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Tag: charlottesville tomorrow

Her downtown art exhibit was vandalized. Here’s why she’s keeping the damage

A brick lined street with a large format black and white photograph facing a lighted storefront.

Photographer Kori Price says that we, as a society, are capable of healing while acknowledging harms of the past and present.

How one family owned and ran the largest Black-owned farm in Albemarle County — for generations

A man with a walking stick looks out over a river, trees behind him.

Philip Cobbs tells the story of his family’s land, and the remarkable ancestors who were determined that their legacy would be equality.

Learn more about the Albemarle County farm at Buck Island with Philip Cobbs

A two-lane road with a car approaching, cleared land and some trees to the side, white clouds in a blue sky. In the center of the image, a green road sign says, "BUCK ISLAND CREEK."

Cobbs will present his work to uncover his family’s history on April 23 at the Northside Library on Rio Road.

It was once his family’s farm — the largest Black-owned farm in Albemarle County — but now we all own part of it

A person with a walking stick walks on a grassy, cleared land, between shrubbery and trees, sun shining across.

Philip Cobbs tells the story of his birthplace, and why we should all know its history.

Telling our stories at Soul of Cville

A banner that reads "101.3 Jamz, Beyond Fitness with Sabrina, Chic & Classy Image Consulting, and the IX Art Park Foundation present SOUL OF CVILLE AT IX ART PARK. A collage of people celebrating and musical notes.

Charlottesville Inclusive Media will be featured at the Soul of Cville 2023 festival at IX Park.

Listen: Why this photographer wants communities in Charlottesville to say, ‘No, we are not oppressed’

A collage of portraits: A woman looking off camera against a bright blue background, A woman holding a small child and smiling at her, A young boy in a blazer in front of a colorful background.

On the In My Humble Opinion podcast, Marley Nichelle says they want Black communities in Charlottesville to feel like they can thrive.

Watch: Charlottesville Inclusive Media tells media colleagues at a national conference why it’s so important to include more people in the news

Three people on a stage, seated in white armchairs. Person in the middle speaks into a microphone.

The First Person Charlottesville project was featured at the 2023 Collaborative Journalism Summit in Washington, D.C. in June.

Listen: What Charlottesville needs to recognize about accessibility

A woman in a wheelchair is photographed on a brick sidewalk with a stairwell behind her.

Next on the In My Humble Opinion podcast, India Sims talks about the challenges of doing simple things in a city that won’t change.

Vote now to support First Person Charlottesville!

Three people in chairs on a stage, man in middle speaking with microphone

Charlottesville Inclusive Media is a finalist in a contest about the future of news.

Gun violence is as much about changing our culture as it is about changing our laws, says UVA undergrad activist

People lined up next to a podium with a man in a suit speaking at microphones, two on the edge are wearing red and black t-shirts with slogans on them. There is a historical painting behind them.

Karly Scholz says it’s time her generation changed its relationship with guns.

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The Charlottesville Inclusive Media project was formed by Charlottesville Tomorrow, In My Humble Opinion Radio Show, and Vinegar Hill Magazine with the goal of bringing more inclusive representation to local media.

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