1st Black Journalist in Role; Todd Stepping Down
NAHJ Board Backs Florida’s LGBTQ+ Population
Jemele Hill’s Spotify Deal Said to Be Ending
Shaun King Has ‘Painful Nerve Condition’
Jessie Maple, Independent Film Maker, Dies at 86
Homepage photo credit: Christopher Dilts/MSNBC
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1st Black Journalist in Role; Todd Stepping Down
White House correspondent Kristen Welker will succeed Chuck Todd as moderator of NBC’s “Meet the Press,” Todd announced at the end of Sunday’s show.
The appointment makes Welker, who is biracial, the first Black journalist to become permanent moderator of one of the major Sunday morning news interview shows.
Todd, 51, who has served as “Meet the Press” moderator since 2014, passes the baton in September and becomes NBC’s chief political analyst.
He praised Welker as his appropriate successor. “I’ve had the privilege of working with her from essentially her first day, and let me just say she’s the right person in the right moment,” Todd told viewers.
In turn, Welker tweeted, “@chucktodd has been a mentor and friend since my first day at @NBCNews. I’ve learned so much from sitting with him at the anchor desk and simply experiencing his passion for politics. I’m humbled and grateful to take the baton and continue to build on the legacy of @MeetThePress.”
The appointment of a Black moderator is a landmark for programming that in the early 2000s had been frequently criticized for its low level of Black participation. “Only 8 percent of the guests on the major Sunday morning talk shows over the past 18 months were African Americans, with three people accounting for the majority of those appearances,” the National Urban League found in 2005.
By 2010, as NBCUniversal sought approval for its proposed $30 billion merger with cable giant Comcast — ultimately successful — Black members of Congress secured a pledge from NBC that “from interviews with political newsmakers to our roundtable discussions, ‘Meet the Press’ is committed to having a more diverse group of voices on the show whose opinions and expertise reflect, not just the news of the day, but the cultural, economical and political landscape of our country.”
Welker was being groomed to succeed Todd, the Daily Beast reported last year, quoting “30 Rock insiders” as saying that “Todd remains unpopular with viewers and critics and that the Meet the Press franchise has been overexposed.” And while “the Sunday morning broadcast shows have declined from the social and political influence they once held,” as Jeremy Barr noted in the Washington Post, they remain important newsmaking platforms.
Benjamin Mullin wrote Sunday for the New York Times, “Ms. Welker, 46, is a longtime NBC stalwart. She was an intern for ‘Today’ in 1997 and has been working for the network full time since 2010. She began covering the White House for NBC a year later and has covered presidents abroad in Belgium, England, Austria, Poland and Japan. In 2020, she was widely praised for her moderation of the final presidential debate between President Donald J. Trump and Joe Biden.”
Welker’s performance at that debate, where she was the first Black woman in such a role since ABC’s Carole Simpson in 1992, demonstrated the importance of diversity in the moderator’s role, media writers said at the time.
“Welker’s line of questioning on race and policing in this country only helped to highlight how the importance of representation in journalism, as she posed the only question in the entire debate cycle about child separation at the border — an important issue that has often been overshadowed by coronavirus policy questioning,” Austa Somvichian-Clausen wrote for The Hill.
“Welker asked President Trump how the parents of more than 500 migrant children taken from their families will be found, to which, after repeated follow-ups, the president finally said he was ‘trying very hard’ to find them.
“During the debate’s segment on climate change, Welker was unique in pointing out that people of color are much more likely to live near oil refineries and chemical plants. At one now heavily discussed point on Thursday night she asked former vice president Joe Biden about ‘the talk’ that all BIPOC parents have with their kids about how to behave to avoid unnecessary confrontation with police officers.
“Perhaps most notably, President Trump was asked by Welker about racial strife arising in the country.”
Welker’s question, added Margaret Sullivan in The Washington Post, “not only prompted some of the most enlightening answers of Thursday night’s final presidential debate. It also perfectly illustrated why American journalists in newsrooms across the country have been so righteously indignant in recent months about matters of race in their own organizations.”
Two years earlier, Welker pressed then-press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders, now governor of Arkansas, on whether Trump used the N-word. Former White House aide Omarosa Manigault Newman alleged in her book, “Unhinged: An Insider’s Account of the Trump White House,” that Trump did repeatedly on the set of “The Apprentice.” “I have heard the tape,” Manigault Newman said.
“Can you stand at the podium and guarantee the American people they’ll never hear Donald Trump utter the N-word on a recording in any context?” Welker asked Sanders.
“I can’t guarantee anything,” Sanders responded. “But I can tell you that the president addressed this question directly. I can tell you that I’ve never heard it.”
In 2020, Welker told Glamour magazine how her ethnicity informed her reporting.
“As storefronts shattered and fires burned blocks from their home in Philadelphia, my father, a white man, told me he never thought he would see protests like those he and my mother, a Black woman, witnessed in the 1960s. ‘History is repeating itself,’ he warned.
“His words stopped me cold.
“My parents got married three years after the Supreme Court, in 1967, struck down laws banning interracial marriage. Their courage to wed 50 years ago shaped my view of the world, and my role in it.
“Growing up as a biracial child, the idea of helping people of different races and backgrounds better communicate inspired me to become a journalist. My father’s words reminded me that the sense of responsibility that got me into journalism more than 20 years ago is what needs to guide me right now.
“With protesters demanding change after George Floyd’s death, it is more important than ever that everyone has a voice and elected leaders from the White House to City Hall are held accountable for their words and actions, or lack thereof.
“The same year the Supreme Court paved the way for my parents’ marriage, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. spoke to students at a junior high school not far from my childhood home. ‘And when you discover what you will be in your life,’ Dr. King said, ‘set out to do it as if God Almighty called you at this particular moment in history to do it.’
“I keep those words close in this moment, but also after the fires are out and our neighborhoods appear back to their usual rhythms. Because much work remains, and we each have a role to play.”
A staff memo on Welker’s appointment from Rebecca Blumenstein, NBC News president of editorial, and Carrie Budoff Brown, NBC News senior vice president of politics, reads:
“Kristen, no stranger to Meet the Press viewers, is a regular fill-in on the Sunday broadcast, anchors Meet the Press NOW every Monday and Tuesday, and has been Chuck’s co-anchor on election nights since 2021. She is the ideal journalist to build on the Meet the Press legacy.
“Kristen cut her teeth as a broadcast journalist working at ABC and NBC affiliates in Rhode Island, California, and Pennsylvania before settling into the weekend anchor chair at WCAU in Philadelphia. She joined NBC News in 2010 as a correspondent in Burbank, California, and arrived the following year in Washington and later was named Chief White House correspondent. She is a campaign trail veteran and has covered the White House and every corner of Washington, spanning three presidential administrations.
“She has masterfully moderated primary and general election presidential debates and her sharp questioning of lawmakers is a masterclass in political interviews. She is a dogged reporter who relishes getting big scoops and is widely admired throughout the bureau and the network for her deeply collaborative nature.”
- Brooke Lea Foster, New York Times: For NBC’s Kristen Welker, Love Took Its Time (March 10, 2017)
- Sam Reed, Glamour: Kristen Welker Never Intended to Become the Story (April 2022)
- Georgia Slater, People: NBC’s Kristen Welker Reflects on Infertility Journey, Tells Families ‘Don’t Give Up’: ‘It’s All Worth It’ (April 28)
- Brian Stelter, CNN: Both left and right praise debate moderator Kristen Welker while Trump keeps fact-checkers busy (Oct. 23, 2020)
- Claire Yuan, Harvard Crimson: ‘First Draft of History’: Kristen Welker ’98 Charts Path from Crimson Reporting to White House
NAHJ Board Backs Florida’s LGBTQ+ Population
NAHJ is holding its annual convention July 12 – 15 in Miami, a selection made five years ago, before the current political climate in the state.
Florida famously passed a “Don’t Say Gay” law [PDF] that prohibits classroom discussion about sexual orientation or gender identity in certain grades. Criticism of the law by the Disney Co., one of the state’s largest employers, led to recriminations against the company from Florida officials.
The convention is sold out, Executive Director David Peña told the board, with the organization seeking to find a way to accommodate 1,600 people at a hotel that has a capacity for 1,300. The group has a waiting list. Registration closed two days early. Peña also said NAHJ has hired additional security at the hotel.
On April 11, the organization Equality Florida “took the extraordinary step of issuing a travel advisory, warning of the risks posed to the health, safety, and freedom of those considering short or long term travel, or relocation to the state,” it declared. “The move comes in response to a wave of safety inquiries Equality Florida has received following the passage of laws that are hostile to the LGBTQ community, restrict access to reproductive health care, repeal gun safety laws, foment racial prejudice, and attack public education by banning books and censoring curriculum.”
The NAHJ board, meeting electronically, voted unanimously to accept the recommendations of its LGBTQ+ advisory committee to prepare a statement of support for its LGBTQ+ members and for that community in general, and to organize any events away from the convention hotel in “queer-friendly” places.
Jemele Hill’s Spotify Deal Said to Be Ending
“Another prominent podcaster is leaving Spotify Technology SA, as the company reverses many of its biggest investments in original audio and loses yet another Black voice,” Ashley Carman and Lucas Shaw reported Friday for Bloomberg News.
Spotify declined to comment.
Bloomberg also mentioned Black stars who have left Spotify, including filmmaker Ava DuVernay, who ” left her agreement during an uproar last year over Joe Rogan, Spotify’s biggest exclusive podcaster, after he shared alleged Covid misinformation and a clip surfaced online of him using the N-word.”
Although Bloomberg said Hill was leaving Spotify, and not the other way around, Hill tweeted, “People: A lot of what’s been reported just isn’t true. My podcast hasn’t been cancelled. I never asked Spotify for $100M. This shit is truly comical.”
“Next week’s guest is: Sabrina Elba.
“In the coming weeks: Blair Underwood, Kasi Lemmons, JR Smith, Kenny Latimore and more.”
Asked by Journal-isms to clarify, Hill replied, “When I have something to say, I’ll say it. I’m not at liberty to clarify beyond what I’ve already said. My podcast has not been cancelled.”
Shaun King Has ‘Painful Nerve Condition’
“Journalist and social activist Shaun King said in a new social media post that he’s been diagnosed with a painful nerve condition that’s left him unable to do some of the most basic actions without experiencing ‘excruciating’ agony,” Bruce C.T. Wright reported May 24 for NewsOne.
“Because he said his insurance won’t cover the recommended treatment, the 43-year-old reached out to his more than 3 million followers on social media in an appeal to help him pay for the medical procedures.
“King said in an Instagram post that he is suffering from a condition called occipital neuralgia, which he called ‘the worst pain I’ve experienced in my adult life.’ He said it was the result of a lingering spinal injury he said he sustained more than two decades ago.
“ ‘At times it hurts to move my head in any direction,’ he wrote in the post on Tuesday that showed him smiling and holding up a peace sign with his fingers. ‘It can hurt to talk, chew, even blink my eyes. It can now hurt to touch my hair or even touch parts of my face. It’s awful.’
“King also said his doctors have identified some ‘promising procedures’ to address his condition. However, those procedures would not be covered by his health insurance, he added. . . . “
Jessie Maple, Independent Film Maker, Dies at 86
“Jessie Maple, a bacteriologist who took up filmmaking in the 1970s, became the first Black woman to join the camera operators union in New York and went on to direct trailblazing independent films about drug addiction, love, sisterhood and friendship, died May 30 at her home in Atlanta,” Harrison Smith reported Friday for The Washington Post. “She was 86.
“Her family announced the death in a statement shared by the Black Film Center & Archive at Indiana University, which had previously hailed her as ‘the first African-American woman to direct an independent feature film in the post-civil rights era.’ The statement did not cite a cause.
“Ms. Maple, who was also known by her married name of Jessie Maple Patton, was working as a lab technician when she decided she ‘wanted something more exciting,’ as she later told the New York Times. She turned first to journalism and then to film, working as a camera operator and a documentarian before releasing her first feature, ‘Will’ (1981), a family drama that she made for less than $12,000. . . .”
Terence Samuel Named USA Today Top Editor
June 2, 2023
Gannett Faces Walkout, Claim of White Victimhood
First Trans Candidate to Run for NABJ President
‘PBS NewsHour’ Aiming to Elevate the ‘Overlooked’
‘Get Down, Get Down . . . Thank You, Lord Jesus’
Let’s Hear More About the Cooper Andrewses
‘Amputation Epidemic in the Black Community’
Homepage photo: USA Today newsroom
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Gannett Faces Walkout, Claim of White Victimhood
Terence Samuel, a veteran journalist whose career includes being No. 2 at TheRoot.com, writing a book about the U.S. Senate and his current job as vice president and executive editor of NPR News, Friday was named editor-in-chief of USA Today.
The Trinidad-born Samuel starts July 10, and will be the first Black person to have the job on a permanent basis. (Michael McCarter holds the position now on as interim editor).
“Samuel will oversee the flagship national publication and guide the next phase of growth and innovation at USA TODAY,” an announcement said. “In his role, Samuel will shape content that serves over 75 million readers monthly who trust USA TODAY as a clear, concise and facts-based news source.”
The appointment comes amid low morale at the national newspaper and throughout the Gannett newspapers, which comprise the nation’s largest news operation.
“Journalists for the largest newspaper chain in the country will walk off the job next week, in a series of strikes staged in part to protest the leadership of the company’s chief executive,” Elahe Izadi reported Thursday for The Washington Post.
“Hundreds of staffers for 24 Gannett newspapers, including the Arizona Republic, Austin American-Statesman and the Palm Beach Post, say they will not report to work for a day or two starting Monday, forfeiting pay and forgoing assignments ranging from city council meetings to high school sports championship games. At some papers, the strikes begin Tuesday. . . .”
Moreover, a white former editor and content strategist at the Democrat and Chronicle in Rochester, N.Y., is suing Gannett Co. Inc., and its newspapers in Rochester and Utica, N.Y., claiming he is the victim of race-based discrimination.
In 2020, Gannett, the 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 and to expand the number of journalists focused on covering issues related to race and identity, social justice and equality,” Nathan Bomey reported at the time for USA Today.
When the most recent USA Today editor, Nicole Carroll, stepped down effective May 1, the newspaper wrote that “Carroll, who is also Gannett’s President of News, championed greater diversity, equity and inclusion at USA TODAY. Under her leadership, USA TODAY hired more journalists of color and in 2020 announced plans to add or reassign journalists to 20 new beats to expand coverage of inequities in the U.S.”
Gannett Chief Content Officer Kristin Roberts said in a statement, “Terry will accelerate our transformation of USA TODAY, embracing our role and our roots as America’s newspaper with the core mission of being nothing less than essential to the readers, viewers and listeners we serve nationwide. With his reputation of leading award-winning newsrooms and fostering cultural change, Terry will be instrumental in the next phase of growth at USA TODAY.”
However, David Folkenflik wrote for NPR, “Samuel, currently NPR’s vice president of newsgathering and executive editor, will inherit a once-proud news title devastated by cuts. USA Today’s parent company, Gannett, has cut 54 percent of its staff over the past four years, according to Jon Schleuss, president of the News Guild, which represents hundreds of journalists throughout the company, though not at USA Today.
“Samuel will depart a national broadcast network with vast reach and its own financial strains: NPR recently underwent serious cutbacks that included a 10-percent reduction in staff due to a collapse of podcast sponsorships.”
Folkenflik also wrote, “Samuel is known within NPR as an affable figure who operates with confidence born of decades of Washington experience.
“In a brief interview, Samuel said he arrived at NPR the day before then President Donald Trump fired FBI Director Jim Comey.
” ‘It’s been the craziest of times from the beginning until the very end,’ Samuel said of his NPR experience. ‘This is a far more collaborative newsroom than the one I walked into. I particularly love that we are faster, broader and deeper than we were — both digitally and on the air.’ “
The lawsuit against Gannett was filed in Rochester in April by Steven Bradley, who worked for the D&C for 21 years beginning in 1999, as Will Astor wrote April 24 in the Rochester Beacon.
Seeking class-action status, the suit alleges that “Gannett moved forward with the implementation of the Reverse Race Discrimination Policy resulting in numerous highly qualified non-minority employees finding their employment terminated or suffering other adverse employment actions based purely on their race.”
“There can be no question that Mr. Bradley’s termination was directly based on his race.”
At the Gannett-owned Times-Dispatch in Utica, N.Y., “Ms. Rayam, a Black female, was selected for the [editor’s] position despite not having expressed interest or applying in the first instance, and despite having far less qualifications than Mr. Bradley, including no prior newsroom management experience, having only previously worked as a reporter and community engagement editor,” the suit says.
It also says that “the Gannett employee tasked with overseeing talent recruitment and retention, Hollis Towns, informed Gannett managers that no more straight White males should be hired going forward.”
Rayam did not respond to a request for comment, and Mike Kilian, the Democrat and Chronicle editor, also named in the lawsuit, referred comment to a Gannett spokesperson. The spokesperson said, “We do not comment on pending litigation.”
“I’m quite proud of the work we did at Gannett to improve newsroom diversity, particularly at the leadership level, and to measure and publicly report our progress to better reflect the communities we serve,’ Stewart, a Black journalist, told Journal-isms. “It is my hope that this lawsuit does not have a chilling effect on these efforts at my former company and in the news industry at large.
“The upward trajectory of Sheila Rayam’s career since her first promotion to top newsroom editor – not to mention other newsroom leaders of color who have enjoyed similar success with Gannett and beyond – is a testament to her leadership abilities and journalistic talent. At the end of the day, those are the qualities that count.”
First Trans Candidate to Run for NABJ President
Tre’vell Anderson, who identifies as “a Black trans (nonbinary) person,” has become the first such official presidential candidate in the 47-year-history of the National Association of Black Journalists. Anderson and Ken Lemon, the current vice president/broadcast, have been certified and were permitted to begin campaigning Friday.
Roland Martin, the entrepreneurial journalist and former NABJ board member who had said he was considering a run for the job, decided against it, he told Journal-isms. “My time is focused on growing and expanding Black Star Network,” Martin messaged.
Electronic voting takes place July 10 to Aug. 4.
“I have experience working with NABJ on a local, regional and national level and a history of working with and fighting for journalists,” Lemon said in his official statement. “I will bring those principles to my work for you as NABJ President. That includes long-term plans to produce more Black news leaders, strengthen finances to better serve members, connect with local chapters, and bring more access to your Board of Directors.
“My plans work best when they include active input and engagement from members. That builds inclusion and creates continuity.”
Anderson’s official statement says, “As NABJ approaches its 50th anniversary, it’s important to ensure we’ll continue to be impactful and relevant for the next half-century.
“But that can’t happen if our organization is not meeting this moment in our industry in the best ways possible, and if we don’t lead with an eye toward embracing said future. As an independent journalist that works across print, digital, and broadcast — in news and entertainment — I am a reflection of the realities of journalism today, and tomorrow. As NABJ President, I’d help chart an informed path forward that emboldens our members to have the careers they desire.”
These candidates are unopposed: Walter Smith Randolph, vice president/broadcast; Madison Carter, secretary and Eva D. Coleman, Region III director. Vance Lang and Amir Vera are vying for vice president/digital.
Candidates for student representative are Anthony Council of the University of North Texas; Grant Hines of High Point University and Alex Perry of Northwestern University.
“We’re grateful to have a hand in widening the aperture,” said co-anchor Geoff Bennett. (Video: PBS/YouTube)
‘PBS NewsHour’ Aiming to Elevate the ‘Overlooked’
If there was doubt that there are new priorities at the “PBS NewsHour,” now co-hosted by Geoff Bennett, a Black journalist, and Amna Nawaz, who is Pakistani-American, Wednesday’s show should remove it. The new co-anchors took over in January.
Among Wednesday’s stories was one on Uganda LGBTQ+ leader Steven Kabuye, who fears for his life after his country enacted one of the world’s harshest anti-LGBTQ+ laws. He said a gang came looking for him, and when they couldn’t find him, beat Kabuye’s colleague so badly he almost lost his life. The “NewsHour” showed the colleague in the hospital.
Another focused on police violence against Asian Americans. Data “show that, as a whole, they experience low rates of fatal police violence. But new research shows the risks they face are much higher.“
A third was about Sixto Cancel, a Black man who grew up painfully in foster care and founded an organization, Think of Us, to help ensure that his experience wouldn’t be repeated with others. “I was 11 months old when social workers placed me into foster care because of my mother’s drug addiction and poverty issues. I was adopted at 9. And that adoptive family was supposed to be my forever family. But, unfortunately, it was riddled with racism and extreme abuse,” Cancel said.
New priorities for the show? Bennett (pictured) messaged Journal-isms, “At the heart of public media is a mandate to reflect the country we serve. We take that seriously and have been intentional about elevating life experiences and voices that are often overlooked. It’s part of the NewsHour legacy, and we’re grateful to have a hand in widening the aperture and sharing a broad array of stories and conversations.”
The spray of bullets very close by stopped the reporter, her crew and the woman being interviewed and they dove out of camera range. (Credit: YouTube)
‘Get Down, Get Down . . . Thank You, Lord Jesus’
“A reporter with ABC station WATN in Memphis, Tennessee, was interviewing a local woman about the rise in crime when a drive-by shooting erupted in their vicinity and they dove for cover,” Rosemary Rossi reported Saturday for The Wrap.
“ ‘We report about the city’s crime problem almost every day, but today that problem hit home for one of our crews while doing a story about crime in Whitehaven,’ WATN anchor Richard Ransom said. ‘We were interviewing a woman about the Memphis PD’s plan to enforce the city’s teen curfew when out of nowhere [there was] a drive-by shooting across the street.’
“Yolanda Cooper Sutton was spelling her name for the on-the-scene reporter, Jay Jones, when the spray of bullets very close by stopped them in their tracks and they dove out of camera range.
“ ‘Get down, get down, get down, just stay down and get down,’ she told Jones calmly. ‘That’s OK. Thank you, Lord Jesus. Stay down and get down.’ . . .”
Let’s Hear More About the Cooper Andrewses
Sometimes stories make the reader go “Wait a minute!,” and the tale of Cooper Andrews is one.
Andrews’ story was part of a larger Memorial Day package in The Washington Post. Andrews, 26, of Cleveland Heights, Ohio, was a former U.S. Marine who volunteered to go to Ukraine and was killed there on April 19. He was an African American who was passionate about social justice and inspired to go to Ukraine partly by the 2014 police killing of 12-year-old Tamir Rice in Cleveland, his mother, Willow Andrews, said.
“In November of 2022, Cooper joined the Foreign Legion and left for Ukraine,” Willow Andrews says on the GoFundMe page she created. “Before he departed we had conversations about Spain and fascism and history, and he made it clear to me that he was going because of the humanitarian needs of the people there. He was so disturbed by what was happening, and for him, it wasn’t just about war in the abstract as it is often represented in the media – we bombed this or that, drone strikes and weapons donations – but about the lives of everyday people struggling against a fascist regime. . . .”
Are there more like Andrews? Terrell Jermaine Starr, the only Black correspondent who has been in Ukraine and Eastern Europe for the long haul, messaged Journal-isms, “I’m working on a story about black Americans who go to Ukraine to work and fight.” He told the Journal-isms Roundtable last year, “the fewer Black journalists in this part of the world, the fewer options for us to really understand what’s happening.
“I believe that Black people have a better understanding of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine than anybody who isn’t Ukrainian or from that part of the world. I think that because of our own experiences in dealing with white supremacy in this part of the world, I think we can provide unique context with the Russian supremacy that’s going on against Ukraine.”
In Ukraine, the Kyiv Post reported May 1, “In Cooper’s messages to his friends, the volunteer wrote that [Russian Premier Vladimir] Putin’s regime must disappear, and he wanted Kharkiv to survive.’
“On February 27, 2022, Volodymyr Zelenskyy appealed to foreigners who want to ‘join the defense of security in Europe and the world’ to join the ranks of the International Legion. According to official figures, citizens of 55 countries serve in the Legion. The British, Americans, Poles, and Canadians have shown the greatest solidarity with Ukraine.
“Since February 24, more than 100 foreign volunteers who fought for Ukraine have been killed in combat. The following countries have suffered the greatest losses: Georgia, Belarus, the US, Azerbaijan, and Great Britain.
Andrews’ story was reported by some national networks and by local outlets, but was notably absent from the traditional Black press, particularly the Don King-owned Cleveland Call and Post.
The May 29 Washington Post account, from the larger story by Alex Horton and Dan Lamothe, reads:
“Andrews, 26, had been in Ukraine for months, having gravitated toward the opportunity to fight fascism, said his mother, Willow Andrews. He knew it was dangerous, she said, but he was eager to help evacuate those in danger.
“He kind of had the attitude, ‘If I don’t do it, who’s going to do it?’” his mother recalled.
“Andrews, who grew up outside Cleveland, was passionate about social justice and inspired by the 2014 police killing of 12-year-old Tamir Rice, his mother said. Since Andrews’s death, his family has raised more than $20,000 in his name to assist charities focused on food insecurity and community organizing.
“Andrews, who was Black and had become an Eagle Scout as a teenager, liked the structure of the Marine Corps, his mother said, though he was disturbed by the racism he encountered in the ranks. In one case, he was called a ‘Black nationalist’ by White colleagues who confronted him for reading a book about Malcolm X, Willow Andrews said.
“ ‘They just couldn’t grasp the idea that he could want all kinds of knowledge and still just be a person,’ she said.
“His experiences were better in his Ukrainian unit, his mother said. ‘We are brothers, Mom,’ she recalled him saying.
“The family held a memorial service for Cooper on May 20 at Forest Hill Presbyterian Church in his hometown of Cleveland Heights.
“When his remains return to the United States, Cooper will be buried alongside his father in Cleveland, his mother said. She has sought help from the Ukrainian community in Ohio after losing faith that the State Department will get the job done, she said. Communication with the U.S. government, she said, has been frustrating, inconsistent and at times exasperating. She has relied, in part, on updates from European families with connections to her son’s unit.
“A State Department official, speaking on the condition of anonymity under ground rules set by the agency, defended the administration’s efforts in this case and others, saying the U.S. government ‘takes its role in such a situation very seriously’ and shares information with families ‘whenever possible.’ ”
‘Amputation Epidemic in the Black Community’
“The 5th Edition of ‘AMERICA IN BLACK’ will air Sunday, June 4 at 10 PM ET/PT on BET, BET Her and available on BET+ and The CBS News Streaming Network,” BET announces.
“This installment will feature an eye-opening investigation on the amputation epidemic in the Black community reported by Pulitzer Prizewinning journalist Wesley Lowery; an empowering profile of actor, producer, and best-selling author Gabrielle Union star of the upcoming BET+ original docuseries ‘Gabrielle Union: My Journey to 50’ and a profile of celebrated historian, professor, and filmmaker Henry Louis “Skip” Gates Jr.
“I wanted to call out the heart-wrenching investigative piece on unnecessary amputations with correspondent Wesley Lowery as the anchor. Please see an exclusive clip of the segment here.“
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Richard Prince’s Journal-isms originates from Washington. It began in print before most of us knew what the internet was, and it would like to be referred to as a “column.” Any views expressed in the column are those of the person or organization quoted and not those of any other entity. Send tips, comments and concerns to Richard Prince at journal-isms+owner@
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View previous columns (before Feb. 13, 2016)
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