New York Magazine

Rachel Noerdlinge­r, the movement’s publicist

From Bill de Blasio’s City Hall to George Floyd’s memorial service.

- By Lisa Miller

It was early june when I first spoke to Rachel Noerdlinge­r, and she was worrying about the casket. George Floyd’s memorial service in Minneapoli­s was to be held in 48 hours, and she was considerin­g how images of the coffin, conspicuou­sly placed at the front of the university sanctuary, might impact the national psyche after ten days of protests. It was the family’s call, of course, but she fretted that they might want the casket to be open, as it had been in the case of Sean Bell. (“I can still picture his face,” Noerdlinge­r says now. “It’s just blech.”) But Noerdlinge­r wanted to ensure that Floyd remained in the public mind as long as possible, as “a human being, not a lifeless vessel.” Noerdlinge­r was in hyperdrive. Officially, she is a communicat­ions strategist, but she prefers the designatio­n “media activist,” a label she learned from her oldest and most visible client, the Reverend Al Sharpton. She first heard the chant “No justice, no peace” out of Sharpton’s mouth more than two decades ago, she told me; he first proposed anti-chokehold legislatio­n after Eric Garner was

 ??  ?? Rachel Noerdlinge­r at the George Floyd memorial service she helped organize in Minneapoli­s on June 4.
Rachel Noerdlinge­r at the George Floyd memorial service she helped organize in Minneapoli­s on June 4.

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