
5 Black Women Journalists To Follow For Diddy Trial Coverage
As the trial of embattled music mogul Sean 'Diddy' Combs continues in a New York court, many around the world are hanging onto the updates given via journalists, as no cameras are allowed in the courtroom.
Diddy's trial officially began on May 5 with jury selection. After the jury was chosen, the trial kicked off on May 12 with opening statements from both the defense and the prosecution. Witness testimony followed with Diddy's long-time ex-girlfriend Cassie taking the stand and recounting the abuse she suffered during their 10-year relationship.
During her testimony, Cassie explained the inner workings of their relationship, which she described as having extremely unbalanced power dynamics. She recalled that Diddy called 'all the shots' in both their personal and professional relationship, and if she did anything outside of what he demanded, abuse would occur, according to CNN. Source: WWD / Getty
'He would smash me in my head, knock me over, drag me, kick me, stomp me in the head if I was down,' Cassie said during her testimony on Tuesday, May 13.
When asked about the heavily reported 'Freak Offs,' Cassie described how she felt after the multiple sexual encounters would occur. 'I felt disgusting. I was humiliated. I didn't have the words to put together at the time how horrible I really felt, and I couldn't talk to anybody about it,' she said, per CNN.
Cassie, who is currently pregnant with her third child with husband Alex Fine, also shared the details of the physical altercation that was captured by hotel cameras in 2016. She revealed that the abuse seen on the video at the hands of Combs initially began because she attempted to leave one of the 'Freak Offs' before it was over.
To highlight the #BlackGirlMagic on full display in such a huge trial, we rounded up a few of the Black women you need to follow for all of the latest updates, happenings, surprises and developments in the trial of one of the biggest names in entertainment.
Loren Lorosa
The Breakfast Club correspondent is keeping listeners of the show informed with the trial's latest updates, and also sharing the developments on social media of each day's events and testimonies.
Jericka Duncan
The CBS News correspondent is covering the Diddy trial in real time, for both the CBS network and also breaking down the daily events of the case to other media outlets, such as Entertainment Tonight .
Dr. Yasmin
Jasmine Simpkins and Debrah O
Despite Diddy's trial taking place in New York, KTLA reporter and Hip Hollywood host Jasmine Simpkins and Debrah O are keeping the West Coast fully informed about every detail of what's happening during the court proceedings.
Tori B. Powell
A member of CNN's breaking news team that is covering the trial step-by-step via the network's website, social media channels and also lie correspondence on-site at the New York courthouse.
SEE ALSO
5 Black Women Journalists To Follow For Diddy Trial Coverage was originally published on hellobeautiful.com
Black America Web Featured Video
CLOSE

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fox News
9 minutes ago
- Fox News
Fox News beats ABC, NBC, CBS during weekday primetime while CNN has lowest-rated week of year
Fox News Channel beat all broadcast networks in a key metric last week as CNN had its lowest-rated week of the year. Fox News averaged 2.7 million viewers during primetime on weekdays from May 26-30, compared to 2.4 million for NBC, 2.4 million for CBS and 2.3 million for ABC. While Fox News prevailed against the trio of broadcast networks, it also obliterated CNN. Fox News averaged 1.5 million total day viewers from May 26 through June 1, compared to a dismal 308,000 for CNN. During primetime, Fox News averaged 2.3 million viewers while CNN settled for only 374,000. It was much of the same among the advertiser-coveted demographic of adults aged 25-54, as Fox News delivered 175,000 total day demo viewers and 240,000 during primetime, compared to 49,000 total day and 61,000 primetime demo viewers for CNN. CNN finished with its worst week of the year across both primetime and total day as Fox News had its highest cable news share since inauguration week. Along the way, the top 100 cable news telecasts for the week all aired on Fox News. "The Five" averaged 3.7 million total viewers and 409,000 in the critical demo to lead cable news in both categories. "Special Report with Bret Baier," "The Ingraham Angle," "Jesse Watters Primetime," "Hannity," "FOX News @ Night," "Gutfeld!," "Outnumbered," "The Will Cain Show," "America's Newsroom," "America Reports" and Harris Faulkner's "The Faulkner Focus" all had strong weeks, too, to help Fox News crush CNN. Ratings data courtesy of Nielsen Media Research.

Miami Herald
11 minutes ago
- Miami Herald
Jackie Robinson mural defaced at Overtown park where Negro League once played
The rain drizzled down as Terrence Cribbs-Lorrant peeled back the plastic bags unveiling a swastika and racist slurs that cover a mural of Jackie Robinson at the historic Dorsey Park in Overtown, hallowed grounds where Negro League players once played ball. The racist epithets — including a swastika and N***** spray-painted onto the concrete walls surrounding the park — were reported to the Miami Police on Monday afternoon in what the community and police are calling a hate crime. The park is located at Northwest 17th Street and Northwest First Avenue. 'We need the community to uncover the hurt and the hatred that is existing,' Cribbs Lorrant, director of Miami's Black Police Precinct and Courthouse Museum, told reporters at a Tuesday morning press conference. The mural's defacing galvanized the Overtown community, with members of the Overtown Business Association, the museum and others calling for more of a police presence around the park, once home to the Negro Leagues' Ethiopian Clowns. 'We're going to increase police patrols,' Miami Police Commander A. Cooper told the small crowd inside Dorsey Memorial Library. 'We're going to make sure we also partner with some of our specialized units to bring more presence, more enforcement in the key hot spots in Overtown.' The murals have been up since 2011 and were spearheaded by URGENT Inc., a youth development organization based in Overtown, along with funding from the Knight Arts Challenge. This is the first time they have been defaced, said Saliha Nelson, the founder and CEO of URGENT. Nelson's brother Kadir Nelson painted some of the murals that adorn the park, including that of Satchel Page, James 'Biz' Mackey and Josh Gibson — all stars of the Negro Leagues, which began in 1920 to counter Major League Baseball excluding Blacks from playing professional ball. Jackie Robinson played for the Negro Leagues' Kansas City Monarchs in 1945, before signing with the Los Angeles Dodgers in the winter of 1945, becoming Major League Baseball's first Black ballplayer. 'I was really floored and appalled that someone would have the audacity to come and deface in such a derogatory, mean-spirited way,' Saliha Nelson told the Miami Herald.
Yahoo
28 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Civil rights leader Talbert Swan II claims racist threats from musician
SPRINGFIELD — Bishop Talbert W. Swan II is urging an entertainment company to take action over a string of racist messages he says he received from a musician it represents, Danny Wilde. Wilde, a 68-year-old white musician, performs as part of a Bon Jovi tribute tour under the management of AFM Entertainment. The incident began when Swan made a social media post about the fifth anniversary of the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis. Swan said Wilde went off in a reply, invoking racist tropes about food stamps and Section 8 housing vouchers. Swan's post criticized those calling for the exoneration of Floyd's killer, former Minneapolis Officer Derek Chauvin. MAGA followers have been calling for President Trump to do just that. Chauvin is serving a 22-year sentence for violating the constitutional rights of Floyd and, in a separate incident, of a 14-year-old child. On May 25, 2020, Floyd lost his life after Chauvin pressed his knee against Floyd's neck for nearly 10 minutes; Chauvin also choked and beat the child with a flashlight on Sept. 4, 2017. Through Facebook and Instagram messages in response to Swan's post, Wilde sent racially charged insults, threats of physical violence, and other offensive messages aimed at Swan's race, profession, and advocacy for justice. Wilde also demanded that Swan, a nationally known minister and president of the Greater Springfield National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, 'make him a burger,' while threatening lawsuits and claiming he would 'snap (him) in half.' Swan said there were thousands of comments and hundreds of people that responded to his post. 'Being active and vocal against injustice triggers a lot of these racists,' he said. Although many responses are nasty, he said he does not expose everyone, only those who make physical threats against him. 'Danny Wilde felt emboldened to threaten me because I spoke out against injustice and condemned calls to pardon Derek Chauvin, the convicted murderer of George Floyd. That is the audacity of white supremacy in 2025,' Swan said. 'What I don't understand is why they don't think Black people have the right to voice their opinion,' he said. Wilde works for AFM Entertainment, a company in Michigan owned by Len Schmitzer that hires performers across the nation. Wilde's acts include Bon Jovi tribute performances, tying his public image to a legendary brand known for its mass appeal and diverse fan base, Swan said. 'AFM Entertainment must make clear whether it condones this kind of behavior from its artists,' Swan said. 'Any agency with integrity should sever ties immediately. Bon Jovi is a global icon whose music speaks to hope and unity. I find it hard to believe Jon Bon Jovi would stand by while someone using his name and likeness harasses Black clergy and spews racist vitriol from behind a keyboard,' he said. AFM Entertainment's owner, Len Schmitzer, said in a statement the company does not condone any type of racist or hate speech. 'I have not been shown any of the threatening messages in question, so I cannot comment on any of that directly, as I have no knowledge of what was said,' he said. 'This matter will be handled internally once we see the messages in question. But again, to be clear, AFM Entertainment fully condemns any sort of racist, hate or threatening speech.' Swan said he sent Wilde's messages directly to AFM Entertainment and Schmitzer before he released a statement to the media and as of Tuesday had not heard back. Over the past 30 years, Swan said he's faced many threats and attempts at censorship for speaking up about racism. While the messages were reported to Meta, owner of Facebook, Swan said Tuesday he hadn't received a response. Swan said Wilde's messages are part of a bigger problem of out of control white men attacking Black leaders online without facing consequences. 'This is not about one man. This is about a culture that emboldens racist violence — digital or physical — when Black people speak truth to power. It must be confronted and condemned at every level,' Swan said. Swan said he has taken precautions to safeguard himself, his church and his family. Despite the danger, Swan emphasized the importance of continuing to fight for social justice and racial equality. 'I believe in a higher power, protection and being prepared to deal with a threat,' Swan said. He said he has always felt compelled to do this work and that he wants to make the world a better place for his children and grandchildren. More now than ever, particularly with the Trump administration in office, Swan said he fears for what kind of world will be left to them. Swan called for unity among people of all races, colors and creeds. 'We need to learn how to set aside our differences and come together to fight for our collective best interests.' 'This isn't just about Black people. Although we're disproportionately affected, many different groups are affected by the wickedness of this administration,' he said. Read the original article on MassLive.