
Tony Brown poses in front of the Tony Brown’s Journal logo. Brown, who died June 17 at age 93, transformed Black public affairs television and influenced generations of journalists through his groundbreaking broadcast career. — (Photo courtesy of Tony Brown’s Journal/Facebook)
By Crusader Staff
For nearly four decades, millions of Americans welcomed Tony Brown into their homes each week. But Brown was never interested in simply hosting another television program. He wanted to transform the way Black America saw itself—and the way the nation saw Black America.
Brown, the pioneering journalist, broadcaster, educator and civil rights advocate, died June 17, 2026, at his home in Newport News, Virginia. He was 93. His death marked the end of one of the most influential careers in Black media history, but his impact continues to resonate throughout journalism, public broadcasting and higher education.
“Will it help Black people?”
That philosophy distinguished Brown from many of his contemporaries.
Rather than chasing celebrity interviews for ratings alone, Brown viewed television as an instrument of empowerment. He believed media could either reinforce damaging stereotypes or become a powerful force for education, economic advancement and self-determination.
His commitment to changing media was rooted in personal experience.
Reflecting years later on his career, he recalled that when he entered broadcasting there were virtually no Black producers or on-air personalities.
“When I started out in television, television stations had almost zero producers, zero Black faces on the air,” Brown said in an interview reflecting on his career. “I never dreamed I would ever work in television.”
He remembered approaching a Detroit television station as a young man after being encouraged by a college friend to pursue broadcasting. Rather than receiving encouragement, Brown was laughed at by a station executive who considered the idea of a Black television host unimaginable.
Instead of accepting rejection, Brown helped change the industry.
Week after week, Brown challenged viewers to confront difficult conversations about race, inequality, economics and public policy. His interviews often generated controversy because they addressed issues many national programs ignored altogether.
Brown also understood that representation behind the camera mattered as much as representation in front of it.
He consistently advocated for more Black producers, writers, executives and decision-makers throughout the television industry. He argued that authentic storytelling required diverse leadership in newsrooms and production offices.
His work extended beyond broadcasting.
Brown served as the founding dean of the School of Communications at Howard University before later becoming the inaugural dean of the Scripps Howard School of Journalism and Communications at Hampton University, where he helped mentor a new generation of journalists committed to public service and ethical reporting.
He also wrote books, syndicated a newspaper column and hosted radio programs while encouraging Black entrepreneurship and economic independence.
Perhaps Brown’s greatest legacy lies in the doors he helped open.
Today’s television landscape—with Black news anchors, network executives, producers, documentary filmmakers and nationally recognized journalists—is dramatically different from the one Brown entered more than six decades ago.
He often credited public television, particularly WNET, for giving him an opportunity when few others would.
“It helped shape my life in a direction nothing else was prepared to do,” Brown said while reflecting on the station’s commitment to diversity and public service.
For generations of viewers, however, Brown did far more than shape his own career.
In an era when conversations about media representation continue to evolve, Tony Brown’s career serves as a reminder that progress often begins with those willing to challenge the status quo.
His voice may be gone, but the platform he built—and the journalists he inspired—continue carrying forward the conversation he began decades ago.
Based on reporting by Chicago Crusader.