In 2020, while most of us retreated to our phones and various screens, Cary Wheelous started noticing something that wasn’t there.
He’d open app after app, but would never run into any stories from Black publishers, sometimes not even from outlets he followed himself.
“It didn’t make any sense,” he remembers. “If I couldn’t even find the content, how is anyone else going to?”
It was that singular question that would morph into a calling of sorts for Cary, especially after he and his wife dug into the history behind their city, Durham, North Carolina. For instance, they learned about its own historic Black Wall Street, referred to as the Hayti district at the time, named in honor of Haiti, the first free Black republic in the Western Hemisphere.
But the name also carried with it a promise.
“Hayti” stood for community, one that had built its own thriving ecosystem. Cary wanted to pay homage to that kind of spirit, but this time, for the digital era: a singular home where Black journalism could be discovered online just as easily as everything else competing for our attention.
So he incorporated Hayti in November 2020, and started hardwiring things together: calling publishers one by one, getting their permission, putting in the plumbing (custom feeds, safeguards, things like that), essentially creating a platform that could ingest and beam content all over the world.
The idea was clear: one app, one feed, thousands of Black voices. Because for ad-supported media like the publishers he was working with, discovery isn’t a “nice to have” — it’s basically oxygen.
When content doesn’t surface, impressions are lost. When impressions are lost, ad revenue dries up. And when revenue dries up, local newsrooms and independent creators struggle to survive.
Cary built Hayti to short circuit that downward spiral. His app would curate articles from Black publishers and pair them with an eager audience.
Not only that but midway through, he found another gaping hole on the internet: there wasn’t a directory of Black podcasters either!
“I hadn’t seen a news app that also had podcasts,” he says. “But our audience moves fluidly between articles and audio anyway. So it made sense for the app to reflect how people actually consume media.”
By the time podcasts went live in the app, Hayti’s catalog boasted 100+ Black news publishers, along with 3,000+ Black podcasters, and counting.
It wasn’t just a feed anymore; it was now a map of a global media community, right there in your hand.