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2003
4th Annual Women's History Month Luncheon
Morning Speaker - Tony Brown, Chief Executive Officer, Urban
America Television Network, Ambassador of Free Enterprise
Award, Communicator of the Year, Educator of the Year
• TV Journalist/Commentator • Self-Help Advocate
• Radio Talk Show Host • Keynote Speaker •
Media Entrepreneur • Film Director • Educator
Tony
Brown is Chief Executive Officer of Urban America Television
Network (UATV) which has about 30 million viewers. In 2002,
Brown also became the first recipient of the National Director’s
Legacy Award for Journalism from the U. S. Department of Commerce’s
Minority Business Development Agency (MBDA).
Within
weeks of that honor, this widely recognized out-of-the-box
thinker was inducted into the National Academy of Television
Arts & Sciences’s prestigious Silver Circle. With
this honor, he joins such television icons as Walter Cronkite
who “have made enduring contributions to the vitality
of the television industry and set the highest standards of
achievement for all to emulate.”
This media entrepreneur has been an innovator in many areas.
He was the first and founding dean, as well as professor,
of the School of Communications at Howard University, where
he established a highly distinguished academic and professional
record. Tony Brown has distinguished himself as a producer
writer, educator, television commentator and film director.
This
television commentator and self-empowerment advocate’s
life embodies the American dream. In his powerful and highly
personal upcoming April, 2003 book, What Mama Taught Me,
he describes the seven core values, given to him by his Mama,
that have sustained his life and given it meaning. In other
words, he writes, “Mama,” a maid and dishwasher
in Charleston, West Virginia, gave him health, wealth and
happiness.
Also
written with Brown’s signature strength and vitality,
he previously authored two powerful books, Black
Lies, White Lies: The Truth According To Tony Brown
which sold 100,000 copies, and Empower The People,
both published by William Morrow & Co.,
Inc. Brown is an active advocate of market solutions to social
problems.
But
it is for his work as a journalist that he is best known.
He is the commentator of the PBS series Tony Brown’s
Journal, the longest-running of all PBS series. Brown’s
weekly television series was selected in the New York Daily
News as one of the top 10 television shows of all time
that presents positive Black images. Tony Brown’s
Journal was the only current program ranked in the top
10. The TV series was also nominated for the 1991 NAACP
Image Award for “Outstanding News, Talk or Information
Series/Special.” Adding to Brown’s many exploits
as a media expert, Tony Brown Chicago can be heard
on WLS (890 AM), the Chicago ABC Radio Networks affiliate
and Disney ABC-owned station. He was selected by Talkers,
the prestigious radio trade magazine, as one of “the
100 most important radio talk show hosts in America.”
Called
“Television’s Civil Rights Crusader”
in a cover story by Black Enterprise magazine, this
educator and lecturer coordinated a march in Detroit that
featured Martin Luther King, Jr. and drew an estimated 500,000,
perhaps the largest civil rights march in America. It is also
believed to be the first time Dr. King delivered his famous
“I Have A Dream” speech. USA Today recently
selected him as one of the top five leaders to analyze the
status of Black America.
The
Sales and Marketing Executives International Academy of Achievement
awarded him the Ambassador of Free Enterprise Award because
of his “interest in creating jobs and business through
the Buy Freedom Network.” Previous Academy inductees
include: Henry Block of H & R Block and J.C. Penney of
J.C. Penney Company. He is the recipient the 1995 Educator
of the Year Award and previously received the Communicator
of the Year Award from the Academy’s national board
of trustees. Previous winners of this prestigious award include
the heads of TBS, CBS, ABC, CNN and several of the major newspaper
chains and national publications. He is the first Black to
receive either honor. The Institute For American
Business recently recognized Brown’s work
in economic and community development with its 1993
Community Service Award. He received The
Economic Empowerment Award from the Southern
Christian Leadership Conference (S.C.L.C.) for “his
vision of economic parity.” Other awards include the
Black Emmy Award, the Image Award by the NAACP in Hollywood
and the Solomon Carter Fuller Award by the nation’s
leading organization of Black psychiatrists for promoting
self-esteem through education, broadcasting and movie distribution.
Brown
also founded the annually-held Black College Day in 1980 and,
as the honorary chairperson of the National Organization of
Black College Alumni, Inc., spearheads a movement to preserve
Black colleges. The U.S. Congress has since officially designated
Brown’s choice, the last Monday in September, as a national
observance. His community activities include: member of the
Board of Trustees of The Shaw Divinity School; member of the
National American Slavery Memorial Advisory Board; advisor
to the Harvard Foundation for Intercultural and Race Relations;
and the Board of Directors of the Association for the Study
of Afro-American Life and History.
Tony
Brown was born in Charleston, West Virginia, where he graduated
from Garnet High School. He received his Bachelor’s
degree in Sociology and his Master’s degree in Psychiatric
Social Work at Wayne State University in Detroit. He has received
numerous honorary doctorate degrees for his achievements in
civil rights, education, economics and journalism.
His
motto is “Self Help.” His call to action is very
explicit: No Black Lies, No White Lies — Only The Truth!
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