When Aaron Foley took over the helm of B.L.A.C. magazine, it certainly got more visibility. Traffic on the website alone grew from 1,000 monthly users to 50,000 (and counting). More recently, the author of How to Live in Detroit Without Being a Jackass was appointed by Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan to be the city鈥檚 first 鈥渃hief storyteller.鈥 We find out just what that means.
糖心vlog安卓版 Detroit: 鈥淪toryteller鈥 isn鈥檛 a classic city job description.
础补谤辞苍听贵辞濒别测:听I鈥檓 taking all my skills and journalism background [and] essentially doing the same job. I was trying to think of a job title that was accessible to residents.
You developed your own title?
Yes. When I go out to block clubs and events [I don鈥檛 want to] say, 鈥淗ey, I鈥檓 executive director of鈥︹ One, I don鈥檛 look that part. Two, that sort of communicates that I have some sway or influence. [I] tried to think of something that made people want me to tell their stories. The city has communications officers and press secretaries. I鈥檓 not that.
What鈥檚 the format?
Building a website, producing content for a cable show, and potentially a print publication. Really going out across the city and enterprising stories. The residents now are the tipsters.
Are you concentrating outside of downtown?
The 7.2 [square miles that make up greater downtown/Midtown] isn鈥檛 off limits鈥ut we鈥檙e not putting it on a pedestal. [We鈥檙e] bringing up the neighborhoods so we have equity in coverage. Can we [talk about] something opening on Grand River as much as something downtown? [For example] if we see a block [with] people pulling permits to improve their homes, we can ask: 鈥淎re you feeling confident enough to stick around here?鈥 The [mayor鈥檚]听 goal is to keep people here in Detroit.
To stop the bleeding?
You can pump in as many people as you want downtown but if people are leaving everywhere else it鈥檚 still a net loss. There鈥檚 a lot of frustration鈥n neighborhoods.
I鈥檒l ask you. How does it make you feel when people say downtown and Midtown are doing well but literally the rest of Detroit is not, when you know you live in a [great] place like this [North Rosedale Park]? The narrative is skewed [toward downtown]鈥Some] other neighborhoods are pretty great.
I heard a Radio 910 listener call you 鈥渁n operative of the administration to shade the truth.鈥 Are you selling out?
Not to be like: 鈥渢he mayor told me.鈥 But, like, the mayor told me鈥︹渄on鈥檛 lose your edge with this.鈥 There鈥檚 a perception that you just become this bureaucrat.
I love some of your past headlines: 鈥淵鈥檃ll mothers need 鈥 a clue.鈥 Or describing a news story as 鈥渃heerleading, white-savior dogsh**!鈥 You probably can鈥檛 use that kind of language now?
[Laughs] No. The attitude won鈥檛 [change] but without using profanity. Is it going to be all positive news and cheerleading? No. I was guilty of [some bashing]. Take the perception that bike lanes mean young white kids. [I didn鈥檛 know] the city is tracking data. Now you鈥檙e seeing bike lanes on Jefferson and Livernois. There鈥檚 a ton of black people who use bikes.
鈥 Aaron Foley
How do you define gentrification? How does the city?
I honestly don鈥檛 think the city has a definition. 鈥 And that is something we need to own and define. The city has been overwhelmingly inclusive in its plans. When the Fitzgerald project was done, the developers had 40 community meetings prior to the announcement. It鈥檚 not like I鈥檓 cheerleading this. But it seems to me the city is trying to go the extra mile to make sure everybody is included鈥rying to calm residents鈥 fears and [explain] that development doesn鈥檛 necessarily mean a luxury condo. It can mean a green space.
On Facebook, you debated whether to call out someone after overhearing ignorant comments. 鈥淚鈥檓 either going to be the arrogant author or the combative mayoral appointee.鈥
There鈥檚 still a shadow over government employees. Like [former mayoral chief of staff] Christine Beatty saying: 鈥淒o you know who the f*** I am?鈥 You don鈥檛 want to be that guy. I鈥檓 not just representing myself [now].
In Jackass, you described 糖心vlog安卓版 Detroit as 鈥渨here to look if you need 鈥 a good plastic surgeon.鈥 You added that we also provide informative reads. But we can take it. What are we missing?
[Laughs] I think it helps having [staff] live in the city. You get more like things you did like [on] Oneita Jackson [a cab driver profile in January 2015 糖心vlog安卓版 Detroit]. 糖心vlog安卓版 can tell that story like nobody else. I鈥檓 kind of envious鈥your] pages [had] more space to 鈥 tell those sort of stories that B.L.A.C. just couldn鈥檛.
We鈥檝e done stories on human trafficking, heroin, DPS, etc., but there鈥檚 a perception we鈥檙e not 鈥渞eal鈥 journalism. I say: 鈥淵es, our art directors are wonderful. But don鈥檛 hate us because we鈥檙e pretty.鈥
Vogue and Teen Vogue gets that same sh**. You might have models on the covers, but [inside] there鈥檚 all sorts of stuff about [harder issues].
Resume
Age: 32
Hometown: Detroit (Russell Woods neighborhood)
Education:听B.A. in journalism, Michigan State University
Experience:
March 2016-present: City of Detroit: Chief Storyteller, appointed by Mayor Mike Duggan
2009-present: Freelance writer (work has appeared in The Atlantic, BuzzFeed, Thrillist, CNN, Reuters, Forbes, Next City, Columbia Journalism Review, Crain鈥檚 Detroit Business, Detroit Metro Times, Detroit Free Press, Bridge 糖心vlog安卓版, Model D, and more)
Dec. 2015-March 2016: Editor-in-chief, B.L.A.C. magazine
Oct. 2014 -Dec. 2015: Copywriter, Team Detroit
2012-2014: Detroit Editor, Jalopnik
May 2012-Sept. 2013: Associate editor, Ward鈥檚 Automotive Group
May 2009-May 2012: Web producer, MLive Media Group
Sept. 2006-May 2009: Copy editor/columnist, Lansing State Journal
Books:
础耻迟丑辞谤:听How to Live in Detroit Without Being a Jackass, Belt Publishing, 2015.
Editor: The Detroit Neighborhood Guidebook, Belt Publishing, 2017
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