Newseum’s Today’s Front Pages exhibit goes dark
Newseums Todays Front Pages exhibit goes dark
Some mornings, I take a commuter bus into DC to get to work. When I do, I get off at the National Gallery of Art, walk past the Federal Trade Commission, and cross Pennsylvania Avenue at the Newseum. I take a few minutes to scan the day's headlines, and then off for Canada (or at least the Canadian Embassy).
This morning, the front pages had gone black, in honor of "journalists who died or were killed in the pursuit of news in 2014."
Posted on
June 8, 2015 by
Newseum
Todays Front Pages might look different to you this morning. For this first time in our history on Pennsylvania Avenue, no newspapers are displayed in our exhibit inside and outside the Newseum or online. Instead, were displaying blacked-out front pages as part of a campaign to raise awareness of the increasing threats to journalists around the world.
The
#WithoutNews awareness campaign takes place as we rededicate our Journalists Memorial, which recognizes journalists who died or were killed in the pursuit of news. At a
10 a.m. ceremony, which is open to Newseum visitors and will be
live streamed online, the names of 14 journalists selected to represent all journalists who died covering the news in 2014
will be added to the 2,257 names on the memorial.
We invite you to share why news is important to you on social media using #WithoutNews, and to encourage others to consider a world without news.
Learn more and get involved at
newseum.org/withoutnews.