Tavis Smiley (born September 13, 1964 in Gulfport, Mississippi) is an American author, political commentator, and talk show host.
In 1996, Smiley became a frequent commentator on the Tom Joyner Morning Show, a nationally syndicated radio show broadcast on black and urban stations in the United States. He developed a friendship with host Tom Joyner, who appeared to share many of Smiley's opinions on racial matters, and together they began hosting annual town hall meetings beginning in 2000 called "The State of the Black Union" which were aired live on the C-SPAN cable television network. These town hall meetings each focused on a specific topic affecting the African-American community, featuring a panel of African-American leaders, educators, and professionals assembled before an audience to discuss problems related to the forum's topic, as well as potential solutions. Smiley also used his commentator status on Joyner's radio show to launch several advocacy campaigns to highlight discriminatory practices in the media and government and to rally support for causes such as the awarding of a Congressional Gold Medal to civil rights icon Rosa Parks. Smiley also began building a national reputation as a political commentator with numerous appearances on political discussion shows on MSNBC, ABC, and CNN.
Also in 1996, Smiley began hosting and executive producing BET Tonight, a public affairs discussion show on the Black Entertainment Television (BET) network. Smiley interviewed major political figures and celebrities and discussed topics ranging from racial profiling and police brutality to R&B music and Hollywood gossip. Smiley hosted BET Tonight until 2001, when in a controversial move, the network announced that Smiley's contract would not be renewed. This sparked an angry response from Tom Joyner, who sought to rally his radio audience to protest BET's decision. Smiley himself publicly aired his disapproval of the way BET had abruptly and unceremoniously informed him of their decision via a fax to his agent. BET founder Robert L. Johnson defended the decision, stating that Smiley had been fired because he had sold an exclusive interview to ABC News without first offering the story to BET, even though Smiley's contract with BET did not require him to do so. Smiley countered with the assertion that he had offered the story--an interview with Sara Jane Olson, an alleged former member of the Symbionese Liberation Army--to CBS, which, along with BET, was owned by Viacom. Smiley ultimately sold the interview to rival network ABC, he said, only after CBS passed on the interview, and suggested that his firing was payback for the publicity he gained as a result of providing an exclusive interview to ABC. Despite outcries from thousands of supporters, including prominent figures such as Cornel West (with whom Smiley collaborated in 2001 on the hip hop album [http://www.cornelwest.com Sketches of My Culture) and Al Sharpton, BET and its parent company Viacom did not reverse their decision to terminate Smiley's contract.
Following his dismissal from BET, Smiley was offered a chance to host a radio talk show on National Public Radio (NPR) in the United States. He served as host of the Tavis Smiley Show on NPR until December 2004 when he announced that he would be leaving his NPR show citing the network's inability to reach a more diverse audience. *
As of 2006, he hosts a late night talk and interview show, Tavis Smiley, on the PBS television network, and also the Tavis Smiley Show on the PRI radio network.
Smiley’s advocacy efforts have earned him numerous awards and recognitions including the recipient of the Mickey Leland Humanitarian Award from the National Association of Minorities in Communications. He has received numerous honorary doctorate degrees, including one from his alma mater, Indiana University.
In 1999, he founded the Tavis Smiley Foundation, which funds programs that develop young leaders in the black community.
Texas Southern University recently honored Smiley with the opening of The Tavis Smiley School of Communications and The Tavis Smiley Center for Professional Media Studies, making Smiley the youngest African-American to ever have a professional school and center named after him on a college or university campus. Smiley cemented his commitment to the university by pledging an $11 million (one million annually for eleven years) contribution to the Center. He also offered TSU students an opportunity to intern at his Los Angeles based The Smiley Group, Inc.
In March 2006, The Smiley Group and Third World Press published The Covenant with Black America (ISBN 0883782774), a collection of essays by black scholars and professionals edited by Smiley. The book covers topics ranging from education to healthcare as discussed in several "State of the Black Union" forums. Described by the publisher as a national plan of action to address the primary concerns of African-Americans related to social and economic disparities, the book became the first non-fiction book by a Black publisher to be listed as the No. 1 non-fiction paperback in America by the New York Times.
1964 births | Living people | African Americans | American radio personalities | American television personalities | Kappa Alpha Psi brothers | People from Mississippi | American television talk show hosts | Indiana University alumni
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