Home / Full timeline / Stanley Scott calls out Black-owned newspapers saying they should be kept instead of sold to wealthy whites.
Stanley Scott calls out Black-owned newspapers saying they should be kept instead of sold to wealthy whites.
1975 (Jan 17)
Stanley Scott, President Ford's chief Black American White House aide, said during a seminar on mass communications at the John F. Kennedy Center in Atlanta, Georgia, that “fast buck operators” were threatening America's remaining Black newspapers. He said wealthy whites were "buying out Black-owned newspapers and franchising them like McDonald's hamburgers.” The “Black press should survive,” Scott added, because the “majority white press” did not cover adequately all aspects of life in Black communities. “I believe in integration,” Scott continued, “but I think we should maintain and save some of our old institutions too.” Scott estimated that of the 500 Black-oriented newspapers in the country, “only about 30 or 35 are still Black-owned.” One of those was the Atlanta Daily World, a pioneer Black daily, published by Scott's family.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.