(BALTIMORE – April 26, 2026) — There is an energy swirling in Baltimore right now.
A momentum is in motion.
And if you’re paying attention—not just to headlines, but to the people, the investments, the leadership, and the wins—you can feel it.
This weekend alone made that clear.
I watched Chrisean Rock — “Holy Hands” — earn a split decision on YouTube, representing Baltimore with strength and discipline. And in this city, moments like that don’t happen alone. They are shaped by institutions—by people like Calvin Ford and Kenny Ellis—who have built champions from the ground up in West Baltimore.
At the same time, LaRian Finney celebrated a top-tier 60th birthday at The Rossi—while stepping into even greater influence, now leading one of Baltimore’s most iconic entertainment platforms. That’s culture. That’s power. That’s continuity.
Across downtown, boxing returned to the Hilton Baltimore Inner Harbor—a major signal for the city’s economic and entertainment revival—with Kevin Seawright playing a role in bringing that vision to life.
And on Sunday, Black Wall Street BENEDETTO 2.0 continues the momentum—honoring builders like Robert Harrington and former Mayor Catherine Pugh, while celebrating Kevin Scott’s 25-year milestone with a ribbon-cutting at 119 W. Mulberry Street.
Twenty-five years.
That’s legacy in real time.
A City Aligning
And this is bigger than one weekend.
Kireem Swinton has stepped in to lead Visit Baltimore.
Otis Rolley is helping shape economic direction at Baltimore Development Corporation.
Kevin Seawright continues to drive impact in Park Heights and through the Greater Baltimore Urban League.
David Bramble is reimagining the Inner Harbor while investing along West North Avenue.
And yes—this is all happening under the leadership of Brandon Scott and Wes Moore.
That matters.
Because leadership sets tone.
Leadership sets direction.
Leadership creates conditions for momentum.
The Real Issue: Who Controls the Narrative
But here’s the part that brought me to write this in the first place.
While all of this movement is happening—real work, real progress, real coordination—there is also a competing force working just as hard to define Baltimore in a very different way.
A recent report highlighted how media outlets connected to Sinclair Broadcast Group have aggressively scrutinized both Mayor Scott and Governor Moore, raising serious questions about narrative, motive, and power.
Mayor Scott said it plainly:
“It’s very clear that they do not want to see free or liberated Black political power.”
That’s not just about politics.
That’s about control of the story.
Because while Baltimore is building, investing, and evolving—there are powerful institutions deciding what gets amplified, what gets questioned, and what gets minimized.
Why Black Media Is Not Optional
And that takes us back to the point.
These stories—Chrisean, Finney, Harrington, Scott, Seawright, Bramble, Swinton, Rolley—
they are already headlines in the Black community.
But without our own platforms, they remain:
Fragmented.
Disconnected.
Unframed.
That’s why BMORENews.com exists.
Not because nobody is watching—
but because we must own the narrative.
We don’t wait to be defined.
We define.
We don’t chase distortion.
We document reality.
We connect the dots between culture, business, politics, and development—because in real life, they are already connected.
The News Before the News
Baltimore is not what they say it is.
It is what it is becoming.
A city in motion.
A network aligning.
A story still being written.
And we are going to tell it—fully, clearly, and unapologetically.
Because long before the mainstream catches up—if it ever does—
this is the record.
That’s BMORENews.
The news before the news.









