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Kierna Mayo
American writer, editor and media executive From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Kierna Mayo is an American writer, editor, and media executive. She started her journalism career as a member of the original writing staff for The Source. Mayo co-founded the lifestyle magazine Honey in 1999, and was later the editor-in-chief of Ebony. Mayo is the vice president and executive editor of Random House and Roc Nation's imprint Roc Lit 101.
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Early life and education
Mayo was born and raised in Brooklyn, New York. She was a fan of hip-hop music during her adolescence, and attended high school at Murry Bergtraum High School with Q-Tip and Ali Shaheed Muhammad (of A Tribe Called Quest fame).[1] She received her bachelor's degree from Hampton University.[2][3]
Career
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Mayo's editorial career began in the early 1990s as an original member of the Mind Squad at The Source, where she worked for four years.[4][5] Her writing frequently pushed back against sexism in the music industry and blanket criticism of hip hop.[6] She then worked as an urban affairs reporter at City Limits.[5]
In March 1999, she co-founded and was named the inaugural editor-in-chief of Honey, a bimonthly lifestyle and fashion periodical geared toward young multicultural women.[4][7] She and her co-founder Joicelyn Dingle sold the magazine and ultimately shuttered it in 2003 due to creative differences with the new owner, as well as financial issues.[8][9]
By 2000, Mayo had joined LikePepper.com, an e-zine, along with George Jackson.[5] In the years following, Mayo worked as Senior Editor of Cosmogirl and was a founding member of the Hearst Diversity Council.[5]
Mayo worked as Ebony's editorial director beginning in 2011 and was promoted to editor-in-chief in 2015.[10][11][3] A few months into her tenure she attracted both praise and condemnation for a cover depicting the fictional Huxtable family of The Cosby Show in a smashed picture frame.[12][11] The accompanying article, written by Goldie Taylor, contextualized Cliff Huxtable's legacy in light of the scores of women that accused Bill Cosby of sexual assault and misconduct.[13]
In 2016, Mayo resigned from her position after Ebony's owners sold the publication to ClearView Partners.[14] Later that year she was named senior vice president of content and brands for Interactive One.[15]
As of 2021, she is the vice president and executive editor at the publishing imprint One World/Roc Lit 101.[16][needs update?]
Other work
Mayo wrote the foreword to Joan Morgan's cultural history book, She Begat This: 20 Years of The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill (2018).[17] She also contributed the essay “Hip-Hop Heroines” to the Smithsonian Anthology of Hip-Hip and Rap (2021).[18]
Mayo appeared as a commentator for On the Record and We Need to Talk About Cosby.[19][20]
She was previously a part of the human rights organization, Malcolm X Grassroots Movement.[21]
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Accolades
- 2012 - Nomination for Outstanding Magazine Article at the 23rd GLAAD Media Awards[22]
- 2015 – The Root 100[23]
- 2020 – Equality Now Gala Honoree[24]
References
External links
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