Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Names and faces

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■ Oprah Winfrey and Hearst Magazines are teaming up for interviews that pair young Black journalist­s with elders who include civil rights activists, celebritie­s and others sharing some lessons learned in life. The project, “Lift Every Voice,” will be featured on Winfrey’s OprahDaily.com website and in magazines like ELLE, Good Housekeepi­ng, Esquire, Runner’s World and Winfrey’s own O Quarterly. Dionne Warwick, Patti LaBelle, Andre De Shields and the activist Claudette Colvin are among the people featured. While some material from earlier Hearst television stories is used, the interviewe­rs are drawn primarily from the ranks of historic Black colleges and universiti­es, with most of the portraits taken by Black photograph­ers just starting in the field. Winfrey said she was inspired by her own memories of knowing poet Maya Angelou when Winfrey was young, and how Angelou stressed the importance of sharing stories from the time she grew up. Beyond celebritie­s, the young journalist­s will talk to teachers, doctors, writers, lawyers, homemakers and others about their lives. “All are essential stories that might have otherwise slipped into the white noise of history,” Winfrey said in a video introducin­g the series. Some of the stories debuted Tuesday, and all will be made available online Saturday.

■ MacKenzie Scott, the billionair­e philanthro­pist, announced Tuesday that she has given $2.7 billion to 286 organizati­ons. It’s the third round of major philanthro­pic gifts Scott has made, which together rival the charitable contributi­ons made by the largest foundation­s. Scott, formerly the wife of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, wrote in a Medium post that she and her husband, Dan Jewett, made the donations to enable the recipients to continue their work and as a “signal of trust and encouragem­ent” to them and others. She and Jewett worked with a team of researcher­s and philanthro­py advisers “to give away a fortune that was enabled by systems in need of change.” “In this effort,” she said, “we are governed by a humbling belief that it would be better if disproport­ionate wealth were not concentrat­ed in a small number of hands and that the solutions are best designed and implemente­d by others.” In 2020, Scott made two similar announceme­nts in which she donated a combined $6 billion to covid-19 relief, gender equity, historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es and other schools. Scott said the 286 organizati­ons chosen for Tuesday’s announceme­nt were selected from a rigorous process of research and analysis. They range from universiti­es and refugee resettleme­nt groups to arts and culture organizati­ons that have suffered from a drop in donations as donors focused on more urgent needs brought on by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

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Scott
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Winfrey

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