![]() The May 24, 2008 board describing former President Charles Taylor's war crimes trial | |
Type | Free daily news board |
---|---|
Format | Blackboard |
Founder(s) | Alfred J. Sirleaf |
Managing editor | Alfred J. Sirleaf |
Founded | May 14, 2000 |
Language | Liberian English |
Headquarters | Tubman Boulevard, Monrovia, Liberia |
The Daily Talk is an English-language news medium published daily on a blackboard on Tubman Boulevard in the center of the Liberian capital Monrovia. [1] According to the New York Times , it is "the most widely read report" in Monrovia, as many Monrovians lack the money or the electricity necessary for access to the conventional mass media. [2] Filmmaker David Lalé has stated that "while the global media too often define Liberia in terms of the tragedy of the recent civil war, from its street-level perspective The Daily Talk describes a busy, hopeful nation in the process of renewal." [3]
The founder, managing editor and sole employee of the Daily Talk is Alfred J. Sirleaf, an inventor and father of three [4] who founded his blackboard newspaper on May 14, 2000 [5] [6] because of his belief that a well-informed citizenry is crucial to the rebirth of Liberia after years of civil war. In post-war Liberia, Sirleaf sees access to information as the key to peace. [7]
Sirleaf's critical writing about Liberian President Charles Taylor led to him being jailed several months after the board's creation, and the Daily Talk was destroyed by government soldiers. [8] Following a period in exile, he returned in 2005 and resumed writing. [9] [10] With help from his fellow Monrovians, Sirleaf rebuilt it a week before the 2005 election of president Ellen Johnson Sirleaf (not a close relation) and resumed publication of the Daily Talk.[ citation needed ]
After a vehicle drove into and damaged the board in 2018, US Ambassador Christine A. Elder was present at the reopening ceremony two months later. [11] Funding for the reconstruction was provided by USAID via the non-profit Internews. [8]
Attached to the back of the 10 by 15 feet (3.0 by 4.6 m) [12] chalkboard there is a small wooden shed, the "newsroom", where Sirleaf prepares and writes reports. [10] Lacking a computer of his own, he visits an internet café to read international news reports. [13]
He writes on the board in Liberian English, and adds symbols to assist understanding of stories for those with limited literacy – including a bottle of dirty water for news about oil prices, a blue helmet for United Nations peacekeeping or a devil for the Ebola virus. [4] [14] Colors are also used to distinguish topics, such as yellow for numbers, prominent people and leaders. [5]
The Daily Talk is free to read, [15] with Sirleaf receiving support in the form of occasional gifts of taxi rides and pre-paid cellphone cards. In 2010, he relied on reports from 200 volunteers around Liberia. [16]