Utrice Leid

Last updated
Utrice C. Leid
Bornc. 1953
OccupationJournalist
Notable credit(s)Trans-Urban News Service,
The City Sun ,
WBAI

Utrice C. Leid (born c. 1953) is a Trinidadian American, former activist in the Civil Rights Movement, and journalist. She was the managing editor of The City Sun and general manager of New York radio station WBAI. In 2004, The Miami Herald wrote that she "prides herself on never working in the mainstream media during her 34 years of journalism". [1]

Leid is the host of Leid Stories on Progressive Radio Network. [2]

Life and career

Leid was born in Princes Town, Trinidad, the seventh child of Claude and Gertrude Leid. When she was 18, Leid came to the United States and attended Adelphi University. [3] [4] She returned to Trinidad and Tobago, where she spent nine months investigating the aftermath of an unsuccessful coup d'état . Leid's research was cut short when the government seized her notes. She decided to move back to the United States. [4]

Leid worked as a receptionist at the New York Amsterdam News for six months, and in 1977 she and Andrew W. Cooper, a columnist at the newspaper, left to establish the Trans-Urban News Service (TUNS). [5] [6] TUNS trained minority journalists and produced reporting that was relevant to their communities. [5] The Public Relations Society of America gave TUNS its top award in 1979 for its multi-part series on racial tensions between blacks and Jews in Crown Heights. [7]

Cooper and Leid co-founded The City Sun, a weekly newspaper that covered issues of interest to African Americans in New York City, in 1984. [6] According to The New York Times , The City Sun had a circulation of 18,500 in 1987. [8] Leid resigned from the paper in 1992 after a dispute with Cooper. [9] By one account, she asked Cooper for complete control of the paper and he refused. [7] By her account, Leid left because Cooper was inflating the newspaper's circulation. [6] The New York Times reported that readers of The City Sun said the paper published "its most hard-hitting issues" during Leid's tenure, and that it "stopped being [a] must-read" after she left. [9]

In 1993, Leid started working at WBAI, where she hosted a talk radio program called Talkback! The New York Daily News described the show as "serious talk" and said that Leid covered a wide range of topics. The Daily News also noted that Leid sometimes gave her listeners homework. [10]

On December 22, 2000, the board of directors of Pacifica Radio, which controlled WBAI, removed the station's general manager and asked Leid to replace her. Two other long-time staff members were also dismissed. Leid and Pacifica's executive director changed the locks at the station's doors. [6] The changes, which became known as the "Christmas Coup", prompted several protest demonstrations that involved more than 1,000 people. [11] [12]

On March 5, 2001, Leid interrupted an interview with Congressmember Major Owens, who was discussing the events at WBAI. "Lies have been told," she announced, and began to broadcast a music program. [13] In August, Amy Goodman, the host of WBAI's Democracy Now! , said that Leid had shoved her during a heated discussion. [14] By late 2001, several groups of listeners and dissident radio hosts sued the Pacifica board. The board settled the lawsuits and agreed to grant more autonomy to WBAI. [15] Leid resigned her position in December. [16]

In 2002 Leid moved to Florida, and in 2004 she became editor of The Broward Times, a weekly newspaper that focused on issues of interest to African Americans and Afro-Caribbean Americans in Broward County. [1]

Related Research Articles

Pacifica Foundation is an American non-profit organization that owns five independently operated, non-commercial, listener-supported radio stations known for their progressive/liberal political orientation. Its national headquarters adjoins station KPFK in Los Angeles, California.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">LBC</span> Radio station in London

LBC is a British phone-in and talk radio station owned and operated by Global and based in its headquarters in London. It was the UK's first licensed commercial radio station, and began to broadcast on Monday 8 October 1973, a week ahead of Capital Radio.

<i>Democracy Now!</i> American TV, radio, and internet news program

Democracy Now! is an hour-long American TV, radio, and Internet news program hosted by journalists Amy Goodman, Juan González, and Nermeen Shaikh. The show, which airs live each weekday at 8 a.m. Eastern Time, is broadcast on the Internet and via more than 1,400 radio and television stations worldwide.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Margot Adler</span> American journalist (1946–2014)

Margot Susanna Adler was an American author, journalist, lecturer, Wiccan priestess, and New York correspondent for National Public Radio (NPR).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">WBAI</span> Pacifica Radio station in New York City

WBAI is a non-commercial, listener-supported radio station licensed to New York, New York. Its programming is a mixture of political news, talk and opinion from a left-leaning, liberal or progressive viewpoint, and eclectic music. The station is owned by the Pacifica Foundation with studios located in Brooklyn and transmitter located at 4 Times Square.

Louis Schweitzer was a Russian-born United States paper industrialist and philanthropist. He was an executive at the family paper company until its sale. He purchased the U.S. radio station WBAI from Theodore Deglin for $34,000 in 1957. An idealist, eccentric, and long-time radio enthusiast, Schweitzer ran the station as a personal hobby and an artistic endeavour, broadcasting the latest in music, politics, and ideas.

Marc Cooper is an American journalist, author, journalism professor and blogger. He is a contributing editor to The Nation. He wrote the popular "Dissonance" column for LA Weekly from 2001 until November 2008. His writing has also appeared in such publications as the Los Angeles Times, The Atlantic Monthly, Harper's Magazine, The New Yorker, The Christian Science Monitor, Playboy and Rolling Stone. His translated work has been published in various European and Latin American publications, including the French daily Liberation and the Mexico City-based dailies La Jornada and Uno Mas Uno. He has also been a television producer for PBS, CBS News, and The Christian Science Monitor. His radio reports have aired on NBC, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and the BBC. During the 2008 presidential campaign he worked as editorial coordinator of The Huffington Post's citizen-journalism project OffTheBus as well as a senior editor of the overall site.

Don Rojas is a journalist and political commentator from Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. He was the Editor in Chief of Grenada's national newspaper The Free West Indian. He served as press secretary for Prime Minister Maurice Bishop from 1981 to 1983, until a Bishop power-sharing dispute led to fighting and Bishop's death. When U.S. Marines invaded Grenada in 1983, he was deported by the U.S. military to Barbados.

New Country Y-107 was a radio station simulcast on as many as four FM stations all on 107.1 MHz around New York City. Airing a country music format, the stations targeted a primarily suburban audience. Owned by Big City Radio, New Country Y-107 broadcast from 1996 to 2002; the simulcast then flipped to contemporary Spanish music as "Rumba 107" before being broken up after it was sold in 2003. The station was based at the headquarters of Big City Radio in Hawthorne, New York, moving to Manhattan in 2001.

Deepa Fernandes is one of the hosts of NPR's Here and Now. She has formerly hosted the WBAI radio program Wakeup Call and the nationally syndicated Pacifica radio news show Free Speech Radio News on the politically independent, anti-war Pacifica Radio Network. Fernandes has worked as a freelance producer for, among others, the British Broadcasting Corporation, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, and Pacifica Radio.

WWRL is a commercial radio station licensed to New York City. WWRL airs an all-news radio format as an affiliate of the Black Information Network (BIN). The station is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc.

Robert Morton Fass was an American radio personality and pioneer of free-form radio, who broadcast in the New York region for over 50 years. Fass's program, Radio Unnameable, aired in some form from 1963 until his death primarily on WBAI, a radio station operating out of New York City.

Lynn Margaret Samuels was an American radio personality and blogger, based in New York City. She was one of the first women to host a political radio show.

Wakeup Call was a morning radio program produced in New York City by the WBAI station of the Pacifica Radio Network. Until its cancellation in August 2013, its final hosts were Esther Armah Monday to Thursday and Felipe Luciano on Fridays.

WKPX 88.5 FM is the non-commercial, educational radio station owned and operated by the Broward County Public Schools (BCPS), broadcasting at 3000 watts and reaching all of Broward County. In mid-2020, production studios were relocated from Piper High School, where the station had operated for many years, to BECON's production facility in Davie. This move is a first step in a plan to create internship opportunities for students throughout BCPS to get training and practical experience in radio as well as television and video production.

Mickey Waldman was a prominent radio personality/host and producer at influential WBAI in New York.

<i>The City Sun</i>

The City Sun was a weekly newspaper that was published in Brooklyn from 1984 through 1996. Its primary focus was on issues of interest to African Americans in New York City.

Norman Lawrence Josephson was an American public radio producer. From 1965, he worked in the field of public broadcasting as a producer, host, station manager, engineer, teacher, writer, and consultant. His first show at listener-supported radio station WBAI in New York was influential in developing the free-form radio style of the 1960s and 1970s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Charles Pitts (broadcaster)</span> American radio personality and activist (1941-2015)

Charles Pitts was an American gay activist and radio personality. He co-hosted The New Symposium on New York City's WBAI from 1968 to 1969, the first weekly public radio program to offer an affirming discussion of homosexuality by openly gay hosts. After the Stonewall Riots, he co-founded the Gay Liberation Front in New York City and continued his audio activism through the program Homosexual News. From 1971 to 1973, his weekly WBAI show Out of the Slough broke barriers as the first freeform radio show centered on gay politics and culture.

The South Florida Times is a weekly newspaper covering the Black community in Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach counties in south Florida. It publishes on Fridays, with a circulation of about 35,000. Robert G. Beatty acquired the paper, then known as the Broward Times, in 2007; the name was changed several months later, along with plans to expand to neighboring counties. Beatty had a background as legal counsel to the Miami Herald, and has been a featured speaker at local business functions. Bradley Bennett, who served as executive editor, also had a background with the Herald. The paper's stated mission includes in-depth analysis of worldwide events relating to the African diaspora, and making connections to its local community. The paper has partnered with the Miami Herald. The Times' reporting has been picked up by the Herald, and has been referenced in the Herald's own reporting. As of 2010, a journalism professor at the Florida International University partnered with the Times, assigning his students to investigate and report stories for the paper.

References

  1. 1 2 Prince, Richard (March 12, 2004). "Outspoken Utrice Leid Surfaces in Florida". Robert C. Maynard Institute for Journalism Education . Retrieved February 8, 2010.
  2. "Monthly Review | Gerald Horne & Utrice Leid on "Leid Stories," PRN.FM". 13 August 2020.
  3. "Utrice Leid". Everything2. November 14, 2002. Retrieved February 8, 2010.
  4. 1 2 "Folio" (PDF). Pacifica Radio. March–April 1995. p. 8. Retrieved February 8, 2010.
  5. 1 2 "Andrew W. Cooper". Answers.com. Retrieved January 30, 2009.
  6. 1 2 3 4 Richardson, Lynda (January 17, 2001). "A Firm New Boss at an Old Voice of the Left". The New York Times . Retrieved February 8, 2010.
  7. 1 2 Dawkins, Wayne. "Why did The City Sun (1984-1996) matter?". African American Literature Book Club . Retrieved February 8, 2010.
  8. Jones, Alex S. (August 17, 1987). "Black Papers: Businesses With a Mission". The New York Times. Retrieved February 8, 2010.
  9. 1 2 Foderaro, Lisa W. (November 9, 1996). "Black Weekly's Survival Is in Question". The New York Times. Retrieved February 8, 2010.
  10. Hinckley, David (April 16, 1996). "WBAI's 'Talkback': A Leid-Ing Voice on Talk Radio". New York Daily News . Retrieved February 8, 2010.
  11. Gonzalez, Juan (December 29, 2000). "Shakeups Make Waves at WBAI-FM". New York Daily News. Retrieved February 8, 2010.
  12. Blair, Jayson (January 7, 2001). "Hundreds Protest Firings at WBAI-FM". The New York Times. Retrieved February 8, 2010.
  13. Hentoff, Nat (April 3, 2001). "WBAI: Beijing Radio, New York". The Village Voice . Retrieved February 8, 2010.
  14. Hinckley, David (August 15, 2001). "'BAI Dissident Hides Out". New York Daily News. Retrieved February 8, 2010.
  15. Worth, Robert F. (December 13, 2001). "Pacifica, Owner of WBAI-FM, Settles Lawsuits". The New York Times. Retrieved February 8, 2010.
  16. Boyd, Herb (December 26, 2001). "Trouble Still Brews at WBAI". New York Amsterdam News . ProQuest   390136898.  via  ProQuest (subscription required)