GM CEO Mary Barra to meet with Black media owners days after they call her racist – Detroit Free Press

General Motors CEO Mary Barra will meet with Black-owned media leaders on Thursday, a GM spokesman said. 

The meeting follows an incendiary full-page ad that seven owners of Black-owned media companies placed in Sunday’s Detroit Free Press calling Barra racist for refusing to meet with them and allocate more of GM’s advertising dollars to the Black-owned media.

GM has denied the racist accusation and took issue with some other statements in the ad.

Mary Barra, the chairman and CEO of General Motors talks in a press conference with nine CEO's of Detroit's largest corporations at the Detroit City Council Auditorium with Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan. They were all there to talk and take a joint stand against racism and injustice on June 3, 2020

But on Monday GM’s Chief Marketing Officer Deborah Wahl had a preliminary meeting with Byron Allen, the head of Allen Media Group which owns the Weather Channel, and several of the men who signed the full-page ad. 

That meeting was “constructive,” prompting the parties to set up a follow-up meeting with Barra for Thursday, said GM spokesman Pat Morrissey.

“We never said we would not have a meeting with Mr. Allen,” Morrissey said. “We indicated we wanted to have a preliminary meeting between our chief marketing officer and his team to lay out our broader strategy on diversity and Black-owned media, including all marketing, advertising and sponsorship activities prior to a meeting with Mary.”

Allen said GM reached out to him Sunday afternoon. He and the others spoke with Wahl on Monday morning.

“The meeting with Mary Barra is long overdue,” Allen told the Free Press Tuesday. “We’re looking forward to it and we hope that we can finally get something done where we have meaningful economic inclusion for Black-owned media.”

He said Barra has the opportunity to do something “transformative in corporate America” by being a leader in including Black-owned media in GM’s media spending. But he said the full-page ad influenced the meeting with Barra, even though GM said it did not.

“I can’t believe anyone would state that when we’ve requested that meeting for many years,” Allen said. “This meeting came to fruition because of the enormous press around the ad.”

Civil Rights crusader

The meeting between Barra and the Black-owned media companies will be virtual due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Morrissey said he did not know the time or other details.

More:Full-page ad blasts GM CEO Mary Barra as racist

Barra has said she wants GM to be the most inclusive company in the world and she started an Inclusion advisory board last year, around the Black Lives Matter protests, to prove it.