The custom-built installation will feature magazines, newspapers, art and other forms of media owned and published by Black folks representing the diversity of the African diaspora.
Civil-rights and civil-society leaders will hold an emergency press conference to announce an escalation of the #StopToxicTwitter campaign and to issue an urgent call to Twitter’s largest advertisers to pause their buys on the platform.
Of the five major platforms —Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Twitter and YouTube — only TikTok explicitly prohibits targeted misgendering and deadnaming in its hate-and-harassment policy.
Free Press’ Venneikia Williams discusses the goals of the organization’s Media 2070 project, which “calls for media reparations and ownership of Black stories by Black people.”
The CJPA is a giveaway to the bill’s most vocal proponents: large corporate media outlets, including those that are responsible for mass layoffs in local newsrooms.
This custom-built installation explores the question “What does a media that loves Black people look, feel, sound and taste like in a future where reparations are real?”