban officials worked to build relationships with members of the American media who held critical views of Havana’s critics in Congress, and that a network of social media accounts ‘almost certainly covertly tied’ to Cuba ‘amplified derogatory content’ on U.S. politicians viewed as hostile to the Cuban state.

“The declassified portion of the intelligence assessment does not name any specific individuals who were targeted, and much of the report’s section on Cuba’s activities are redacted. The assessment also does not say how effective Havana’s influence campaign was on Florida’s elections. . . . “

Bruno Rodríguez, the Cuban regime’s foreign minister, called the intelligence reports “a total fallacy.”

Separately, “Cuban independent journalist José Luis Tan Estrada (pictured) [said] on his social networks that he was threatened and deprived of internet access for more than 24 hours by a State Security agent in Camagüey [central-eastern Cuba],” Cubanos por el mundo reported Dec. 12.

“According to his account, it happened on Sun, Dec. 10 — International Human Rights Day, which was marked by repression in Cuba — when he was on his way to his French classes.

[…]

“It is worth noting that this is not the first time that José Luis Tan Estrada has been threatened by the Cuban regime. The Cuban journalist exposes information, both in Camagüey and the rest of the island, using social media.”

Friday on X, formerly Twitter, Mari@Regala reported that “State security has begun to repress the relatives of the political prisoners arrested in mass protests” of July 11, 2021. “They met yesterday, December 21, to support each other by not being with their loved ones who are now unjustly imprisoned as political prisoners. Some have already stopped visiting. The dictatorship imprisons your son and prohibits you from meeting other family members.”

Another tweet said, “Relatives of political prisoners speak who gathered to remind the rest of the Cubans, and the world, of the injustice on the Island.”

Meanwhile, Editor DeWayne Wickham, dean emeritus of the Morgan State University School of Global Journalism and Communication, released the winter 2023 issue of the Morgan Global Journalism Review, centered on Cuba. Headlines include “What African Americans Needs to Know About This Embattled Nation” and “My Up-Close Look at the Damage Done by the U.S. Blockade.”

A Journal-isms column summarizing a Dec. 3 Journal-isms Roundtable discussion of Cuba began, “The 60-year U.S. embargo against Cuba, a rallying point for activists who argue that the communist country is being unfairly stigmatized by the Yankees, is being used as a scapegoat by a repressive regime that persecutes independent journalists and seeks to deflect attention from its own mismanagement and incompetence, according to three independent Cuban journalists and a Cuban communications professional.”

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