S. Epatha Merkerson to host new TV One series, “Find Our Missing” (Searching For Missing Black Americans)
As the centerpiece of an effort to draw attention to and help find missing Black Americans, whose stories are largely ignored in national media coverage of missing persons, TV One will premiere Find Our Missing, a 10-episode, one-hour docu-drama series Wednesday, January 18 at 10 PM ET.
Hosted by Emmy and Golden Globe Award-winning actress S. Epatha Merkerson, who for 16 years portrayed Police Lieutenant Anita Van Buren on NBC's Law & Order, Find Our Missing is designed to put names and faces to people of color who have disappeared without a trace. Each episode will tell the story of the missing person or persons, beginning with the day they vanished and the frantic searches by loved ones and investigators to find them.
Find Our Missing provides insight into these victims' lives –their hopes and dreams, what makes them tick, and how they have touched those around them - from the people who know them best.
The episodes will chronicle the investigations into their disappearances, and why the search for them so far has only turned up dead ends.
"Nearly one-third of the missing in this country are black Americans, while we make up only 12 percent of the population. Yet stories about missing people of color are rarely told in the national media... Find Our Missing will be dramatic television, but we also hope that TV One's combined efforts on air, through digital and social media, and through partnerships will also draw attention to a critical issue and bring new information to light for the loved ones of the missing featured in this series, and for others. We hope these profiles will trigger the memory of someone who might have seen something, and feel compelled to come forward and help these families who have suffered for so long," said TV One President and CEO Wonya Lucas.
The premiere episode of this new series will feature stories of two people who vanished in 2009: Pamela Butler, a 47-year-old Program Analyst at the Environmental Protection Agency, who mysteriously disappeared from inside her Washington, D.C. home despite an elaborate security system. Her boyfriend was the last person to see her; and Hasanni Campbell, a sweet five-year-old boy suffering from cerebral palsy vanished from the Rockridge neighborhood in Oakland, California. His foster father, who was dropping off Hassani at his foster mother's job, says he left him alone for just moments when he took Hassani's younger sister to the front of the store.
But the effort won't be relegated just to television, as TV one will complement the series with social media and online content, via its social networking accounts and website: www.tvone.tv.
Future episodes of Find Our Missing will feature: Yasmin Acree, a popular 15-year-old honor student on Chicago's west side, who disappeared from her home in the middle of the night in 2008; Althedia Vaught, a 41-year-old- grandmother-to-be in Tulsa, who was seen leaving her house late one night in January 2009 wearing her pajamas, never to be seen again; Monica Bowie, a 34-year-old Atlanta woman, who is believed to have been kidnapped in 2007 from the parking deck of her Atlanta apartment complex and other stories.
Towers Productions produces the series for TV One.
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