
Ernest “Ernie” Floyd, WUTY radio station founder.

After graduating from College of the Holy Cross and acclimating to Worcester in the mid-1980s, Ernest “Ernie” Floyd decided to make more opportunities for youth to express themselves.
At the time, there was a negative connotation about the city’s young people. Many would gather in their off time at the Worcester Youth Center, where “they were being attacked like no one’s business, almost kind of similar [to] the ICE situation,” said Floyd, who now runs 97.9 Unity FM Radio in Worcester. “Just coming in, starting trouble, trying to take people out. … All the young people wanted to do was just to gather, and have a place of their own and just have peace in their lives.”
He used his position as an advertising salesman with a local cable company to change what young people saw. In 30-second to one-minute promos, he saw an opportunity to integrate the community.
Several organizations began asking him to serve on their boards, including YOU, Inc. After agreeing to join the youth organization’s board, Floyd thought about how he could inject media into their services and the community as a whole.
In part to help raise money and in part to provide more opportunity, Floyd launched the nonprofit organization, Pride Productions, Inc., which “empowers communities by providing platforms for creative expression, education, and media literacy” in 1994.
Despite community resistance while pursuing a brick and mortar space — from residents who couldn’t get past teens’ negative reputation — he partnered with the Boys and Girls Club of Worcester to create a safe haven for at-risk youth.
From a new Multimedia Clubhouse, he hosted youth multimedia training activities and produced the talk show, “Youth Unity.”
It was a welcome change for the club, which previously would lose their teenagers around 14 or 15.
As
the organization grew, Floyd led major success in the Worcester
community over the years, while teaching essentials of conducting
interviews and shooting and editing shows. From receiving numerous
awards, successfully obtaining the FCC license to operate a lowpower
radio station on air (WUTY 102.9 Worchester and
streaming on WUTY.org), and relocating its operations and collaborating
with Becker College, the production company has worked with close to
2,000 youth.
“What
inspires me to do the work is the fact that I get the chance to see in
the moment, to empower young people, to allow them to express
themselves. People like the arts, people like the culture, people like
to be
creative, people like to be inspired, and not only be inspired, but if
they’re able to also have the tools and a wherewithal in the tutoring
and the mentoring to go along with that — it’s very powerful,” he said,
adding that several alumni have mentioned the difference it made in
their lives, with some going on to obtain doctorates.
Last week, he saw a LinkedIn post from one former youth
about Rev. Jesse Jackson. Youth Unity had enabled her to meet and
interview him for Youth Unity, decades ago.
Under
his direction, his youth have had the privilege of interviewing
high-profile guests when they arrive in the city, such as Common, the
Worcester Red Sox, Chuck D, the Harlem Globetrotters and many others.
He also believes it’s
crucial to teach youth about media literacy and creative expression
skills in the age of social media, where messages — whether false or
true — are spread so quickly.
Floyd
advises Black entrepreneurs who may want to launch nonprofits that amid
all the highs and lows, the work must come from the heart. Matching
dedication with service to the community is the sweet spot.
“The
longevity is where it comes in: the times where you feel as though that
no one’s going to come to your program, times you feel like customers
are not coming through your door. The time when you don’t feel like
you’re relevant,” Floyd said. “But if you believe in who you are and you
believe in that audience that’s out there that you wish to serve, the
reward will be…when they come to you and they say, ‘Hey, thank you. …I’m
glad you were able to start this and do this.’”