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NetherlandsCulture7/30/2025

Who is journalism for?

The article discusses an episode of 'Backlight' focusing on journalists rethinking their approach to reach marginalized communities. The episode features interviews with journalists working on stories affecting rural Kenyan farmers and immigrant communities in New York City, emphasizing efforts to deliver news directly to those impacted.

Backlight

Who is journalism for?

This month on Backlight, we talk to journalists who are rethinking how and who they report for

Journalism often claims to serve the public and expose wrongdoing. But too often, the people at the very heart of the story never see it because it’s buried behind paywalls, in the wrong language, or on platforms they don’t use. This month’s episode is in three parts:

– Part 1: Beatriz and Tessa speak with Cynthia Gichiri, a multimedia journalist at Africa Uncensored, who took a story about the health dangers of pesticides on the road through rural Kenya to get it to the farmers most at risk.

– Part 2: A conversation to Mazin Sidahmed, who co-founded Documented, a newsroom that was designed from the ground up to serve immigrant communities in New York City in the languages they speak on the platforms they already use.

– Part 3: 5 practical things journalists at any outlet can do to make sure their reporting reaches affected communities.

From WhatsApp group chats to community screenings, this episode is about getting reporting out of the newsroom and into people’s hands.

You can also listen to the episode on Spotify ,  Apple Podcasts and YouTube .

Hosts: Beatriz Ramalho da Silva, Tessa Pang

Sound design, mixing and editing: Spoovio – Audiovisual Productions

© 2025 LIGHTHOUSE REPORTS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Read the full article at Lighthouse Reports

1 reports

Lighthouse ReportsIndependentCenter7/30/2025
Who is journalism for?

The article discusses an episode of 'Backlight' focusing on journalists rethinking their approach to reach marginalized communities. The episode features interviews with journalists working on stories affecting rural Kenyan farmers and immigrant communities in New York City, emphasizing efforts to deliver news directly to those impacted.

Bias read (Center): The article presents a discussion on journalistic practices aimed at reaching underserved communities without taking a stance on political issues. It focuses on methods of improving accessibility and engagement rather than commenting on policy or ideology.