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Gene Demby

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Gene Demby
NationalityAmerican
Alma materHofstra University
EmployerNPR
Known forPostBourgie
Code Switch
Gene Demby
mmádu
ụdịekerenwoke Dezie
mba o sịNjikota Obodo Amerika Dezie
aha enyereGene Dezie
ọrụ ọ na-arụonye mgbasa ozii, onye ntaakụkọ, odee akwụkwọ Dezie
ebe agụmakwụkwọHofstra University, Mastery Charter School Thomas Campus Dezie

Gene Demby bụ onye nta akụkọ America. Ọ bụ onye na-eduga na-ede blọgụ na agbụrụ, agbụrụ na ọdịbendị nke NPR Code Switch na onye na-akwado podcast site n'otu aha ahụ. [1]Ọ bụkwa onye guzobere blog PostBourgie na podcast ya.

Oge ọ malitere

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Demby tolitere na South Philadelphia, ma gaa Mahadum Hofstra.[2][3]

Tupu ọ banye na NPR, Demby rụrụ ọrụ maka The New York Times ma mesịa bụrụ onye nchịkọta akụkọ maka Huffington Post's BlackVoices vertical.[4]

NPR Code Switch

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Demby malitere ọrụ NPR Code Switch na Eprel 7, 2013 na edemede mmeghe nke nwetara otuto ozugbo; na-ede na Complex, Jason Parham kwuru na ọ bụrụ na edemede "'How Code-Switching Explains The World' bụ ihe ọ bụla na-egosi ọdịnaya na-abịa, anyị enweghị ike inwe obi ụtọ karịa".[5]

N'afọ 2016, Demby na onye na-akwado Shereen Marisol Meraji gosipụtara ihe Harvard's Neiman Lab kpọrọ "podcast a na-echere ogologo oge" site na Code Switch.[6]

Blog PostBourgie

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Demby malitere ide blọgụ n'afọ 2004. N'ikwu okwu na ColorLines na 2012, Demby kwuru na nkụda mmụọ na mkparịta ụka mgbasa ozi gbasara agbụrụ kpaliri ya, na-ekwu maka otu oge onye nta akụkọ CNN bịakwutere ya n'ụlọ ikpe basketball iji rịọ maka ịza ajụjụ banyere okwu Bill Cosby's Pound Cake na 2004 NAACP Image Awards. Demby chetara, "M chụpụrụ ya n'ike n'ike...E nwere ndị na-eche na ọnọdụ ndị isi ojii n'ụwa ga-aka mma ma ọ bụrụ na anyị na-ele anya ka mma. 'Pụlite uwe gị.' O yiri ka ọ dị obere nke na anyị na'inwe mkparịta ụka ndị a. " N'ịchọ ihe ọzọ, na 2007 Demby guzobere blọọgụ otu gbasara agbụrụ, ọdịbendị, ndọrọ ndọrọ ọchịchị na mgbasa ozi a kpọrọ ndị enyi ka ha rụkọọ ọrụ ọnụ bụ ndị na-ekerịta ọchịchọ ya "inwe mkparịta ọrụ nke chere na ndị isi ojii bụ ndị na ha bụ ndị na ndị na-adịghị mma na ha bụ ụmụ mmadụ ndị na-enweghị ihe mgbagwoju anya na ndị na ndị isi"[7]

N'ikwu okwu na New York Magazine, Jamil Smith kwuru na PostBourgie bụ otu n'ime blọọgụ ndị "na-edozi mmanya maka... oghere ndị e mere ka [ndị Afrịka-Amerịka na ndị ọzọ nwere agba] nwee. Ọbụna ma ọ bụrụ na ị na-arụ ọrụ maka mgbasa ozi ọdịnala, ị nweghị ohere inye echiche gị, iji gwa ndị na-enweghị nkwenye nke eziokwu ahụ na ị na ndị ọzọ... ọ na-eme ka ha laghachi azụ na-ebipụta n'ebe ahụ. Na The Washington Post, Alyssa Rosenberg maka ndị na-ede akwụkwọ akụkọ ọhụrụ.[8][9]

Demby na-akwado podcast na-esote nke a na-akpọkwa PostBourgie.

N'afọ 2009, Demby's PostBourgie meriri Black Weblog Award maka Best News / Politics Site.[10]

N'afọ 2013 na ọzọ n'afọ 2014, a kpọrọ aha Demby na ndepụta nke The Root 100 nke ndị isi ojii 100 kachasị mkpa.[11][12]

N'afọ 2014, Demby na ndị otu Code Switch meriri onyinye nke Online News Association maka Best Online Commentary.[13]

Ndụ onwe onye

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Demby is married to fellow journalist Kainaz Amaria, a Zoroastrian American[14] who is currently a visuals editor for Vox Media.[15][16] The couple live in Washington.

Ihe odide

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  1. NPR Launching Code Switch Podcast. Cision (May 23, 2016).
  2. "I'm from Philly and 40 years later I'm still trying to make sense of the MOVE bombing".
  3. Young. "Gene Demby gives Black writers a voice with 'PostBourgie,' and more", Rolling Out, September 6, 2016. Retrieved on September 30, 2016.
  4. Wilson. "Huffington Post Turns Up the Volume At BlackVoices", All Digitocracy, June 29, 2011. Retrieved on August 19, 2016.
  5. Parham. "NPR Launches New Blog Covering "Race, Culture and Ethnicity"", Complex, April 8, 2013. Retrieved on August 4, 2016.
  6. Wang (June 2, 2016). What does the intersection of race and culture sound like? NPR's Code Switch is looking for the right mix. NeimanLab. Retrieved on November 30, 2017.
  7. King. "Sepia Mutiny's Closure Is a Reminder: Blogging While Brown Ain't Easy", ColorLines, April 12, 2012. Retrieved on August 19, 2016.
  8. Tabor. "MTV News' Jamil Smith on What's Wrong (and Right) With the Media", New York Magazine, July 24, 2016. Retrieved on July 30, 2016.
  9. Rosenberg. "PostBourgie, Andrew Sullivan and why blogging still matters", The Washington Post, February 3, 2015. Retrieved on July 30, 2016.
  10. Black Weblog Awards - Past Winners. www.blackweblogawards.com. Archived from the original on 2013-03-06. Retrieved on 2023-10-29.
  11. The Root 100: A Who's Who Of Black America. NPR (September 26, 2013).
  12. #ICYMI: This Week's Public Media Highlights. Protect My Public Media (September 26, 2014).
  13. 2014 Awards. Online News Association (August 25, 2014).
  14. arZan (2013-05-31). Kainaz Amaria in Conversation: Being Zoroastrian. Parsi Khabar. Retrieved on 2021-12-30.
  15. Accomplished journalists set for presentations as part of ongoing Speakers Forum. Pennsylvania State University (September 29, 2020).
  16. Kainaz Amaria Profile and Activity. Vox. Retrieved on 2021-12-30.