• Apple News
  • Apply
  • Multimedia
  • Newsletter
  • Photo Gallery
  • Student Media
    • NewsWatch
    • Rebel Radio
    • The Daily Mississippian
    • The Ole MIss
Thursday, March 19, 2026
No Result
View All Result
The Daily Mississippian
  • News
    • All
    • ° Associated Student Body
    • ° Breaking News
    • ° Campus
    • ° National
    • ° Oxford
    • ° Prepping for Primaries
    • ° State
    2026 ASB candidates vie for your votes

    2026 ASB candidates vie for your votes

    ASB Senate dissolves athletics committee

    ASB Senate dissolves athletics committee

    University Police Department investigates campus bomb threat

    Fired UM employee’s lawsuit against Chancellor Glenn Boyce dismissed by federal judge

    New professor on the block: Get to know Richard Purcell

    Richard Purcell wins MHC Teacher of the Year award: ‘The humanities are for everyone’

    Work of Lafayette County Remembrance Project culminates in National Park Service study on lynching sites

    Work of Lafayette County Remembrance Project culminates in National Park Service study on lynching sites

    Here are your 2026 ASB elections candidates

    Here are your 2026 ASB elections candidates

  • Arts & Culture
    • All
    • ° Events
    • ° Features
    • ° Listicles
    • ° Reviews
    Amy McDowell ‘whispers’ sociological secrets in new book

    Amy McDowell ‘whispers’ sociological secrets in new book

    Who are the women who have shaped the University of Mississippi?

    Who are the women who have shaped the University of Mississippi?

    Girls rock! Here’s your Women’s History Month playlist

    Girls rock! Here’s your Women’s History Month playlist

    Mitski’s ‘Nothing’s About to Happen to Me’ delivers domestic horror

    Mitski’s ‘Nothing’s About to Happen to Me’ delivers domestic horror

    Indoor Yard Sale: Clothes, furniture, appliances and a lot of knicknacks

    Indoor Yard Sale: Clothes, furniture, appliances and a lot of knicknacks

    Country star Gavin Adcock announces tour stop in Oxford

    Country star Gavin Adcock announces tour stop in Oxford

  • Sports
    • All
    • ° Baseball
    • ° Basketball
    • ° Cross Country
    • ° Football
    • ° Golf
    • ° Rifle
    • ° Soccer
    • ° Softball
    • ° Tennis
    • ° Track & Field
    • ° Volleyball
    What we learned about Ole Miss Baseball this week

    What we learned about Ole Miss Baseball this week

    Ole Miss Softball drops season opener to BYU but quickly picks up two wins

    Mississippi Senate denies NIL bill

    Lady Rebels look to make history this March

    Lady Rebels look to make history this March

    AJ Storr caps off college career with SEC All-Tournament Team honor

    AJ Storr caps off college career with SEC All-Tournament Team honor

    Ole Miss Rifle brings home the gold

    Ole Miss Rifle brings home the gold

    Chambliss sues NCAA over injunction appeal

    Chambliss sues NCAA over injunction appeal

  • Opinion
    • All
    • ° Ask a Philosopher
    • ° Diary of a Black Girl
    • ° From the Editorial Board
    • ° Lavender Letters
    • ° Letters to the editor
    • ° Magnolia Letters
    Diary of a Black girl: the art of finding your voice

    Redefining womanhood at the University of Mississippi

    What this month means to me

    What this month means to me

    How much longer can movie theaters stay open?

    How much longer can movie theaters stay open?

    Life with Lenora: Antiques host stories and souls

    The people behind the trend: the impact of Black fashion

    ‘What you do matters’: ASB can only accomplish so much

    ‘What you do matters’: ASB can only accomplish so much

    Diary of a Black girl: the art of finding your voice

    Diary of a Black girl: the art of finding your voice

  • Special Projects
    • All
    • ° It's a Whole New Ball Game
    • ° Jordan Center Symposium
    • ° Rising Tides & Temperatures
    • ° Winter Storm Fern
    The cost of catastrophe: Effects of Winter Storm Fern linger

    The cost of catastrophe: Effects of Winter Storm Fern linger

    Landscape workers clear the way for campus regrowth

    Landscape workers clear the way for campus regrowth

    Meet a lineman who brought power back to Oxford

    Meet a lineman who brought power back to Oxford

    ‘Everyone is your neighbor in a disaster’: Churches step up during crisis

    ‘Everyone is your neighbor in a disaster’: Churches step up during crisis

    Kindness on wheels: Facebook moms rally around young rescue driver

    Kindness on wheels: Facebook moms rally around young rescue driver

    Baptist Memorial Hospital puts patient care first during historic storm

    Baptist Memorial Hospital puts patient care first during historic storm

  • About Us
    • Applications
    • Advertise
    • Archives
    • Classifieds
    • Contact
    • Daily Mississippian Staff 2025-26
    • Editorial Board
    • Tips & Corrections
  • Print / e-Editions
  • News
    • All
    • ° Associated Student Body
    • ° Breaking News
    • ° Campus
    • ° National
    • ° Oxford
    • ° Prepping for Primaries
    • ° State
    2026 ASB candidates vie for your votes

    2026 ASB candidates vie for your votes

    ASB Senate dissolves athletics committee

    ASB Senate dissolves athletics committee

    University Police Department investigates campus bomb threat

    Fired UM employee’s lawsuit against Chancellor Glenn Boyce dismissed by federal judge

    New professor on the block: Get to know Richard Purcell

    Richard Purcell wins MHC Teacher of the Year award: ‘The humanities are for everyone’

    Work of Lafayette County Remembrance Project culminates in National Park Service study on lynching sites

    Work of Lafayette County Remembrance Project culminates in National Park Service study on lynching sites

    Here are your 2026 ASB elections candidates

    Here are your 2026 ASB elections candidates

  • Arts & Culture
    • All
    • ° Events
    • ° Features
    • ° Listicles
    • ° Reviews
    Amy McDowell ‘whispers’ sociological secrets in new book

    Amy McDowell ‘whispers’ sociological secrets in new book

    Who are the women who have shaped the University of Mississippi?

    Who are the women who have shaped the University of Mississippi?

    Girls rock! Here’s your Women’s History Month playlist

    Girls rock! Here’s your Women’s History Month playlist

    Mitski’s ‘Nothing’s About to Happen to Me’ delivers domestic horror

    Mitski’s ‘Nothing’s About to Happen to Me’ delivers domestic horror

    Indoor Yard Sale: Clothes, furniture, appliances and a lot of knicknacks

    Indoor Yard Sale: Clothes, furniture, appliances and a lot of knicknacks

    Country star Gavin Adcock announces tour stop in Oxford

    Country star Gavin Adcock announces tour stop in Oxford

  • Sports
    • All
    • ° Baseball
    • ° Basketball
    • ° Cross Country
    • ° Football
    • ° Golf
    • ° Rifle
    • ° Soccer
    • ° Softball
    • ° Tennis
    • ° Track & Field
    • ° Volleyball
    What we learned about Ole Miss Baseball this week

    What we learned about Ole Miss Baseball this week

    Ole Miss Softball drops season opener to BYU but quickly picks up two wins

    Mississippi Senate denies NIL bill

    Lady Rebels look to make history this March

    Lady Rebels look to make history this March

    AJ Storr caps off college career with SEC All-Tournament Team honor

    AJ Storr caps off college career with SEC All-Tournament Team honor

    Ole Miss Rifle brings home the gold

    Ole Miss Rifle brings home the gold

    Chambliss sues NCAA over injunction appeal

    Chambliss sues NCAA over injunction appeal

  • Opinion
    • All
    • ° Ask a Philosopher
    • ° Diary of a Black Girl
    • ° From the Editorial Board
    • ° Lavender Letters
    • ° Letters to the editor
    • ° Magnolia Letters
    Diary of a Black girl: the art of finding your voice

    Redefining womanhood at the University of Mississippi

    What this month means to me

    What this month means to me

    How much longer can movie theaters stay open?

    How much longer can movie theaters stay open?

    Life with Lenora: Antiques host stories and souls

    The people behind the trend: the impact of Black fashion

    ‘What you do matters’: ASB can only accomplish so much

    ‘What you do matters’: ASB can only accomplish so much

    Diary of a Black girl: the art of finding your voice

    Diary of a Black girl: the art of finding your voice

  • Special Projects
    • All
    • ° It's a Whole New Ball Game
    • ° Jordan Center Symposium
    • ° Rising Tides & Temperatures
    • ° Winter Storm Fern
    The cost of catastrophe: Effects of Winter Storm Fern linger

    The cost of catastrophe: Effects of Winter Storm Fern linger

    Landscape workers clear the way for campus regrowth

    Landscape workers clear the way for campus regrowth

    Meet a lineman who brought power back to Oxford

    Meet a lineman who brought power back to Oxford

    ‘Everyone is your neighbor in a disaster’: Churches step up during crisis

    ‘Everyone is your neighbor in a disaster’: Churches step up during crisis

    Kindness on wheels: Facebook moms rally around young rescue driver

    Kindness on wheels: Facebook moms rally around young rescue driver

    Baptist Memorial Hospital puts patient care first during historic storm

    Baptist Memorial Hospital puts patient care first during historic storm

  • About Us
    • Applications
    • Advertise
    • Archives
    • Classifieds
    • Contact
    • Daily Mississippian Staff 2025-26
    • Editorial Board
    • Tips & Corrections
  • Print / e-Editions
No Result
View All Result
The Daily Mississippian
No Result
View All Result

Students weigh staying or leaving journalism school following Meek’s post

Sarah HendersonbySarah Henderson
April 11, 2019
Reading Time: 5 mins read

Editor’s Note: This article incorrectly stated the year that the university’s journalism department became the Meek School of Journalism and New Media. The school was formed in 2009, not 2007.

Thanks to a $5.3 million gift from Ole Miss alumni Ed and Becky Meek, who received their degrees from the university in the 1960s, the university’s journalism department became the Meek School of Journalism and New Media in 2009. Meek’s controversial post from last semester led to a speedy response by the School of Journalism and New Media as well as from many students questioning what they should do next.

Some students weighed the decision of whether to stay in or leave the School of Journalism and New Media after Meek’s post and the school’s response.

Carl Tart, who studied integrated marketing communication at the then-Meek School, considered Meek’s online comments when he decided to change his major to exercise science. Though he said the decision had a lot to do with following his passion, he said he attributed about 40% of the decision to Meek’s comments.

“I was greatly influenced by the actions of Ed Meek and his inability to see how his words were racially targeting,” Tart said. “I cannot believe I was about to get a degree from someone that made comments like this and his name would be on my degree.”

Senior Jyesha Johnson was an Ambassador for the Meek School of Journalism and New Media when Ed Meek posted the controversial photo and caption on Facebook. Since she was a senior, she had no choice but to stay at the university, but said that she probably would not have enrolled at the University of Mississippi if the post had been made before her freshman year. Photo by Daniel Payne

Meek made other disparaging comments on Facebook in 2017, denouncing the university for allowing Wiz Khalifa to perform on campus. At the time, some condemned Meek’s comments about the concert for being racially biased.

“Ed Meek’s comments the first time did not sit well with me,” Tart said, adding that Meek’s second post, which led to his disassociation from the school, was much worse. “He was attacking, basically cyberbullying, two students that are trying to get a degree and make an honest living.”

Other students, upon seeing the school’s swift reaction to the post, decided to stay in the school.

Janae Hudson, a sophomore journalism and African American studies double major, said it would have been easy to walk to Ventress Hall and change her major.

“I decided to stick with it because I saw how well the university and the school handled the situation,” she said. “Plus, plenty of people felt the same way that I did — that the post was disrespectful, sexist, racist and all of those things, and if the university and the school had not handled it as well as they did, I’m pretty sure that I would have changed my major.”

Hudson said the most important part of the university’s response was that it listened to students first, and she was impressed with the forums offered to students and the general public within days of the post.

There were also conversations in her classes that allowed her to share her experiences and the way she felt about the situation as a black woman.

Hudson was not always so impressed. She had second thoughts when deciding to go to the University of Mississippi and was asked by those around her why she would consider coming to Oxford. She was told that “they don’t really care for people like you.”

She decided to enroll in the university because she liked the journalism school and was offered scholarships. Coming from a community that was mostly black, she also said that she believed the experience would enrich her and broaden her “appreciation for her culture.”

After seeing the school’s rapid response to Meek’s post — the school distanced itself from Meek almost immediately —  she felt justified in her choice, she said.

Jyesha Johnson had similar doubts before committing to the university. She came from Indianola, which is de facto segregated, especially when it comes to schools, she said. This environment affected the way she saw the posts from Meek and the reactions to it.

“It kind of hit home this time,” Johnson said.

She also went out that night and was wearing a black dress, like Jordan. Johnson looked closely at the post to make sure she wasn’t seeing herself on the screen.

“I can only imagine the embarrassment that comes with it,” she said.

Sophomore Janae Hudson considered switching her major after the Meek controversy, but decided to stay in the journalism school after she saw the way that the university handled the situation. Photo by Daniel Payne

Because she was a senior at the time, she had no choice but to stay, she said, adding that she probably would not have enrolled at the university if Meek posted the photo of the students before her freshman year.

When the post went up, Johnson was a Meek Ambassador for the Meek School of Journalism and New Media. If the school had not acted swiftly to take the name down, she said “it would have been too much” to continue in the position.

After the post, she and a friend talked about the consequences of leaving. Her friend, who was also from Indianola, thought about going to the University of Southern Mississippi during freshman year, but she never transferred.

Johnson talked to Ki’yona Crawford, who was in one of the photos Meek posted and who is also from Indianola, about leaving the university over the post. They both decided to stay.

Some students hope the removal of Meek’s name will continue to motivate more change across campus. Following student protests and ASB Senate, Senate of the Faculty, Staff Council and Graduate Student Council Senate votes to recommend the Confederate monument in the Circle be relocated to the Confederate cemetery, the university has recommended the same proposal to the IHL.

“As a freshman I was like, ‘This thing is never going to come down, I’m going to have to walk by it for four years,’” Hudson said of the monument. “I feel like the university is taking this in the right direction. I feel like it will get moved. Hopefully while I’m here — I would love to see that happen — but I don’t know.”

Tart also maintained an optimistic outlook on the future of the university.

“I feel like there is still much work to be done at the university,” he said. “But it’s going to get done.”

Tags: Facebookjournalism schoolmeek's postOle Misspendulumstudent opinion
Previous Post

In Opinion: The Suburb of Oxford: How language, race and property values shape our city

Next Post

With no official recommendations, journalism school still seeks common ground

Sarah Henderson

Sarah Henderson

Related Posts

2026 ASB candidates vie for your votes
News

2026 ASB candidates vie for your votes

March 18, 2026
ASB Senate dissolves athletics committee
News

ASB Senate dissolves athletics committee

March 18, 2026
University Police Department investigates campus bomb threat
News

Fired UM employee’s lawsuit against Chancellor Glenn Boyce dismissed by federal judge

March 18, 2026
New professor on the block: Get to know Richard Purcell
News

Richard Purcell wins MHC Teacher of the Year award: ‘The humanities are for everyone’

March 17, 2026
Work of Lafayette County Remembrance Project culminates in National Park Service study on lynching sites
News

Work of Lafayette County Remembrance Project culminates in National Park Service study on lynching sites

March 17, 2026
Here are your 2026 ASB elections candidates
News

Here are your 2026 ASB elections candidates

March 17, 2026
Load More

In Case You Missed It

What we learned about Ole Miss Baseball this week

What we learned about Ole Miss Baseball this week

2 hours ago
Ole Miss Softball drops season opener to BYU but quickly picks up two wins

Mississippi Senate denies NIL bill

4 hours ago
2026 ASB candidates vie for your votes

2026 ASB candidates vie for your votes

24 hours ago
ASB Senate dissolves athletics committee

ASB Senate dissolves athletics committee

24 hours ago
Lady Rebels look to make history this March

Lady Rebels look to make history this March

24 hours ago
AJ Storr caps off college career with SEC All-Tournament Team honor

AJ Storr caps off college career with SEC All-Tournament Team honor

1 day ago
The Daily Mississippian

All Rights Reserved to S. Gale Denley Student Media Center 2019

Navigate Site

  • Apple News
  • Apply
  • Multimedia
  • Newsletter
  • Photo Gallery
  • Student Media

Follow Us

Republish this article

Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Unless otherwise noted, you can republish most of The Daily Mississippian’s stories for free under a Creative Commons license.

For digital publications:
Look for the "Republish This Story" button underneath each story. To republish online, simply click the button, copy the HTML code and paste it into your Content Management System (CMS).
Editorial cartoons and photo essays are not included under the Creative Commons license and therefore do not have the "Republish This Story" button option. To learn more about our cartoon syndication services, click here.
You can’t edit our stories, except to reflect relative changes in time, location and editorial style.
You can’t sell or syndicate our stories.
Any website our stories appear on must include a contact for your organization.
If you share our stories on social media, please tag us in your posts using @thedailymississippian on Facebook and @thedm_news on X (formerly Twitter).

For print publications:
You have to credit The Daily Mississippian. We prefer “Author Name, The Daily Mississippian” in the byline. If you’re not able to add the byline, please include a line at the top of the story that reads: “This story was originally published by The Daily Mississippian” and include our website, thedmonline.com.
You can’t edit our stories, except to reflect relative changes in time, location and editorial style.
You cannot republish our editorial cartoons, photographs, illustrations or graphics without specific permission (contact our managing editor Michael Guidry for more information). To learn more about our cartoon syndication services, click here.
Our stories may appear on pages with ads, but not ads specifically sold against our stories.
You can’t sell or syndicate our stories.
You can only publish select stories individually — not as a collection.
Any website our stories appear on must include a contact for your organization.
If you have any other questions, contact the Student Media Center at Ole Miss.

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Arts & Culture
  • Sports
  • Opinion
  • Special Projects
  • About Us
    • Applications
    • Advertise
    • Archives
    • Classifieds
    • Contact
    • Daily Mississippian Staff 2025-26
    • Editorial Board
    • Tips & Corrections
  • Print / e-Editions

All Rights Reserved to S. Gale Denley Student Media Center 2019

-
00:00
00:00

Queue

Update Required Flash plugin
-
00:00
00:00