For news media professionals looking to grow, Irving Washington, board chair of the American Journalism Project and former CEO of the Online News Association, said that networking does not look the same for everyone.
When Washington attends networking events such as receptions, his strategy is to connect with a few key individuals.
“I’m actually an introvert,” Washington said. “Learn what type of networker you are. I like to do one-on-one conversations.”
Summit attendee Brian Mell, a freelance photographer who has lived in Philadelphia for the past three decades and has worked for various news organizations, said that diversity in media matters.
“It’s important to get the full story,” Mell said. “Everyone is looking to see what is going on with the government. In terms of media, the biggest concern is that are we actually finding out what’s going on? Are we being told the truth?”
Eli Muttaqi Thomas, 51-year-old Philadelphia resident, said he’s noticed that since George Floyd’s killing there’s more diversity of news subjects and reporters.
He called Floyd’s death “a turning point and a landmark moment in our history.”
Thomas said he noticed there’s still a divide in who gets to decide about which historical narratives are covered.
“I think now it’s on a level of class, maybe where if you’re a Black male of a certain strata, you get the coverage and the other strata, you don’t get the coverage,” he said. “So I think we need to address the class issues along with the color issues.”
Thomas brought his teenage sons – Mateen, 15, and Yusef, 13.
Mateen said he’s interested in pursuing a career in paleontology someday. He said he has gotten more interested in news recently.
“Ever since Trump got in office the country has been through a rebuilding process, it’s been kind of up and down,” he said. “Now I realize I’ve got to listen to the news.”