In the Media

#HW , DIBs

For Us, By Us: Black Empowerment Through the Lens of Gen Z

By Ayanna Anderson on March 19, 2025

4 Key Takeaways From the Young, Gifted, and Black (History): The Gen Z Takeover Panel 

Highwire PR and the National Millennial and Gen Z (NMGZ) community were excited to join forces in the mission to amplify the voices of Black Gen Z’ers — passionate advocates for integrity-driven, human-centered workplaces and visionary leaders who are creating their own platforms and community spaces to bring inclusion to life. 

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DIBs

Letters to the women who inspire us: Highwire celebrates women’s equality day

By Tiana Petricevic on August 23, 2024

This year particularly has been a historic year for women in America. 2024 had triumphant moments leading up to the November elections as we saw Kamala Harris become the first Black Woman to lead a major party ticket in the United States and instances of unbelievable pride as we saw Simone Biles become the most decorated gymnast of all time after the Paris Olympics. Women have been able to see themselves and the possibilities of their futures in these joyous achievements. However, it’s important to remember these extraordinary moments are also plagued with hardship and struggle, so it’s more important than ever before to show gratitude to the women who’ve helped guide our lives and our futures. 

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DIBs

Intersectionality, always: A Highwire conversation with Boston Globe's Jeneé Osterheldt for Juneteenth/Pride

By Tarah Johnson on August 14, 2023

Tarah Johnson, Account Executive at Highwire PR and contributing member of Highwire PR's DIBs Council and co-lead of the affinity group, Have Several Seats, reflects on the key takeaways from a recent Juneteenth DIBs Media Roundtable conversation with Jeneé Osterheldt, culture columnist with the Boston Globe. 

As part of Highwire’s DIBS Media Roundtable series, we had the pleasure of welcoming in Boston Globe's Jeneé Osterheldt for an invigorating and inspiring conversation. Held during the entwinement of Juneteenth and LGBTQ+ Pride month, Jeneé’s perspective of intersectionality, empowerment, liberation, allyship, and disruption couldn’t have been more timely. 

Jeneé’s words proved to be very prescient, as news of the Supreme Court rulings on the reversal of affirmative action and the limiting of LGBTQ+ protections erupted just days after our conversation. As we process and face the repercussions of the rulings impacting millions, the question that Jeneé posed during our conversation was - “Are you listening more than talking?” This is especially poignant during this pivotal time of conflicting ideas, conversations and perspectives –when it’s easy to feel helpless. To be a true ally means to listen and hear the unique lived experiences of our historically marginalized counterparts in order to pave a  path forward. 

As an early career PR pro and Black woman, Jeneé’s conversation truly resonated with me. From her background and to the current work she’s doing, including her platform for amplifying Black voices, Black joy and Black lives through A Beautiful Resistance, she shared amazing perspectives on the core issues and pillars surrounding us today - including how to celebrate inclusivity and how to authentically represent a brand. We so appreciated her vulnerability and transparency. 

Here are my 3 top takeaways: 

“You can’t be one foot in, one foot out of the revolution. Our liberation is bound up in each other.” In her conversation, Jeneé emphasized the urgency in understanding that allyship needs to be done collectively in order to achieve true equity and inclusion. She stressed that while she’s fighting for the liberation of Black folks, she’s equally fired up about the liberation and protection of the LGBTQ+ community. We are, as she noted, united in our quest for freedom. 

In this pivotal time of brands questioning how to authentically present themselves in terms of showing allyship and solidarity rather than “ambulance chasing” certain social justice trends, Jeneé encourages staff to hold employers and beloved brands accountable. Given how many companies made promises in the wake of the “racial reckoning of 2020” - pledging to donate funds, support BIPOC businesses, transform their corporate boards and workforces, etc. - it's vital that we hold them accountable. As an activist and journalist, Jeneé assured us that she hasn’t forgotten about these promises and pledges. She encouraged our audience to be vigilant about ensuring that the brands we care about are making meaningful progress toward their DEIB goals. 

“Journalism has always existed to hold truth to power.”  
Jeneé shared her perspective on the trend of rebranding journalists as activists and advocates as opposed to impartial and neutral members of the media. She stressed that to say anyone is without bias is wildly inaccurate and too high of an expectation, even if their writing does not reflect it. Her assessment is that “journalism has always existed to hold truth to power as an accountability tool - it’s been manipulated to hurt people, and also liberate people. Regardless, it’s always been a political tool.” As our agency and industry peers continue to communicate and collaborate with journalists to tell important narratives and stories, it’s important that we keep this context front and center. 

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DIBs

Creating an inclusive PR industry

By Ayanna Anderson on April 27, 2023

diverse hands of a team

Ayanna-Anderson_860Ayanna Anderson
Head of DIBs at Highwire

In the poem “Harlem,” Harlem Renaissance writer Langston Hughes explores the question of what happens to a dream deferred. “Does it dry up like a raisin in the sun?” he wonders.

Deferred dreams are a hallmark of what many historically underrepresented storytellers and creatives have experienced in their quest to achieve their professional aspirations as upwardly mobile PR agency professionals.

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