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- Articles in the Black Press
- Conversation: Cash Michaels (27 min)
North Carolina Channel, UNC Center for Public Television, June 19, 2017 On this edition of "Conversation," host Mitchell Lewis talks with journalist and filmmaker Cash Michaels about his passion of covering social issues that began as a youngster in Brooklyn, NY.
- Journalist profile
See https://muckrack.com/cash-michaels/articles for full list of articles
- Local filmmaker Cash Michaels on Obama, Wake schools and race in N.C. - Interview about film Obama in NC
Bob Geary (Indy Week, August 25, 2010) interviews Cash Michaels about his film "Obama in NC: The Path to History"
- Michelle Obama interview with Cash Michaels, part I
April 8, 2008. Excerpt from April 8, 2008 interview with Cash Michaels of The Carolinian/Wilmington Journal newspapers, at NC State University in Raleigh, NC.
- Michelle Obama interview with Cash Michaels, part II
April 8, 2008. Cash Michaels was then a journalist with The Carolinian Newspaper of Raleigh and The Wilmington Journal of Wilmington, NC.
- Pardons of Innocence: The Wilmington Ten (2 hr)
From the National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA) and CashWorks HD Productions, the 119-minute documentary recounts the turbulent history surrounding the troubled desegregation of New Hanover County Public School System in North Carolina during the late 1960s through 1971, and the violence that led up to the false prosecution and convictions of eight black male students, a white female community organizer, and fiery civil rights activist, Rev. Benjamin Chavis, for protesting racial injustice. Produced, written and directed by Wilmington Journal staff writer Cash Michaels, the film also traces how the Black Press, led initially by Wilmington Journal publisher Thomas C. Jervay, Sr., and subsequently over 40 years later by his daughter, publisher-editor Mary Alice Jervay Thatch, through the NNPA, ultimately pushed for, and achieved the official and dramatic exoneration of the Wilmington Ten in 2012 through pardons of innocence by North Carolina Gov. Beverly Perdue.The film won Second Place in the Best Documentary category during the 14th Annual NC Black Film Festival.
- Premier of Al: My Brother