(BALTIMORE – June 24, 2026) – For nearly 25 years, BMORENews has done more than report the news.
We have documented a people.
As BMORENews approaches its 25th anniversary, we are reminded that institutions are not built overnight. They are built one story, one relationship, one community event, and one act of service at a time.
Since 2002, BMORENews has chronicled Black life, Black business, Black politics, Black faith, Black education, and Black culture throughout Baltimore, Maryland, and far beyond.
Our mission has always been simple:
To tell the stories others overlook.
To preserve history as it unfolds.
To ensure our community sees itself reflected with dignity, accuracy, and pride.
Over the past quarter-century, our work has taken us from neighborhood streets to the White House more than 70 times.
Our reporting has extended beyond America’s borders to Jordan, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, and Arusha, Tanzania, bringing global stories home while connecting our audience to the broader African diaspora.
Across Maryland, we’ve covered communities from Baltimore City to Southern Maryland, from Harford County to the Eastern Shore, documenting the people and places that make our state unique.
Our reporting has also taken us to Upstate New York, including Lewiston and Niagara Falls, where we documented the Niagara River crossing—a pathway to freedom used by Harriet Tubman and countless formerly enslaved Africans escaping into Canada in search of liberty.
But perhaps our greatest work cannot be measured by the miles we’ve traveled.
It is measured by the lives we’ve touched.
Throughout the years, BMORENews has broadcast live from churches, community centers, schools, businesses, neighborhood organizations, and public spaces often ignored by larger media outlets.
We have conducted live broadcasts from a halfway house on Greenmount Avenue, giving voice to men and women rebuilding their lives after incarceration.
Through the Love for Elle prison ministry, we worked with incarcerated youth between the ages of 14 and 17 inside the Baltimore City Jail, reminding them that their past did not have to determine their future.
For us, journalism has always been about more than headlines.
It has been about hope.
Our commitment to community extends through the Joe Manns Black Wall Street Awards.
For 15 years, the Awards have celebrated entrepreneurship, leadership, perseverance, and excellence in nine American cities, recognizing more than 3,000 entrepreneurs, professionals, educators, clergy, elected officials, artists, and community leaders.
Many of those honorees overcame poverty, discrimination, incarceration, addiction, or extraordinary hardship before becoming examples of what’s possible.
Those are precisely the stories worth preserving.
Over the years, BMORENews has evolved from a local news website into a multimedia communications platform.
Through The Doni Glover Show, radio broadcasts, television appearances, podcasts, YouTube programming, livestreams, and social media, we created multiple avenues for public conversation.
Our Emmy-nominated broadcast platform demonstrated that independent Black-owned media can compete at the highest professional levels.
Our Indigenous podcast attracted a national audience and fostered conversations that crossed geographic, cultural, and political boundaries.
Together, these platforms connected local stories to regional, national, and international audiences.
Whether through articles, interviews, podcasts, television, livestreams, community forums, or public events, our purpose has never changed.
We exist to inform.
To empower.
To connect.
To uplift.
We believe journalism is more than reporting events.
It is preserving memory.
It is protecting truth.
It is celebrating achievement.
It is creating opportunity.
It is holding institutions accountable while reminding communities of their own power.
For nearly 25 years, BMORENews has served as a newsroom, a platform, an archive, a convener, an advocate, and an institution dedicated to documenting the history of our people.
The story of BMORENews is ultimately the story of a community that refused to be ignored.
Twenty-five years later, we are still here.
Still reporting.
Still documenting.
Still building.
Still believing that our stories matter.
Because if we don’t tell our story—
someone else will.
And they will never tell it quite the way we can.









