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Courtland Milloy

American journalist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Courtland Milloy
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Courtland Milloy is an American columnist and former reporter for The Washington Post. He joined the Post in 1975 after working at the Miami Herald.[1] Milloy covers the Washington D.C. area's African-American community and highlighting issues in less affluent areas of Washington, D.C.[2] He is a critic of gentrification and urban cyclists. Milloy hosted the BET show For Black Men Only in 1992. He is one of the journalists interviewed in the documentary film The Newspaperman.

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A former critic of Twitter, he later began tweeting.[3] Milloy has been critical of cyclists and has drawn their protests with his columns.[4][5]

He was a critic of the Washington Redskins team name[6] and has written on issues including panhandling, recovery from drug addiction, reparations, and traffic fines. In the aftermath of the September 11th attacks, Milloy wrote a column addressed as a letter to his son, trying to explain why the attacks had occurred.[7]

On Dec. 19, 2023, Milloy published his farewell column.[8]

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