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Home»History

Why mainstream media keeps failing Black communities

Dorcas OnasaBy Dorcas OnasaApril 23, 2026 History No Comments4 Mins Read
News, Media, Journalism, week
Photocredit : Shutterstock.com/ Yeti studio
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Long before social media algorithms decided which stories were worth amplifying, the Amsterdam News was already doing the work. Founded in 1909, the New York based publication has spent more than 115 years covering the stories that mainstream outlets have historically ignored, minimized, or misrepresented. In that time, it has become one of the most enduring and consequential Black newspapers in American history.

Its longevity is not an accident. It is the result of a community that understood, from the very beginning, that representation in the press was not a luxury. It was a necessity.

Why racial justice journalism fills a gap mainstream media leaves open

Even in today’s crowded media landscape, the coverage gap that publications like the Amsterdam News were built to address has not closed. Stories about systemic racism, economic inequality, housing discrimination, and criminal justice reform remain chronically underreported in mainstream outlets, or when they are covered, they are filtered through perspectives that do not reflect the communities most directly affected.

Racial justice journalism exists to correct that imbalance. It centers African American experiences not as a niche interest but as essential public information. It holds institutions accountable in ways that resonate with the communities bearing the consequences of those institutions’ decisions. And it provides context that broader coverage routinely strips away.

The stakes of that work are not abstract. When a community sees itself accurately reflected in the press, it gains something concrete: the validation that its concerns are real, its stories are worth telling, and its fight for equity is part of the public record.

A legacy that spans some of America’s most defining moments

The Amsterdam News did not simply report on American history it documented it from a vantage point that textbooks have long overlooked. Its archives trace the arc of the Harlem Renaissance, capturing the cultural explosion that transformed African American artistic and intellectual life in the early 20th century. It covered the Civil Rights Movement as it unfolded, providing readers with on-the-ground accounts that national outlets often distorted or ignored entirely.

That institutional memory is itself a form of journalism. For younger generations navigating questions about identity, heritage, and the ongoing pursuit of equality, publications like the Amsterdam News offer something no algorithm can generate: a documented, unbroken record of a community’s resilience.

The real challenges threatening independent Black media today

Surviving more than a century of American history has not made the work easier. Independent racial justice journalism faces a compounding set of pressures that threaten its ability to continue. Advertising revenue has shifted dramatically toward digital platforms, leaving many community focused outlets without the financial base they once relied on. Competing with well funded media conglomerates for audience attention requires resources that most independent publications simply do not have.

There is also the ongoing challenge of misinformation. In an environment where false narratives about race and justice spread rapidly online, publications committed to accurate, community centered reporting often find themselves in a reactive position, working to correct the record while simultaneously trying to fund the next issue.

How readers can make a direct difference

Supporting racial justice journalism does not require a large gesture. It requires consistent ones. Subscribing to publications like the Amsterdam News is among the most direct ways to fund the reporting that keeps community focused outlets operational. Every subscription translates into resources for editors, reporters, and the infrastructure that makes the work possible.

Engagement matters too. Sharing articles, discussing them with friends and family, and bringing them into broader conversations helps expand the reach of stories that deserve wider audiences. For those in a position to give more, direct donations to independent news organizations provide operational flexibility that subscriptions alone cannot always cover.

Attending events fundraisers, panel discussions, community forums builds something harder to quantify but equally important, a culture of investment in local and independent media. When readers show up, they signal to the broader world that this journalism has a community behind it.

The larger meaning of the investment

Choosing to support racial justice journalism is, at its core, a decision about what kind of public record we want to leave behind. The Amsterdam News has spent more than a century insisting that African American stories belong in that record not as footnotes, but as central chapters. That insistence has shaped movements, informed communities, and held power accountable in ways that history is still catching up to.

The work continues because the need continues. And the need will keep being met, as long as the community that built this legacy remains committed to sustaining it.

african american history Amsterdam News Black media Black voices Civil Rights community journalism independent journalism media diversity media representation racial justice
Dorcas Onasa

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