New York Magazine is facing intense criticism after publishing a cover story that misrepresented a pro-Trump inauguration party by cropping out black attendees from an image, further fueling the media’s portrayal of the Republican Party as homogeneously white. The story, titled “The Cruel Kids’ Table” and written by Brock Colyar, highlighted a TikTok-sponsored event called the “Power 30 Awards” held on the eve of President Donald Trump’s inauguration. The piece claimed that “almost everyone” at the party was white, yet the full photograph, which accompanied the article online, revealed a significant number of black attendees.
Conservative figures have pounced on the apparent attempt to manipulate the narrative by selectively cropping the image, which critics say was done to reinforce a stereotype of the GOP.
The New York Magazine cover, showing a room full of white attendees at the “Power 30 Awards,” was seen as a visual reinforcement of the article’s argument that the pro-Trump crowd was overwhelmingly white. However, when conservative commentator Christopher Barnard posted the unaltered image, it became clear that the cropped version was highly selective, omitting several black people who were present at the event, including the event’s host, CJ Pearson.
“I hosted this event and @NYMag intentionally left me out of their story because it would have undermined their narrative that MAGA is some racist cult,” Pearson wrote on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter.
Other attendees, including former Georgia state Rep. Vernon Jones, rapper Waka Flocka Flame, and PragerU’s Xaviaer DuRousseau were at the event, challenging the magazine’s depiction of a “white-only” affair.
Rob Smith, a black political commentator and consultant, joined the chorus of critics, pointing out that the event was attended by people of color, including numerous black, Latino, and Asian conservatives. “NYMag used a whites-only photo to push the media narrative that diverse Republicans don’t exist and weren’t welcome,” Smith wrote on X, urging people to recognize the media’s selective storytelling.
Even though the article did include quotes from DuRousseau, a Black conservative influencer, it failed to mention his race, describing him merely as a “28-year-old conservative influencer.” This omission added fuel to the fire, leading critics to accuse New York Magazine of further obscuring the diversity of the pro-Trump crowd.
In response to the backlash, a New York Magazine spokesperson defended the publication’s decision to crop the cover photo, stating that it was done to “focus on the center” of the image. They insisted that both the cover and the story accurately reflected the nature of the weekend’s events. However, the controversy has sparked questions about editorial choices and the potential for bias in how stories are presented to the public.
The magazine’s response did little to quell the storm of criticism. Many felt that the magazine was failing to acknowledge its editorial decision to manipulate the image in a way that perpetuated a one-sided and narrow view of the event. For critics, the issue wasn’t just the cropping of a photo, but the broader implications of how media outlets continue to portray political movements and the people within them.
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“Liberal Rag” is an accurate description…good one to never read….trash.