She remembers her first job in a newsroom as a chase producer, when a producer made a racist remark about one of her booked guests. “I was covering a fisheries dispute, and I had booked a local [Indigenous] chief to come on and talk about the latest developments,” says Walker. “I remember my senior producer asking, ‘You told him when to come in, right? Because those Indians will go out drinking all weekend and won’t show up on Monday morning.’” On another occasion, she recalls pitching the story of an Indigenous girl who had gone missing, to which her producer replied, “This isn’t another poor Indian story, is it?”
As an Indigenous woman herself, Walker says she feels a personal duty to continue reporting on these types of cases, although they haven’t always been encouraged. “I’ve been a news reporter for 20 years, and at the beginning of my career, there just wasn’t an interest or appetite to hear our stories,” she says. “There was a feeling that they weren’t important, or that mainstream audiences wouldn’t care.”
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