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New Interns Chosen For 2025 Chris Moore Internship Program

March 8, 2025

Interns will gain experience needed for their future career goals in public relations, media production and editing. 

This spring, Toni Jackson, Donnie Rae Blackwell and Tafarah Cherilus, all students or alumni of the University of Pittsburgh, were welcomed as 2025 interns with the Pittsburgh Black Media Federation’s Chris Moore Internship Program.


The Chris Moore Internship Program, named after broadcasting journalism legend Chris Moore, aims to provide aspiring, young writers with the resources, tools and experience needed to access the journalism industry.

 

The interns will work with local news and writing platforms with the Pittsburgh Black Media Federation (PBMF) and have the opportunity to work with professional journalists and establish meaningful networking connections.

 

Jackson, a junior at Pitt, will work with Propel Schools as an editorial intern in the public relations capacity, handling internal and external communications. Blackwell, a recent Pitt graduate, will serve as NextPittsburgh’s newest Press Forward Fellow, covering stories on the African community in Pittsburgh. Cherilus, a junior at Pitt, will work with PBMF, producing articles centered on the organization, handling communications and having opportunities to pitch and write for partner news platforms such as the NorthSide Chronicle, Soul Pitt Media and NextPittsburgh.

 

All interns said they have a deep passion for writing, often seeking opportunities to develop their craft.



In high school, Jackson wrote for her school’s newspaper and continued with journalism at the University of Pittsburgh through the Pitt News.

 

“I love pop culture, and I love news. So, it’s nice to do something that incorporates both,” Jackson said.


Jackson majors in public and professional writing, holding a minor in digital media and Portuguese. Previously, she has worked with Piptone in strategic communications and the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum as a communications marketer.

 

Blackwell’s passion for writing coincides with her interest in sports. She single-handedly started the sports section of her high school’s newspaper and continued sports writing at Towson University as a writer and associate editor. Additionally, Blackwell has worked with the Pitt News for sports marketing and with the Western Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic League (WPIAL) as a sideline reporter.

 

At the University of Pittsburgh, Cherilus’s interest in editing has led her to work with Pitt’s on-campus magazine, Collision Literary Magazine, as an art editor and also as a Peer Tutor at the university’s Writing Center. Her writing on complex themes such as race, religion and family has earned her two awards: the Al McDowell in Nonfiction and the Award for Excellence in Public and Professional Writing Courses. She previously worked with the Fletcher Free Library as a communications intern in fall 2024.

 

“Once I realized I was good at writing, I knew I had to pursue it as a career,” Cherilus said.

 

Jackson, Blackwell and Cherilus hope, through the Chris Moore Internship, to gain the experience needed to polish themselves as writers for their future career goals in public relations, media production and editing.

“The goal is for me to gain versatility to prepare for the world of journalism,” Blackwell said. 

 

NEXTpittsburgh, she said, “is letting me really do my own thing and find myself as a writer. I have a track and field article coming up and I have also been getting experience editing short videos. I just did an athletic interview for my podcast, and I’ll be using it to promote my article coming out this month. Super cool things being done!”

 

At the end of the yearlong internship, Jackson, Blackwell and Cherilus hope to have stronger writing, a better understanding of journalism and media and an opportunity to have better connections that will help them launch their careers in the industry.


November 8, 2024
For 38 years, Elaine Effort, a trailblazing reporter with the former all-news radio station KQV (1410), covered it all: crime, community celebrations, politicians, artists. She retired from the station in 2017 but continued to work with other local radio outlets, focusing on stories about African American lives. Effort, a charter member of the Pittsburgh Black Media Federation (PBMF), unexpectedly passed away at Presbyterian Hospital on Nov. 6, 2024. The Detroit native was one of the first Black female journalists at KQV and, during her time there, she also hosted “Pittsburgh Profiles,” a weekend show that featured interviews with prominent local figures and individuals whom she called “the unsung heroes.” Effort had a pleasant, measured voice and was known for her probing award-winning journalism. In 2017, Pittsburgh City Council honored Effort with a proclamation, naming Dec. 28, 2017, Elaine Effort Day in the City of Pittsburgh. She was also the winner of multiple Golden Quills from the Press Club of Western Pennsylvania and PBMF’s Robert L. Vann awards, achievements noting her excellence in journalism. Additionally, PBMF honored her with its Legacy Award in recognition of her longstanding contribution to advocating for Black journalists and her career achievements. Effort joined the Pittsburgh Black Media Federation in 1973 as a founding member. From 1984 to 1989, she served in various leadership roles, including as vice president, secretary and treasurer. Her insights, compassion, and leadership in running a nonprofit helped the organization to always move forward. For more than 30 years, Effort often volunteered as an instructor with PBMF’s annual Frank Bolden Urban Journalism Workshop for teenagers. “Mrs. Effort was always willing to listen to new ideas and roll up her sleeve to make them work for PBMF,” said Ervin Dyer, current treasurer and a former president of PBMF. “She was supportive, and her range of community connections were a positive for the organization,” PBMF president Deborah Todd was a high school student in the Frank Bolden Journalism Workshop when she met Effort. “She was incredible with young people,” Todd said. “She was patient and kind, but she was also strict and held us accountable to doing our best and preparing us to be capable journalists. I admired and respected her.” Effort earned a bachelor’s and a master’s degree from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and soon moved to Pittsburgh to join KQV, where she built a tenure spanning nearly four decades. For a while, Effort also did TV, hosting a weekly public affairs show on WPGH, called “In Focus.” She would also, on occasion, substitute for Chris Moore as a guest host of WQED’s “Black Horizon,” when he was away from the station. In an interview with the New Pittsburgh Courier in 2017, Effort described herself as a newsperson who loves radio. “The work has been its own reward. I have loved it, I have no regrets, I have no complaints,” she said. Brian Cook, PBMF’s immediate past president, remembered Effort as “an incredible mentor” during his early days as a young journalist. “We both worked in radio simultaneously, and our professional kinship grew while she was at 1410-AM KQV and I was at the American Urban Radio Networks,” he said. “She helped guide me with her wealth of knowledge and experience in the industry. She always encouraged me to find my voice and pursue stories that mattered, instilling the confidence to tackle challenging subjects.” Effort is survived by her husband, dentist Edmund Effort; a son, Edmundson, a daughter, April; and two grandchildren.
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New Article Written by the Pittsburgh Union Progress about the Chris Moore Media Internship from PBMF
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