Filed Under:  OpEd, Opinion

OWN, TV ONE and BET ignore functions of the Black Press too

8th June 2020   ·   0 Comments

By A. Peter Bailey
TriceEdneyWire.com Columnist

As a child growing up in Tuskegee, Alabama in the 1950’s, my only connections with the national Black community was the Pittsburgh Courier newspaper and JET magazine. I could hardly wait for them to be delivered every week. That’s why no one has ever had to convince me of the importance of the Black Press.

When hearing Black pontificators from the broadcast press so cavalierly predict the demise of Black newspapers I get extremely agitated. If they are right, then we, as a people, are in much more trouble than even I thought because of Black-owned TV One, OWN and Black oriented BET are not up to the job. I came to this conclusion after watching them religiously during the home-boundness brought on by the COVID-19 virus. I enjoy programs such as “Living Single,” “Martin” and a couple of Tyler Perry films but they present not one second of news coverage or one second of discussion focusing on issues such as COVID-19 and the lynching of George Floyd. In fact the only program on the three that one can say has any cultural relevance is “Unsung” on TV One.

A friend, Dr. Lionel C. Barrow Jr., who was dean of Howard University’s School of Communications, defined the role of the early Black Press in a 1977 handbook that celebrated the sesquicentennial of the Black Press. He stated that it has four major functions: “to perform as a watchdog function for the Black community that the white press was either are unable or unwilling to perform, to answer the attacks published in the white press, to present a viewpoint that differed even from that of liberal whites and to be a carrier and preserver of Black culture.” I am not saying that Black newspapers are all that they can and should be in carrying out the functions cited by Dr. Barrow but at least many of them make an effort to do so.

TV One, OWN and BET do none of the first three functions and very little of the fourth. That’s why we, as a people, are in deep you know what if the predictors of the demise of Black newspapers are on target. It’s up to us to prove them wrong.

This article originally published in the June 8, 2020 print edition of The Louisiana Weekly newspaper.

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