A Win Rooted in Community

When Dallas Weekly sat down with Jerry L. Hawkins fresh off his Emmy win as a Producer (and narrator) forย Recovering the Stories, the conversation opened with a laugh. Hawkins joked that between the Emmy and a Regional Theater Tony recognition years ago with Dallas Theater Center, he was now โ€œhalfway to an EGOT.โ€ But beneath the humor was a deep gratitudeโ€”for the award, for the people who helped bring the project to life, and for the communities whose histories it uplifts.

Recovering the Storiesย is a documentary series that traces overlooked chapters of Dallas history. The project originated not at KERA, where it ultimately aired, but at Dallas Truth, Racial Healing, & Transformation (TRHT), Hawkinsโ€™ former organization. Its spark came from a Dallas history tour given years ago for visiting racial equity leaders with the W.K. Kellogg Foundation. What stunned Hawkins most was not the guestsโ€™ reaction, but the lifelong Dallas residents who admitted they had never heard these stories.

โ€œThat stuck with me,โ€ Hawkins said. โ€œThe last comprehensive documentary on Dallas was 40 years oldโ€”and it wasnโ€™t equitable. We needed something new. Something that was ours.โ€

Supported by a willing funder and a community advisory board made up of historians, activists, archivists, and local leaders, the team narrowed more than 100 potential stories down to six communities. After three years of interviews, research, and filming, the series launched on KERA last October.

Why Local Storytelling Matters

Hawkinsโ€™ acceptance speech at the Emmys was limited to 20 seconds, nowhere near enough time for a true Emmy acceptance speech. But in an exclusive conversation with Dallas Weekly, Hawkins expanded on a theme that mattered deeply: public media is under threat, and storytelling like this is part of how we keep it alive.

The Corporation for Public Broadcasting, once the key conduit for federal funds to NPR, PBS, and their affiliates, has been defunded. That leaves local stations scrambling for sustainability.

Documentaries like Recovering the Stories, Hawkins said, show what public media can still do at its best: partner with communities, highlight suppressed histories, and make those stories accessible to all.

โ€œIt can start as small as working with a neighborhood-based organization,โ€ they said. โ€œAnd it can turn into something award-winning. Thatโ€™s the power of local media.โ€

Hawkins encouraged viewers to actively support KERA. โ€œThey bring news that actually impacts you. And most of it is accessible. You donโ€™t have to pay to participate in local media.โ€


The People Behind the Project

If the Emmy belongs to anyone, Hawkins said, it belongs to the community.

Hawkins credits KERA’s video team, led by Kaysie Ellingson, and the Dallas TRHT crew, including lead interviewer Dr. Carolee Klimchock, as foundational partners. But the most profound credit went to the residents of West, East and South Dallas who volunteered their stories.

โ€œThese were harrowing stories: bombings, gangs, resettlement. But they were also stories of resilience,โ€ Hawkins said.

One familiar example of these stories: young people, under the leadership of Juanita Craft, integrating the State Fair of Texas.

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โ€œIf they didnโ€™t do that, many of us wouldnโ€™t be welcome in that space today.โ€

What Comes Next

The Emmy has already sparked new ideas. Hawkins hopes to produce a similar series in Fort Worth.

The win also reinforced something personal. โ€œThe racial equity field has been hollowed out,โ€ Hawkins reflected. โ€œThis was deeply personal for me. It reminded me why storytelling matters.โ€

Credit: Jerry Hawkins via Instagram

A community celebration is already in the works. Hawkins plans to carry the Emmy with him everywhere for a week so Dallas residents can see it, touch it, take photos with itโ€”because in his words, โ€œit belongs to them.โ€

Closing Reflections

Hawkins ended the conversation with another round of gratitude for the community members who trusted them with their stories, for KERAโ€™s Kaysie Ellingson, veteran journalist Sylvia Komatsu and for Dallas Weekly itself.

โ€œItโ€™s a dream to be associated with a historic institution like Dallas Weekly,โ€ Hawkins said.

Hawkins’ Emmy win is more than a milestone for a dedicated community leader, educator, historian, archivist and futurist. Itโ€™s a moment of affirmation for Dallas, local media and the generations who fought to ensure their stories wouldnโ€™t be forgotten.