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USA Today Editor Sorry For Publishing A Blackface Photo In Her College Yearbook

PAUL J. RICHARDS/AFP/Getty Images

Amber Athey Podcast Columnist
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USA Today’s editor-in-chief apologized Wednesday after a review of yearbooks revealed she had a role in publishing a blackface photo when she was in college.

The photo was discovered in the 1989 Arizona State University yearbook during an investigation by the USA Today network following Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam’s blackface scandal. (RELATED: Yearbook Page Of Democratic Gov. Northam Features Blackface, KKK Robes)

Nicole Carroll, the top editor at USA Today, was the editor-in-chief of the ASU yearbook the year that the racist photo was published. The photo reportedly shows individuals at a Halloween party dressed as Mike Tyson and Robin Givens and wearing blackface.

Nicole Carroll/ YouTube/ The Fashion

Nicole Carroll/ YouTube/ The Fashion

“The news is full of blackface pictures. There can be no debate about whether or not such images are racist and hurtful. They are,” Carroll said in a statement. “It was recently brought to my attention that I was involved in publishing such a photo when I was in college. I am sorry for the hurt I caused back then and the hurt it will cause today.”

Carroll added that she has no memory of publishing the photo and regrets her mistake, touting her efforts to increase diversity in the newsroom as evidence that she has grown since she was in college.

As a journalist and editor, I have long championed diversity and inclusion in our newsroom and in our news coverage. I initiated USA TODAY’s current diversity committee. In Arizona, before I arrived at USA TODAY, our newsroom held frequent meetings with diverse communities, asking them to critique our work and help us do better. They always did.

Gov. Northam’s yearbook photo featuring blackface and a KKK outfit sparked a national sweep of yearbooks by USA Today to see the extent to which racist photos were published in the 1980s. Shortly after Northam apologized for his own photo, Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring admitted that he once wore blackface to a college party.

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