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Built for Black journalists and creators

The Front Page to the Black Internet

Afronary is a community-powered ecosystem where Black journalists, creators, organizers, and everyday people decide which stories, voices, and conversations matter most.

Share stories. Organize knowledge. Build community memory. Shape our narrative together — without waiting for outside algorithms to decide what deserves attention.

For independent journalists, podcasters, YouTubers, writers, educators, organizers, and community-centered creators.
Community Pulse Trending Hashtags
#BlackHistory
12,483 saves
#BlackOwnedBusiness
9,104 saves
#VotingRights
7,882 saves
#HBCU
6,337 saves
#BlackMentalHealth
5,996 saves
#PoliceReform
5,220 saves
#AfricanAmericanCulture
4,815 saves

Stop letting algorithms decide which Black stories matter.

Black journalism and Black-created content should not have to fight invisible feeds, buried links, and fragmented conversations just to reach the community it was made for.

  • Important stories get buried by platforms built for attention, not community.
  • Black creators build audiences on systems they do not own or control.
  • Powerful conversations disappear after the feed moves on.
  • Local stories, emerging voices, and niche expertise are hard to rediscover later.

Why creators and journalists should use Afronary

Afronary is not just a place to post links. It is a way to make your work discoverable, discussable, searchable, and connected to the larger Black community conversation.

Get discovered by topic

Your work connects to hashtags, conversations, and community interests — not just a one-time social post.

Turn every story into a conversation

Every link, article, hashtag, and topic can become its own discussion forum and live chat space.

Reach people beyond your followers

Afronary helps community members find useful stories and creators through shared interests and collective activity.

Build community memory

Important resources, links, and conversations become searchable knowledge instead of disappearing into a feed.

Surface emerging voices

Creators, local journalists, educators, and organizers can be found by the value of what they share.

See the community pulse

Track what people are saving, discussing, questioning, and organizing around in real time.

Not just content. Community memory. Not just traffic. Collective power.

For the people shaping Black public conversation.

Afronary is for people creating, reporting, explaining, teaching, organizing, and preserving what matters to the African American community.

Independent Journalists Podcasters YouTubers TikTok Creators Writers Researchers Educators Organizers Church Leaders Local News Voices

What if the Black community had its own front page?

A place where the stories we save, the voices we trust, the conversations we start, and the resources we share become part of a living, searchable, community-shaped knowledge base.

How Afronary works

A simple flow designed to help Black-created work move from link, to discussion, to shared knowledge, to community impact.

1

Share

Post a story, article, video, podcast, resource, or page that matters.

2

Tag

Connect it to hashtags so people can find it by topic and interest.

3

Discuss

Turn links and hashtags into forums, comments, and live chat rooms.

4

Amplify

Let votes, comments, saves, and activity surface what the community values.

5

Preserve

Build a searchable archive of Black stories, resources, and conversations.

If Kujichagulia had a website, it would be Afronary.

Kujichagulia means self-determination: the power to define ourselves, name ourselves, create for ourselves, and speak for ourselves. Afronary brings that principle into digital community life.

This is infrastructure for Black digital self-determination — a place where we collectively shape our own narrative.

Help build the place where Black stories gather power.

Bring your journalism, your commentary, your videos, your resources, your local stories, and your community knowledge into the Afronary Ecosphere.

The front page to the Black Internet is built by the people who show up.