Farai Chideya

Farai Chideya

One of the earliest pop culture bloggers, founding PopandPolitics.com in 1995, Farai Chideya is a novelist, journalist and radio host of News & Notes on NPR. Her first novel, Kiss the Sky, is due May 2009. She has worked for Newsweek magazine, MTV News, CNN, ABC and the Oxygen Network.


Topics: Arts / Author/Writer / Current Affairs / Diversity / Social Trends / Television Media
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Farai Chideya is a multimedia journalist who has worked in print, television, online, and radio. Prior to joining NPR's News & Notes with Ed Gordon, Chideya hosted Your Call, a daily news and cultural call-in show on San Francisco's KALW 91.7 FM. Chideya has also been a correspondent for ABC News, anchored the prime time program Pure Oxygen on the Oxygen women's channel, and contributed commentaries to CNN, Fox, MSNBC, and BET. She got her start as a researcher and reporter at Newsweek magazine. In 1997 Newsweek named her to its "Century Club" of 100 people to watch.

Chideya, who was born and raised in Baltimore, MD, and graduated with a B.A. from Harvard University magna cum laude in 1990, is also the founder of PopandPolitics.com, an online journal for younger Americans. In 2004, the site became part of the Center for Integration and Improvement of Journalism at San Francisco State University. Chideya and PopandPolitics.com have won awards including a MOBE IT Innovator award, being named one of Alternet's New Media Heroes, and ranking in PoliticsOnline.com's worldwide survey of "25 Who Are Changing the World of Internet and Politics."

Chideya has published three books. Don't Believe the Hype: Fighting Cultural Misinformation About African Americans (1995), is now in its eighth printing. The Color of Our Future (1999), explores the changing racial identities of America's teens, and her travels from the Crow reservation in Montana to a ninety-nine percent white Indiana town to South Central Los Angeles. The Color of Our Future was named one of the best books for teens by the New York Public Library. Her first two books are featured in college curricula across the country. Chideya's newest book, Trust: Reaching the 100 Million Missing Voters (2004), shows why half of Americans are cut out of the political system - and what we can do about it.

In 1996, Chideya completed a Freedom Forum Media Studies Center fellowship, examining why young Americans are tuning out the news. In 2001-02, she was a Knight Fellow at Stanford University. She has published articles in newspapers and magazines including The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times Magazine, Time, Spin, Vibe, O, The California Journal, Mademoiselle, and Essence. Awards for her writing and broadcast work include a 2004 "Young Lion" award from the Black Entertainment & Telecommunications Association (BETA), a GLAAD Award for the Spin article "Hip Hop's Black Eye" and a National Education Reporting Award for work at Newsweek. She currently serves on the Journalism Advisory Committee of the Knight Foundation, which disburses over $20 million in journalism-related grants each year.

"The Hip Hop Generation" is based on her recent book TRUST: Reaching the 100 Million Missing Voters. She discusses politics, eithics and values of the hip hop generation including information about how they process exposure to this culture and their place in it.

"The Color of Our Future" is based on her 1999 book about immigration, multi-racial identity, and youth; issues that are more prominent now than ever.

She also offers a program based on her expertise in politics and topics surrounding the 2008 elections.

Many programs are customized for specific client and audience needs and causes.

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