Larry Hobbs receives 2020 McCommons Award for Distinguished Community Journalism

Larry Hobbs, a feature writer and reporter at The Brunswick News (Brunswick, Georgia) has been named the recipient of the 2020 Rollin M. “Pete” McCommons Award for Distinguished Community Journalism.

This award, presented during Grady Salutes on Friday, April 29, recognizes Hobbs for his initial and subsequent reporting on the murder of Ahmaud Arbery. 

“I am thrilled that Larry Hobbs is this year’s recipient of the local journalism award endowed in my name by Grady Thrasher and Kathy Prescott,” said Pete McCommons, the publisher and editor of Flagpole Magazine in Athens. “Larry is a great example of the local reporter who doggedly follows a difficult story in spite of all the other assignments that compete for his time and attention.”

A Lower Alabama native and 1984 graduate of Troy University, Hobbs spent the bulk of his early career working for Florida newspapers, including the Palm Beach Daily News and the Palm Beach Post, among others. He started writing for The Brunswick News in 2014, roughly six years before the Ahmaud Arbery shooting. 

“Larry Hobbs and his colleagues at The Brunswick News did what journalists do: they heard of a potential misjustice, they investigated it, they demanded accountability from those in charge, and they ultimately saw one of Brunswick’s, and Georgia’s, most horrific acts to its conclusion. They performed journalism, at its finest,” said Charles Davis, dean of Grady College. 

Larry Hobbs accepts the 2020 Pete McCommons Award for Distinguished Community Journalism on the stage next to Charles Davis, dean of Grady College.
Larry Hobbs (left) accepts the 2020 Pete McCommons Award for Distinguished Community Journalism on the stage next to Charles Davis (right), dean of Grady College. (Photo: Sarah E. Freeman)

Each year, the McCommons Award, sponsored by Grady College, honors outstanding leadership, innovation and entrepreneurism in community journalism. It highlights the substantial contributions of community journalism to civic life and inspires students to pursue careers in community journalism.

In this case, Hobbs began reporting on the Amhaud Arbery shooting the day Arbery died. Hobbs’ relentless reporting was picked up by national media organizations, including Time, CNN and Poynter, among others, and depicted as a catalyst for the Amhaud Arbery trial. 

“Larry’s reporting was important in many ways, and we are glad to have this opportunity to honor him for the work he did,” explained Kyser Lough, the chair of the McCommons Award Committee and an assistant professor in Grady’s Department of Journalism.

“Even before this award, I have been using Larry’s reporting on the murder of Ahmaud Arbery in my classes as an example of the importance of local, community journalism, and I know other journalism professors have been too,” Lough added. “While this year the award went to a reporter in our home state, it’s important to remember that this is a national award and we accept nominations from across the country.”

Larry Hobbs (right) stands nest to Kyser Lough (left), the chair of the McCommons Award Committee and an assistant professor in Grady’s Department of Journalism.
Larry Hobbs (right) stands next to Kyser Lough (left), the chair of the McCommons Award Committee and an assistant professor in Grady’s Department of Journalism. (Photo: Sarah E. Freeman)

In Hobbs’ comments accepting the award, he gave credit to his team at The Brunswick News for fueling their publication. He also made a point that he doesn’t consider himself or his colleagues heroes — just people “doing their jobs.”

“Truth more often thrives in communities where newspapers abide,” Hobbs continued. “Those in positions of public trust are held accountable when newspapers simply do their jobs. When an ugly truth hid behind the senseless killing of Ahmaud Arbery, The Brunswick News did its job. We covered this sad story relentlessly from the day it occurred right up until justice was served in both state and federal courts. We owed that to our community, and to Ahmaud and to his family.”

This sentiment was also expressed by Janice Hume, the head of the Department of Journalism, while introducing Hobbs. 

“It was Mr. Hobbs’ attention to detail and dogged reporting that brought the story of Ahmaud Arbery’s murder first to local and then national attention,” said Hume. “Without the work of a local journalist who understood and cared about his community, there would have been no justice for Mr. Arbery’s family. Local journalism matters, and Mr. Hobbs’ work is a fine example of why. We are grateful for his service to the Brunswick community and beyond.” 

More details and a form to nominate a community journalist for a future McCommons Award can be found on the McCommons Award for Distinguished Community Journalism webpage.

Pete McCommons to receive inaugural award for distinguished community journalism

The University of Georgia Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication will present Pete McCommons with the inaugural Rollin M. “Pete” McCommons Award for Distinguished Community Journalism.

The award will be presented March 2 at 4 p.m. in the Peyton Anderson Forum at Grady College. The brief program will be followed by a reception, which is open to the public.

“Pete McCommons is an Athens journalism institution, the man who gave the Athens Observer its verve and who created Flagpole as an important countercultural voice of progressivism in the city,” said Charles Davis, dean of Grady College. “His unflagging spirit, his devotion to Athens and to journalism make him the ideal namesake for this new award.”

The Distinguished Community Journalism award recognizes the best in community journalism, as represented by small- to medium-sized daily and weekly news organizations who provide exemplary service to their communities.

McCommons, a political science graduate from UGA, is the publisher and editor of Flagpole Magazine.

Before McCommons worked at Flagpole Magazine, he co-founded the weekly Athens Observer newspaper in 1974.

Since becoming publisher of Flagpole Magazine in 1994, McCommons has written a weekly editorial column in Flagpole, “Pub Notes.” Last year, McCommons, published his first book, “Pub Notes,” which is a collection of his widely followed column.

“I am delighted that the Grady College and its generous sponsors are emphasizing community journalism with this award,” McCommons said. “I am humbled by the honor of having it presented in my name.”

McCommons has been involved in community affairs and local government as he worked in the UGA Institute of Government where he headed the State Government Section.

“The people who cover local government and community affairs are the first responders in the fight to keep our citizenry informed and our governments accountable.” McCommons continued. “This award honors all those whose task is to act as the public’s proxy—to tell us what’s happening in our town and help us understand what it all means. Call them enablers of democracy. That it is given in my name is the greatest reward I can imagine for attending all those community gatherings and meeting (more or less) all those deadlines.”

The Rollin M. “Pete” McCommons Award for Distinguished Community Journalism honors outstanding leadership, innovation and entrepreneurism in community journalism. Supported by an endowment, the annual award administered by Grady College was created to recognize professional journalists, students or faculty who produce community journalism of consequence. The award highlights the substantial contributions of community journalism to civic life and inspires students to pursue careers in community journalism. It is named for Pete McCommons in honor of his outstanding career in community journalism as a leading reporter, editor, publisher and innovative entrepreneur.