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Rocky writer James Meadow, a gifted storyteller passed away Sunday night of injuries sustained in a bicycle accident Friday. James was a true wordsmith and had a gift for storytelling. His unique style brought sparkle to whatever subject he was writing about.

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One of the last stories he wrote was about homeless teens Michael and Leah featured in the Do1Thing project. James and photojournalist Judy DeHass document these teens struggle to survive. You can read the story here.

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Many of us never met James personally yet all of us were moved by his story about Michael and Leah.

You can also view the video of Michael and Leah on out multimedia page. The video is called Denver:Boundless Promise of Love.

Not long after The Rocky Mountain News ran the story, the newspaper folded leaving hundreds of journalist out of work and a city left without a Pulitzer-prize winning newspaper with a magnificent 150 year history. Two Pulitzer-prize winning photographers who donated their time to shoot for the project, Judy DeHaas and Preston Gannaway both lost their jobs. Judy was fortunate to be hired by the Denver Post and Preston by the Virginian-Pilot newspaper in Norfolk. Just weeks ago the Virginian-Pilot announced yet another round of layoffs.

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Several other photographers and journalist lost their jobs when their newspapers folded or layoffs took place during and soon after the Do1Thing project launched. None of them question why they spent hour after hour documenting the plight of homeless teenagers, all volunteering their time to do so. You see, we are storytellers. This is what we do. We document history and are compelled to share it.

We believe that regardless of todays economic climate or the nations propensity to want to know more about what million dollar movie stars, overpaid athletes and crooked ceo’s are doing than helping to change the world we all live in, we at Do1Thing will continue to document the injustices and social dilemmas facing Americas youth. That’s one thing you can count on.

As for James, our words can not comfort his families tremendous loss. We want him to know that because of the story he wrote about homeless teens for the Do1Thing project, he did yet 1 more thing to raise awareness for a great social injustice and we hope that you all will be moved to Do1Thing to help.

As a tribute to you James, we urge all of you to got to “I Want My Rocky”, leave a note for James’s family and show your support for the journalists who refuse to let the Rocky Mountain News die.

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The thoughts and prayers of the Do1Thing community are with his family and friends and the more than 1.3 million homeless youth struggling to survive. Here’s to you James.

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When you’ve spent your life inside of a kaleidoscope – twisted and churned until it felt like the air was being squeezed out of you – what do you do when you’re finally free to breathe?

When you’ve been abused or abandoned by the very people who gave you life, how do you find a way to open your heart and learn how to hope?

When you’ve been careening in and out of the lives of adults who never keep you around long enough to remain anything but strangers or enemies, what happens when you’re finally flung out for good, homeless, and you discover that concrete isn’t the hardest thing about the streets?screen-capture-4

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Read the entire story here: ROCKY MOUNTAIN NEWS

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