logo
April Ryan Addresses ‘Awful' Racial Blunder at White House Correspondents' Dinner

April Ryan Addresses ‘Awful' Racial Blunder at White House Correspondents' Dinner

Yahoo02-05-2025
April Ryan has been to dozens of White House Correspondents' Dinners, but this year's event stood out—for the wrong reasons.
'It was the oddest thing I've ever been to,' said Ryan, the longest-serving Black White House correspondent in history, on this week's episode of The Daily Beast Podcast.
During the dinner, Ryan—who currently serves as the Washington Bureau Chief or BlackPressUSA—was awarded the Dunnigan-Payne Prize to honor her storied career. But the WHCA made an excruciating blunder while presenting the award.
As the association's president Eugene Daniels took the stage to honor Ryan, the screen behind him mistakenly cut to NBC News' Yamiche Alcindor. The association had mixed up two of the political media's best-known Black women.
'Oh, that was a bad moment,' Ryan recounted. 'It was awful,' she told co-hosts Joanna Coles and Samantha Bee. 'We have gone beyond that kind of time when Black people all look the same.'
Ryan said that while the incident was embarrassing for Alcindor as well, the two were able to laugh about it afterward.
'That's my girl,' Ryan said. 'I called her, 'She said, 'Hey April,' I said, 'No, no, no, I'm Yamiche, you're April,' and we got a laugh out of it.'
The atmosphere at the dinner was notably more subdued than in previous years. President Donald Trump again opted to skip the event; the association last month canceled its scheduled comedian, Amber Ruffin, following comments she made on The Daily Beast Podcast.
Coles—who also attended the dinner—noted, 'It's been a bad week for Black women with the White House Correspondents.'
Ryan, who served on the association's board for three years in the early 2010s, agreed. 'You never censor someone's craft and their art. You never do that.'
She also reminisced over that tenure in the interview, explaining to Coles and Bee that it's not always glitz, glamour, and endless opportunities to interview the president.
'I was in charge of the refrigerator in the kitchen that kept breaking. And we had to bring the people in when the president was gone,' Ryan said. 'It was such an arduous task. I mean, people would complain about the toilets not working or (that) there's no toilet paper in there.'
During President Trump's second term, however, it's not just journalists' appliances that are breaking down. Even outside of the WHCA, Ryan admitted that media morale has plummeted. The president has escalated his attacks on the 'fake news' by demonizing longstanding journalists and barring reporters from the White House press pool.
'And once you lose ground, you never get it back,' she added. 'If the president gets his way, we won't be around.'
But Ryan isn't give up hope just yet. She stressed that the Fourth Estate must continue as 'the next line of questioning when all else fails,' including the government itself.
That being said, it won't be easy.
'We're all unpacking the first one hundred days of this administration,' said Bee. 'I know it's too soon to talk about when it will be over, but how are we actually going to put the horses back in the barn?'
'How are we gonna get the horses back in the barn?' asked Ryan. 'Well, let's say this—the barn has burned down. There's no barn to go back to."
New episodes of The Daily Beast Podcast are released every Thursday. Like and download on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, YouTube, or your favorite podcast app. And click here for email updates as each new episode drops.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ozzy Osbourne died of a heart attack, report says, citing death certificate
Ozzy Osbourne died of a heart attack, report says, citing death certificate

CNN

timean hour ago

  • CNN

Ozzy Osbourne died of a heart attack, report says, citing death certificate

People in entertainment Heart disease Chronic diseasesFacebookTweetLink Follow Ozzy Osbourne died of a heart attack and had coronary artery disease in addition to suffering from Parkinson's disease for years, his death certificate said. The singer had suffered from coronary artery disease as well as Parkinson's, according to the certificate filed at a register office in London and obtained by The New York Times on Tuesday. Osbourne died on July 22 at 76. An email from The Associated Press requesting confirmation from the registry office in Hillingdon Council in northwest London, which covers the district where the Black Sabbath singer was reportedly officially pronounced dead, was not immediately returned. Osbourne's representatives didn't immediately return the AP's emailed requests for comment. The document was submitted by Osbourne's daughter Aimée Osbourne the New York Times reported. Osbourne died of '(a) Out of hospital cardiac arrest (b) Acute myocardial infarction (c) Coronary artery disease and Parkinson's disease with autonomic dysfunction (Joint Causes),' the certificate states. Osbourne, also a somewhat unexpected reality TV star, announced in 2020 that he had Parkinson's disease after suffering a fall. In announcing his death, his family asked for privacy and said that he was with relatives when he died. Fans came out in droves from across the country to mourn his death in his hometown of Birmingham last week. Osbourne had his final show there just weeks before his death, as admirers watched the heavy metal icon perform while seated on a black throne. 'I don't know what to say, man, I've been laid up for like six years. You have no idea how I feel — thank you from the bottom of my heart,' Osbourne said during his performance. 'You're all … special. Let's go crazy, come on.'

Columbia, Brown to disclose admissions and race data in Trump deal
Columbia, Brown to disclose admissions and race data in Trump deal

Boston Globe

time4 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

Columbia, Brown to disclose admissions and race data in Trump deal

Advertisement But college officials and experts who support using factors beyond test scores worry that the government — or private groups or individuals — will use the data to file new discrimination charges against universities and threaten their federal funding. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up The Trump administration is using every lever it can to push elite college admissions offices toward what it regards as 'merit-based' processes that more heavily weigh grades and test scores, arguing that softer measures, such as asking applicants about their life challenges or considering where they live, may be illegal proxies for considering race. The additional scrutiny is likely to resonate in admissions offices nationwide. It could cause some universities to reconsider techniques like recruitment efforts focused on high schools whose students are predominantly people of color, or accepting students who have outstanding qualifications in some areas but subpar test scores, even if they believe such actions are legal. Advertisement 'The Trump administration's ambition here is to send a chill through admissions offices all over the country,' said Justin Driver, a Yale Law School professor who just wrote a book about the Supreme Court and affirmative action and who said he believed that the administration's understanding of the Supreme Court's affirmative action decision was wrong. 'They are trying to get universities to depress Black and brown enrollment.' The Trump administration has celebrated getting this data as part of its war on 'woke' university policies such as affirmative action and diversity, equity and inclusion programs that it says discriminate based on race. 'Because of the Trump administration's resolution agreement with Brown University, aspiring students will be judged solely on their merits, not their race or sex,' Linda McMahon, the secretary of education, said when the Brown deal was announced, echoing similar comments she had made about Columbia. 'Woke is officially DEAD at Brown,' President Trump proclaimed on Truth Social in announcing the deal. Columbia and Brown will have to maintain 'merit-based admissions policies,' according to their settlements, which codify the administration's broader aims in legally binding language. The universities 'may not by any means unlawfully preference applicants based on race, color or national origin in admissions throughout its programs,' both agreements state in identical language. 'No proxy for racial admission will be tolerated.' The admissions disclosures will provide the government with data on accepted and rejected applicants broken down by 'race, color, grade point average and performance on standardized tests.' While it is not clear what Brown's and Columbia's data will reveal, general data shows that admissions systems that are focused on standardized tests typically help Asian students and harm the chances of Black students. Advertisement Of the high school graduates who scored between 1400 and 1600 on the SAT in 2024, the highest possible scores, 1 percent were African American, and 27 percent were Asian, according to the College Board, the private organization that administers the test. About 12 percent of students taking the test were Black, and 10 percent were Asian. Some experts consider the tests to be unfair because there are score gaps by race and class. Student demographics at Columbia and Brown had already started to shift as the 2023 Supreme Court decision took effect. Among first-year undergraduates entering Columbia in fall 2024, 39 percent were Asian, and 12 percent were Black. In the fall of 2023, the entering class was 30 percent Asian and 20 percent Black. (White and Hispanic enrollment dropped slightly from 2023 to 2024). At Brown, Asian and white first-year enrollment went up from fall 2023 to fall 2024, while Hispanic and Black enrollment decreased. Not all Ivy League universities, however, showed the same effect. Applicants to Columbia have the option of not submitting standardized test scores, complicating any analysis. According to the National Center for Education Statistics, a federal statistical agency, about 61 percent of first-year Columbia undergraduates in fall 2023 had submitted test scores. Brown has returned to requiring test scores from applicants. In a letter to the campus, Christina H. Paxson, the president of Brown, said that the federal government was already entitled to the new data from Brown or any other university as part of compliance with civil rights laws. Advertisement She said she was not worried about releasing the material, saying it would 'demonstrate the strong academic qualifications of the classes we admit while remaining committed to welcoming students from a wide range of backgrounds.' Columbia also explained in a recent fact sheet that the data would be anonymized and that it had an obligation to comply with the law. 'We have agreed to provide data to which the government is entitled, and is currently requesting from scores of institutions, including ours,' Claire Shipman, Columbia's acting president, said when the deal was announced. This article originally appeared in

The Studio Museum in Harlem Will Reopen in November
The Studio Museum in Harlem Will Reopen in November

Hypebeast

time5 hours ago

  • Hypebeast

The Studio Museum in Harlem Will Reopen in November

Summary The Studio Museum in Harlemwill open the doors to its new 82,000-square-foot home on November 15, 2025. The announcement comes as an exciting new development for museum-goers following the institution's seven-year overhaul period. Originally slated to reopen in 2022, the museum closed its doors in 2018, tearing down its former building to make room for the multimillion-dollar expansion project, helmed byDavid Adjayeof Adjaye Associates. Housed within its seven floors, the structure will see an over 70% spatial increase across indoor and outdoor offerings, alongside 14,000 square feet dedicated to state-of-the-art exhibition space, a rooftop terrance, flexible program spaces and a studio and lounge for pioneering Artist-in-Residence program. The museum's Studio Store will also debut a range of publications and new products by Black-owned businesses. In terms of showcases to look forward to, the Studio Museum will present four exhibitions, two site-specific commissions and mount works from its esteemed collections. Heading the charge will be a survey exhibition dedicated to artist and activist Tom Lloyd, whose work was the subject of the institution's inaugural exhibition in 1968. 'As our historic homecoming approaches, I am reflecting on the transformative vision of the artists, supporters and community members who have helped us shape this pivotal moment in our legacy,' said Chief Curator Thelma Golden in a recent statement. 'Our breathtaking new building is an invaluable space and a tribute to the museum's mission and the vitality of artists of African descent. I am thrilled to welcome everyone back to a reimagined Studio Museum, rooted in Harlem and resonating far beyond.' The Studio Museum in Harlem will celebrate its new home with a building-wide Community Day on November 15, offering free admission and arts programming for visitors. For more information, head to the museum'swebsite.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store