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Florida's
statewide black voice
Why
an African-American statewide newspaper?
To empower; to educate; to advocate.
Our
history:
1969:
Charles W. Cherry, Sr., a civil rights
activist and later state president of
the Florida NAACP, starts Daytona Beachs
Westside Rapper, a black weekly
newspaper.
1978: The Westside Rapper
is succeeded by the Daytona Times,
the black weekly newspaper voice of East
Central Florida, now in its 29th year
of publication and read by some 50,000
readers weekly (circulation: 15,000).
1989:
Cherry, Sr. starts the Florida Courier,
targeting African-Americans living on
Floridas Treasure Coast, including
Indian River and St. Lucie Counties (current
circulation: 10,000).
Cherry, Sr. and sons Charles W. Cherry
II and Dr. Glenn W. Cherry purchase WPUL-AM
1590, a Daytona Beach-area radio station,
to be operated in conjunction with the
Daytona Times.
2004: the Cherry family media business
expands to become Tama Broadcasting, Inc.,
Floridas largest privately owned
African-American media group, with a total
of eight FM stations and three AM stations
located among the Tampa, FL, Jacksonville,
FL, Daytona Beach, FL, Savannah, GA, and
Greenville, SC radio markets.
2006: The Florida Courier
launches as Floridas first African-American
owned and operated statewide weekly newspaper.
Our goals: to be distributed statewide
to some 1.3 million black Floridians ages
18 and above, a multibillion-dollar consumer
market virtually ignored by other media;
to empower our readers; to educate them;
and to advocate for them.
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