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OP-ED: When Media Attention Depends on Who Is Missing

WASHINGTON INFORMER — In Washington, D.C., and cities across the country, Black boys and girls disappear with alarming regularity. Many cases receive minimal coverage, framed as fleeting statistics rather than urgent human stories. Without sustained attention, tips dry up, public pressure fades, and the chances of a safe recovery diminish.

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The Washington Informer | WI Editorial Staff

The nation is right to hope and pray for the safe return of Nancy Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of journalist Savannah Guthrie, co-anchor on NBC’s “Today.” Any disappearance is terrifying. Any family thrust into uncertainty deserves compassion, urgency, and relentless attention. But compassion should never be selective — and that is precisely where the media’s response exposes a troubling, long-standing inconsistency.

Wall-to-wall coverage, push alerts, and breathless updates appear almost instantly when there is a missing person linked to fame, privilege, or proximity to power. Yet, when Black people — especially children — go missing, the silence is often deafening. Their faces rarely dominate news cycles. Their names seldom trend. Their families search with fewer resources, far less attention, and almost no national urgency.

This disparity sends a cruel, unspoken message: some lives are more “newsworthy” than others. It reinforces a hierarchy of empathy that mirrors broader inequities in American society and in the media. Black families do not love their children any less. They do not ache any less. And the fear, danger, and possibility of tragedy are no different.

In Washington, D.C., and cities across the country, Black boys and girls disappear with alarming regularity. Many cases receive minimal coverage, framed as fleeting statistics rather than urgent human stories. Without sustained attention, tips dry up, public pressure fades, and the chances of a safe recovery diminish.

Derrica Wilson and Natalie Wilson have spent years confronting this injustice. In 2008, they founded the Black and Missing Foundation, Inc. (BAMFI) to ensure that missing people of color do not slip through the cracks and to help families navigate police departments and media environments that can be hostile or dismissive.

According to BAMFI, headquartered in Hyattsville, Maryland, 563,389 people were reported missing in 2023. While Black people make up just 13% of the U.S. population, minorities accounted for 40% of missing-person cases.

“Our first hope is always for a safe recovery, and we certainly want that for Nancy Gutherie. No family should have to experience the trauma of a disappearance,” Natalie Wilson of BAMFI told The Informer in a statement. “We believe that pressure and attention shouldn’t be a rarity, but a standard we fight for in every case we represent.”

This moment should be bigger than one family. Regardless of the outcome — and we pray for the safe return of her mother — as a celebrated journalist, Guthrie has an opportunity to use her platform to help correct this imbalance by consistently amplifying the stories of missing Black children and adults and demanding equal urgency from her industry.

We must search for Relisha Tenau Rudd, 8 years old when she disappeared from a D.C. homeless shelter on March 1, 2014, with the same determination shown in high-profile cases. Loss knows no racial, ethnic, or economic boundaries. Neither should our compassion nor coverage.

“Extensive coverage is a powerful tool because it directly results in recoveries through community engagement,” the BAMFI co-founder said, “and puts necessary pressure on law enforcement to allocate more resources.”

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