Omari Salisbury ‘exits stage left’ of Converge Media’s flagship show
Jun 1, 2022, 12:16 PM

Recording Academy PNW Chapter members Carol Crawford (L) and Omari Salisbury attend the Member Celebration at Museum of Pop Culture on May 10, 2022 in Seattle, Washington.
(L)
Omari Salisbury — CEO of Converge, a media outlet that caught national attention for its coverage of Seattle-area protests following the murder of George Floyd — is stepping down from hosting the company’s flagship Morning Update Show.
“This gives me an opportunity to kind of step back … to reinforce our existing shows and work with them. But also, we’re spreading our footprint across the Pacific Northwest and down in Portland … in Spokane and Anchorage, we really want to anchor ourselves as a world-class company in telling the black story across the Pacific Northwest,” Salisbury told Xվ Newsradio.
The flagship news program will continue in the form of The Day with Trae, hosted by the current co-host TraeAnna Holiday. In a , Salisbury described ongoing physical injuries and “mental scars” that he incurred during his coverage of the George Floyd protests.
“I’m exiting stage left, but it’s gonna give me an opportunity to uplift our other additional programming and really get more into news and issues in our community,” Salisbury said. Converge Tuesday its partnership with The Vida Agency, a public relations firm that emphasizes its pursuit of amplifying voices of minority communities.
While Converge rose to prominence with its coverage of the George Floyd protests, Salisbury prides Converge’s amplification of issues that affect the black community which extends beyond policing. As an example, he pointed to the difficulty that black-owned businesses can have in securing loans.
As a black-owned business itself, Converge has its own issues with financing, which Salisbury sees as indicative of a systematic problem facing the black community in the Seattle area. That kind of problem is one on which Converge seeks to report.
“Xվ FM, here’s Converge. We’re in our sixth year. We’ve won almost every award there is to win. We’ve been in the black for six years, and we cannot get a loan. Converge can’t even get a $500 credit card,” Salisbury continued.
“Imagine now the issue that Converge has — a black-owned business magnified by so many other black-owned businesses who don’t have any access. You see what I’m saying?”
The CEO and journalist addressed disproportionate levels of homeownership in the Seattle area as an example of an issue that’s underserved in the media at large.
“I would say that a lot of times in media, they sum up all black people’s issues around police. And two years ago, before the protests, there was a white income gap between black people and white people, and homeownership was in decline. We do ourselves a disservice if we bottle up all the issues that have impacted black people around one policy, There are larger issues that should be discussed,” Salisbury added.
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