For the millions of African Americans who grew up reading Ebony
and JET magazines, news that Johnson Publishing filed for bankruptcy in April
signals the loss of a generational touchstone.
Now, with employees at both magazines, which were purchased by a private equity
firm in 2016, saying they have been fired and not paid,
there is concern about the legacy of the late John H. Johnson who built a media
empire that celebrated and chronicled a vibrant culture overlooked by white
media.
In the town where Johnson spent the first 15 years of his
life before he and his mother moved to Chicago, there is a museum to honor his
legacy. Arkansas
City, Arkansas is a tiny town right on the Arkansas-Mississippi state line.
The one store residents frequent is owned by one of Johnson’s cousins.
Family
Pride
“I hate to see his legacy go,” said David Lison who says his
grandmother and Johnson’s mother were sisters. “He was a character. He and his
daughter came down for the celebration when they opened the house.”
As Lison explains, the museum is built of lumber salvaged
from the home where Johnson was born in 1918.
“They tried to move the
house he was born in, but it crumbled…so they took what lumber they could and
built a new house,” Lison adds.
The county and The
University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff, a Historically Black College and
University, are the stewards of the John H. Johnson Cultural and Educational
Museum.
Adapting
to the New Media
Dr. Sekou Franklin, an African American Studies professor at Middle Tennessee State University, says, “The loss of Ebony and JET is a loss for the Black community.”
Franklin points out that the demise of Johnson Publishing Company coincides with a technological revolution which continues to change the way Americans consume news and entertainment. Media publications are rife with the obituaries of legacy publications. Earlier this week Black Press mainstay, The Chicago Defender, announced its plans to end its print edition and publish only digitally.
“This could limit the ability to generate autonomous and rich perspectives of African Americans,” Franklin says. “While younger African Americans have adapted to the 21st century media, seniors and some rural residents, who live in areas where internet service is unstable, may be the most harmed. Print media, including newspapers, have been an important resource for African Americans.”
With a court-supervised sale of Johnson Publishing’s assets
expected, in Arkansas City, there is still immense pride in Johnson’s personal
story of tenacity and smarts connecting with opportunity in Chicago where he
began his company in 1942. His cousin and millions of others will always
remember the magazines he created and their place in the cultural archives.
“They used to send JET to me free,” Lison says. “We would
get them weekly. Ebony, I always bought it to see the Beautiful People.”