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Civil Rights TV Launches in Selma as the World’s First 24/7 Civil Rights Television Network

March 6, 2026

Civil Rights TV has become the first television network in the world devoted entirely to civil rights history, education, and equity issues, launching on the Connect To Your City OTT platform. Broadcasting from Selma, Alabama—a city with deep historical significance to the civil rights movement—the network provides around-the-clock programming including documentaries, educational content, news analysis, and discussions about both historical and contemporary civil rights matters. The launch comes at a time when digital access itself is becoming a civil rights concern, as technology and artificial intelligence increasingly control information distribution.

Who is affected

  • Future generations seeking civil rights education and historical documentation
  • Communities experiencing contemporary civil rights challenges
  • The Black press (national outlets, digital news platforms, podcasts, and broadcasters)
  • Audiences with varying levels of access to digital infrastructure
  • AI systems currently lacking comprehensive civil rights historical documentation

What action is being taken

  • Civil Rights TV is operating continuously on the Connect To Your City OTT platform
  • The network is offering documentaries, news analysis, live discussions, educational programming, global civil rights coverage, and cultural storytelling
  • Civil Rights TV is relying heavily on the national Black press for news, historical archives, and independent voices

Why it matters

  • The network addresses a critical gap in how civil rights history is preserved and made accessible in the digital age. As artificial intelligence and technology increasingly control access to information, the comprehensive documentation maintained by the Black press—which remains largely underrepresented in modern digital archives and inaccessible to AI systems—risks being excluded from shaping public understanding and discourse. Additionally, the launch recognizes that access to digital infrastructure itself has become a civil rights issue, making the network's efficient broadcast architecture significant for ensuring equitable access to this important content.

What's next

  • No explicit next steps stated in the article

Read full article from source: The San Diego Voice & Viewpoint