Support Socially Conscious Black Owned Media
Support Socially Responsible Black Owned Media
Junious Ricardo Stanton
For over
twenty years I have been associated with Black Internet radio; first with Don
Rojas’ Website and Internet radio station The Black World Today back in
2000. When that went defunct, I went with Neil Blake’s Rainbow Soul and Music
Massage channels, then to Onion Horton’s New Black City, then to Dalani Ammon’s
Harambee Radio and to Keidi Obi Awadu’s www.LIBRadio.com’s Falcon Forum. I briefly
produced and hosted a program on the Before It’s News Website Internet Radio
station. I say all this to let you know Internet radio has been a big part of
my life for decades, I was a pioneering in Internet radio. I’ve been a producer
and host for several talk shows, I’ve been a DJ playing socially conscious
music on my Message in The Music shows on two Internet radio stations
before they went out of existence. I also produced podcasts and video-casts for
years on several platforms.
Prior to
Internet radio I produced and hosted a program on WHAT radio 1340 AM in
Philadelphia called Positively Black for ten years. I’ve been a
community journalist and columnist since the 1990’s and at one time I was
syndicated weekly by the National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA) an
organization of over 200 Black owned newspapers around the country. In
Philadelphia, I wrote for : SCOOP USA, Renaissance Magazine, The
Philadelphia New Observer, Real News, The Black Business Review
On The Scene Magazine and occasionally The West Side Weekly. I
also wrote for About Time Magazine out of Rochester New York for several
years.
I’m not
saying this to toot my own horn but to reflect on over thirty years of media
involvement and engagement. Looking back, I was motivated to use my skills to
promote, celebrate and uplift my people because I knew the general market media
(White media) was never going to treat us fairly, honestly tell our stories or
share our rich history and contributions not only to this country but the
world. So, I took it upon myself to do just that and quite frankly most times I
didn’t get paid and if I did it was not what I could have commanded in the
general market papers as a freelancer.
This happened not because Black
publishers were cheap but because they were barely scraping by, they were
struggling to pay to get the paperers printed or the radio station (terrestrial
and Internet) profitable because they couldn’t get the crucial advertising
support from Black or White businesses and advertisers.
This has been an ongoing historical
pattern since Freedom’s Journal the first Black newspaper was founded in
New York City by Samuel Cornish and John Russwurm two “free” Blacks in
1827. Their mission was to offer a
rebuttal to and provide a powerful and articulate alternative to the slander,
denigration and lies the White press printed about people of African descent! We are still subjected to that in 2026!
Since 1827, Black media has always
had to struggle to survive especially during the enslavement, Post
Reconstruction legalized apartheid periods and today’s divisive anti-Black social
milieu. I am a witness to this first
hand as I have served as a writer, an editor and I’ve produced terrestrial and
Internet radio program content for decades. I brokered or purchased the time on
WHAT so I had to come up with a way to cover the cost. I was able to secure a
few loyal advertisers before Cody Anderson the owner graciously allowed me to
do the show free of cost.
I admired
the work Acel Moore and Reggie Bryant did once they founded the National
Association of Black Journalists; their pioneering work was responsible for
getting many Blacks into general market media in news, radio and television.
Their groundbreaking television program Black Perspective on the News
was a seminal work and garnered praise and recognition throughout the industry.
It was syndicated on PBS. However, I was
never interested in that, I wanted and still want to help build Black media and
carve out a solid sustainable niche for us.
I have contributed to White
stations and social media platforms so I have no issue or problems
collaborating with anyone. I feel it is my calling to be a voice and contributor
to conscious and progressive Black media, especially in times such as these
where our voices are being muffled, censored and suppressed by algorithms, editors
and special interest groups who want to negate us altogether.
I say all of this to urge you to
support socially and politically conscious Black owned media whether it is
print, radio, Internet or streaming. We must have our own voice and offer our
own perspectives beyond the clap-trap and gaslighting we are subjected to on a
daily basis. We deserve better programming than the stereotypical depictions
even Black producers foist on us as: thugs, hyper-sexualized, vulgar and profane
caricatures we see in the films, TV shows, videos and songs in the marketplace
today.
As a people we are better than that
and we should display our better side to ourselves and the world. Notice in
most commercial we are always dancing and playing sports; we do more than that
and we should tell stories and depict ourselves in ways which show our
diversity, resilience and successes. We need media to do this! Support
conscious Black media!
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