Niala Boodhoo

Niala Boodhoo is an American journalist, Knight-Wallace Fellow and the host of the Asian-American Journalists Association program AAJA At ThisTime.[1]

Niala Boodhoo
Niala Boodhoo (Wikimedia)
Born
Alma mater

For three years she was the founding host and executive producer of Illinois Public Media's statewide radio talk show, The 21st. [2] Previously a business reporter for the Miami Herald and Chicago Public Media, she hosted WBEZ's mid-day talk show, The Afternoon Shift, before joining WILL in Urbana, Illinois. Boodhoo also served as the Vice President for Broadcast of the Asian American Journalists Association[3] from 2012 to 2016.

Personal

Boodhoo was born and raised in Miami. After earning her Bachelor of Arts in philosophy and psychology at Calvin College in Grand Rapids, Michigan, she taught preschool and high school journalism in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.[4] The daughter of US immigrants from Trinidad and Tobago, she is a first-generation American.[5] Boodhoo had a cameo appearance on an episode of the Netflix original series Easy, in which she played herself across from comedian Marc Maron.[6]

Career

Boodhoo's first professional exposure to journalism came through an internship with the Miami Herald the summer before her senior year of high school. It was there that the Herald published her first news story, about Hurricane Andrew.[7] After earning her master's degree in journalism from Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism, she worked as an editorial assistant for the AP and later as a reporter for Reuters in London and Washington, D.C. Boodhoo moved back to Florida to work as the Sun-Sentinel's senior business writer, before returning to the Herald as a business reporter.[8]

Boodhoo transitioned from commercial to public media while working as a multimedia reporter at the Herald. There, she produced The Miami Herald Friday Business Report, which aired weekly on WLRN-FM, Miami's NPR member station. She later moved to Chicago to join Chicago Public Media's Changing Gears reporting project, which covered the economic transformation of the Rust Belt and the stories of people living in the industrial Midwest affected by the transformation. After working as WBEZ's only business reporter, she was tapped to succeed Rick Kogan as the host of WBEZ's mid-day talk show, The Afternoon Shift. After hosting the show for two years, WBEZ canceled The Afternoon Shift to focus on its morning programming.[9] Illinois Public Media later hired Boodhoo to serve as executive producer and host of The 21st, a daily public radio talk show that focuses on statewide Illinois issues.[10] Boodhoo stepped down from The 21st at the end of July 2019.[11]

Boodhoo shifted back to commercial podcasting as the host of Axios Today, a brief morning news show co-sponsored by Axios and Pushkin Industries, the podcasting company started by Malcolm Gladwell and Jacob Weisberg, which premiered on 22 Jun 2020.[12]

References

  1. "University of Michigan Names 2019-2020 Knight-Wallace Journalism Fellows". Wallace House at University of Michigan. Retrieved April 29, 2020.
  2. "Niala Boodhoo announces she will be stepping down from The 21st". University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Retrieved April 29, 2020.
  3. "AAJA Board of Directors". Asian American Journalists Association.
  4. "Changing News, Unchanging Purpose". Council for Christian Colleges & Universities.
  5. Alvarez, Sarah. "A Recipe for Trinidadian Pelau, Courtesy of Niala Boodhoo". Changing Gears.
  6. "Niala Boodhoo". IMDb. Internet Movie Database.
  7. "Changing News, Unchanging Purpose". Council for Christian College & Universities.
  8. "The Herald inside Haiti: Niala Boodhoo". Miami Herald.
  9. Lazare, Lewis. "WBEZ-FM axes local afternoon show to focus on a popular morning program". Chicago Business Journal.
  10. Feder, Robert. "Illinois Public Media taps Niala Boodhoo for new talk show". Robert Feder.
  11. "Niala Boodhoo announces she will be stepping down from The 21st". 1 Jul 2019.
  12. "Pushkin Industries and Axios launch daily news show, Axios Today". 22 Jun 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.