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Leslie Gray Streeter

Leslie Gray

Leslie Gray Streeter is a columnist excited about telling Baltimore stories — about us and the things that we care about, that touch us, that tickle us and that make us tick, from parenting to pop culture to the perfect crab cake. She is especially psyched about discussions that we don’t usually have. Open mind and sense of humor required. When she was a sophomore at Baltimore City College High School in the ’80s, she met her first newspaper columnist and thought, “Wait? They’ll pay you to write about your opinions? Sign me up!” And since then, that’s all she has wanted to do, and mostly all she has done. She went from City to the University of Maryland and then up and down the East Coast until she found herself as the lifestyle columnist for The Baltimore Banner. It’s a perfect circle, and honestly she’s directing the emotional movie montage in her head right now. There’s a lot of Janet Jackson in it. At The Banner, she wants to build on the expertise she has gained as a staffer at The Miami Times, The York Dispatch and The Palm Beach Post, with freelance gigs including writing for The Washington Post, opining about grief for O, The Oprah Magazine and recapping “The Bachelorette” weekly for The Seattle Times. That’s a lot of ground to cover, but as a features writer and columnist for almost 30 years, she has learned that we, as humans, cover a lot of ground, too, so what we read should, too. We are what we care about, eat, watch, listen to and gab online about, and it means even more when it’s about where we live. And that's what her column is. She is the author of one book, the memoir “Black Widow,” and an international speaker about grief, culture, parenting and a lot of other stuff. She is also a widowed single mom of one son named Brooks Robinson, because they’re really, really, really from Baltimore, which they returned to in July 2020. She is a very slow run-walker, a fan of true crime documentaries and podcasts, and a bad guitarist who sings loud over the chords she can’t reach.

The latest from Leslie Gray Streeter

Streeter: A reimagined Harborplace has to be for everyone
COLUMN | As Harborplace’s planned refurbishment continues to progress, it must remain a third space welcoming to all — or it won’t work.
A sparse number of pedestrians meander through Harborplace at lunchtime at the Inner Harbor in Baltimore on Wednesday.
Streeter: Why is it so hard to keep a trash can in Baltimore — and get a new one?
COLUMN | Baltimore City living has its highs and lows, like parking issues and potholes, but it shouldn’t have to mean that your trash can goes missing.
Garbage cans line an alley in Baltimore's Charles Village neighborhood.
Streeter: When a child goes missing, it should shake us all
COLUMN | Tristan King is not my kid, but his ordeal makes me, as the mother of a brown son who looks a little like him, wonder why the systems failed and how we can shore them up.
Streeter: Pastor Jamal Bryant apologized for implying the Target boycott was over. It never was.
OPINION | Baltimore native Pastor Jamal Bryant declared his part of the Target boycott over. We still aren’t going back.
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 05: Dr. Jamal H. Bryant speaks onstage during WayMaker Men's Summit Presented By BET Experience – Day 1 on June 05, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.
Streeter: As a public-school parent, I thought kids had too much time off. Was I wrong?
It seems, as a parent, that Baltimore City Public School kids have too much time off. Some educators tried to set me straight.
Children sled down the hill at Wyman Park Dell on the morning after the first lasting snowfall of the winter, in Baltimore, MD on Monday, Jan. 6, 2025.
Streeter: Being stuck in the Middle East is a nightmare. I know — it happened to me.
COLUMN| I’ve been having flashbacks to a time, four decades ago, when my family was trapped in the Middle East, unable to get home. It was awful. But at least, unlike the Americans currently trying to make their way out of the same region, there weren’t any bombs.
Passengers stranded by the closure of Dubai International Airport await for assistance in the airport parking lot in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Sunday, March 1, 2026.
Streeter: Black women don’t always get to rest. Baltimore’s Hanifa clothing brand is doing just that.
COLUMN | Existing and excelling as a Black woman can be exhausting. This business owner chose to rest.
NEW YORK, NEW YORK - OCTOBER 08: Anifa Mvuemba attends Glamour Women of the Year at Times Square EDITION Hotel on October 08, 2024 in New York City.  (Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for Glamour)
Streeter: DC arts events are coming to Baltimore. But we’re still us.
COLUMN | Baltimore may be having a moment, but in our own way, we are the moment. And we always have been.
Streeter: What the city’s doing wrong with potholes. RIP my tires.
COLUMN | Baltimore City is working to fill the potholes, but it feels like they’re literally patching the problem for a temporary fix.
Baltimore City buildings reflect in water inside of a pothole on I-83 in Baltimore, Thursday, May 22, 2025.
Streeter: Dating is hard. But I want a human companion.
As a widow, I understand loneliness and the yearning for true, deep connection, but I just don’t believe that can exist with what is essentially a robot.
Affectionate woman with arm around AI robot on sofa - stock illustration
Streeter: Baltimore is Black history. You’re driving by it right now.
COLUMN | A local historian and explorer has created a vibrant Instagram page that he hopes helps Baltimoreans feel the importance of this often-maligned but very special place.
The WIN Waste Baltimore trash incinerator is seen along I-95 in Baltimore.
Streeter: Sotto Sopra’s dress code causes chatter but makes sense to me
COLUMN | Dress codes help create a restaurant’s ambience.
Sotto Sopra in Mount Vernon recently posted an official “Dress Code & Guest Courtesy Policy.”
Streeter: White House snub of Governor Moore is straight-up racist. Say that.
COLUMN | The fact that it’s so hard for other people to name a thing, a thing is such tiresome gaslighting, Leslie Gray Streeter argues.
Maryland Gov. Wes Moore was not invited to two White House events during an annual National Governors Association meeting.
Streeter: Mom groups can help bridge the adult friendship gap or create another gulf
COLUMN | Mom groups can be a lifeline, because early parenting can be a singularly isolating situation where you spend most of your time tending to a needy human who can’t talk back to you.
A black woman hugging herself among the silhouettes of people. Loneliness in a crowd. Vector illustration in flat style.
Streeter: The Brewer’s Art’s demise a reminder to support local faves while you can
COLUMN | The sudden closure of The Brewer’s Art in Baltimore is a reminder to visit our local iconic places before we can't anymore.
The Brewer’s Art, the Mount Vernon brewpub and restaurant that has been an anchor of the Charles Street corridor for 30 years, closed abruptly Monday, according to employees.
Streeter: What Amy Sherald’s BMA show says about Baltimore. And why you should see it before it leaves.
Amy Sherald's "American Sublime," at the Baltimore Museum of Art, is at once a work of art and an act of rebellion.
Wednesday, October 29, 2025 - Amy Sherald's exhibit American Sublime press viewing at the Baltimore Museum of Art. Sherald's piece, "If You Surrendered to the Air, You Could Ride It," at right.
Streeter: That’s not your parking spot. Lose the chair.
COLUMN | There’s a lot of discussion about chair etiquette as Baltimore residents dig out from the snowstorm. And it’s getting testy.
A lawn chair marks a shoveled-out parking spot in a Dundalk neighborhood on Wednesday.
Streeter: I don’t want Snowmaggedon to freak me out. And yet.
COLUMN | I know Marylanders look ridiculous freaking out over a predicted storm when, more than not, it doesn't materialize. I'm still loading up on snacks, batteries and bourbon anyway.
Snow falls during the last big snow in early 2025.
Streeter: The new food pyramid pushes meat and dairy. What if you don’t eat that?
Column | The New Food Pyramid says eat more meat, which forgets all the vegans.
Elle, 18 months, reaches toward the bread at the bottom of the revised food pyramid while held by her mother Claire Dooley, after an announcement by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., about nutrition policy, at Health and Human Services Headquarters, Thursday, Jan. 8, 2026, in Washington.
Streeter: Stevie Wonder’s reminder that MLK and our history were not illusions
The celebration of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday is bittersweet this year.
Civil rights leader Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr delivers a speech at UC Berkeley's Sproul Plaza, Berkeley, California, May 17, 1967. Approximately 7,000 people attended the event. (Photo by Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)
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