Patty Talahongva (native name: Hopi languageQotsak-ookyangw Mana, born 1962) is a Hopi journalist, documentary producer, and news executive. She was the first Native American anchor of a national news program in the United States and is involved in Native American youth and community development projects. A past president of the Native American Journalists Association, she was the recipient of their Medill Milestone Achievement Award in 2016. In 2019, she was hired as the news executive for the national television news program developed by Indian Country Today at Arizona State University.
Early life
Patricia A. Talahongva, or Qotsak-ookyangw Mana (white spider girl) in the Hopi language, was born in 1962 in Denver, Colorado.[1][2] Though her Certificate of Degree of Indian Blood states she is four-fourths Hopi, Talahongva acknowledges Tewa ancestry as well.[3] Her parents had been relocated from the Hopi Reservation in Arizona, under a federal program that sought to assimilate Native Americans into mainstream society by relocating them to urban areas. Her father worked in King's Bakery,[4][5] but when she was four, her parents and sister returned to their village, Songoopavi in Second Mesa, Arizona so that the girls would not lose their cultural heritage.[1][6][5] Talahongva' upbringing was complicated because her parents wanted their six children to participate in their native culture and religion but they also did not want them to struggle with the stigma they had faced.[6] Because of this, she had both a Catholic and Hopi upbringing and did not learn the Hopi language as a child, but instead was taught English.[6][7][8]
While she was attending the Phoenix boarding school, she began working as a youth reporter for the Phoenix Gazette[7] and also started working at KOAI-TV station in Flagstaff.[13] Though she was a teenager, FCC regulations required having a representative of the Navajo or Hopi people on staff since the station was broadcast on their reservations.[9] Reporting on the 1980 United States presidential election, she became interested in politics,[13] and also reported on world events like the Iran hostage crisis.[12] When she was attending university, she worked at the Phoenix zoo as a public relations assistant and in 1986, was hired as public relations manager of Chanen Shocket Communications.[14][15] She married an Anglo, with whom she had her son Nick, who was raised in the Hopi tradition. The couple divorced after fourteen years of marriage.[15]
In 2013, Talahongva became the curator of the Phoenix Indian School Visitor Center,[7] a heritage center opened after the boarding school closed. The Center aimed to reinforce the importance of culture and preserve the history of the school, including the period when Native culture was suppressed.[26] In 2016, she was honored by the Native American Journalists Association with the NAJA-Medill Milestone Achievement Award for lifetime contributions to journalism.[13] Acting as an advisor to the Heard Museum she was one of the curators of "Away From Home: American Indian Boarding School Stories", which was exhibited in 2019.[27] That year, Indian Country Today founded a nationwide news broadcast station at the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication,[28] selecting Talahongva as executive producer for their news broadcasting.[23]
In addition to her work in journalism, Talahongva has served on the boards for the Center for Native American Youth[23] and for the Hopi Education Endowment Fund, leading many student projects.[19][25] Besides her two years as president of the Native American Journalists Association, she served in various other capacities on the board. She has also served on the board of directors for UNITY: Journalists of Color, Inc.[19]
2011 V-Day 11.11.11, collaborator and co-director[36] Of the over 50 segments submitted to "tell the collective experience of being a veteran", 15 were selected for inclusion in the final production.[37]
2018 “No More ‘Die Bread’: How Boarding Schools Impacted Native Diet and the Resurgence of Indigenous Food Sovereignty,” Journal of American Indian Education, Vol. 57, No. 1 (Spring 2018), pp. 145-153. https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5749/jamerindieduc.57.1.0145
Magahern, Jimmy (September 2014). "Humble Pride". Phoenix Magazine. Phoenix, Arizona: Cities West Media. ISSN1074-1429. Archived from the original on July 31, 2019. Retrieved August 1, 2019.
Scheib, Ronnie (August 23, 2002). "Lady Warriors". variety.com. Los Angeles, California: Variety Magazine. Archived from the original on July 31, 2019. Retrieved July 31, 2019.