Mainstream Media Continues to Fail Black Voices

Don’t be fooled by the new ‘woke’ race coverage — it’s business as usual

Jeremy Helligar
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Colin Jost and Michael Che on Weekend Update, “Saturday Night Live.” Photo: YouTube

“A change is gonna come,” Sam Cooke sang on his 1964 album, Ain’t That Good News. Five months later, with the Civil Rights Act of 1964, it did. But the burden of being Black in America has barely budged.

Changes, though, keep coming. Ever since George Floyd’s murder last year ushered in a new age of racial unrest and reckoning in the U.S., many mainstream publications have shifted focus to race-related content. That has resulted in increased awareness and more freelance work for me, but I’ve remained wary.

Is it just about keeping up appearances, or do the White editors and executives who call most of the shots want to enact meaningful change? I’m skeptical — and not just because it’s my nature to have doubts.

I’ve written several race-themed pieces for one of these content-shifting websites over the last year. It’s a major player tied to an American publishing institution, one so iconic and globally reputable that my Australian husband grew up with it. As encouraged as I was by the steady stream of “How Not to Be Racist” content, their commitment to Black careers hasn’t held up as well.

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