Celeste Headlee has previously been the host of the Georgia Public Broadcasting program "On Second Thought"., and the co-host of the national morning news showThe Takeaway, from Public Radio International and WNYC. Before joining fellow host John Hockenberry in 2009, she was the Midwest Correspondent for NPR's Day to Day and the host of a weekly show on Detroit Public Radio. Headlee is the author of We Need to Talk: How to Have Conversations That Matter.
Headlee began her career as a journalist as an anchor and writer with Arizona Public Radio stationKNAU in Flagstaff in 1999 and as an on-air personality with Flagstaff stationKVNA. In 2001, she became a reporter and anchor for WDET-FM, Detroit Public Radio, hosting a weekly one-hour program called Front Row Center. In 2006 she began working for National Public Radio, developing stories, covering breaking news, and producing long-form features. Headlee was the Midwest Correspondent for NPR's Day to Day and her news reports have aired on NPR, Public Radio International, the Pacifica Network, the Great Lakes Radio Consortium, and National Native News. From 2009 to August 2012, Headlee was the host of The Takeaway, a live national morning news program produced by Public Radio International and WNYC New York. In December 2017, it was revealed that she was one of many female former Takeaway cohosts who had left the program as a result of having allegedly been subjected to bullying and disrespect by Hockenberry. Other women associated with the program also came forward with similar accounts, as well as allegations of sexual harassment. As of late 2012, she has been an occasional guest host on NPR's Tell Me More, and a guest host in the absence of Neal Conan on Talk of the Nation. In 2014, she launched On Second Thought on Georgia Public Broadcasting. The hour-long public radio show focuses on local and national news as it relates to Georgia and the South. Headlee is currently the cohost of Retro Report on PBS.
Journalism awards
Headlee has won awards from the Michigan AP, The Michigan Association of Broadcasters, and the Metro Detroit Society of Professional Journalists. Headlee serves as a mentor and managing editor for NPR's Next Generation Project, which is aimed at training young broadcast journalists. While living in Arizona, she was a member of the Artist's Roster for the Arizona Commission on the Arts. In 2011 she was named a Getty Arts Journalism Fellow by USC's Annenberg School of Journalism.
Writing
Headley's 2017, book, We Need to Talk: How to Have Conversations That Matter is based on a May 2015TEDx talk that she gave in Savannah, and covers ways for people to improve their communication skills. She also covers relevant research in the book and helps people create strategies for their conversations. Her book Do Nothing discusses ways that software is designed to keep people anxious that they are not productive enough in their own lives. In the book, Headlee asserts the importance of leisure time and connecting genuinely with other people.
Headlee has two children. Headlee is the granddaughter of composer William Grant Still. Headlee frequently performs Still's music in concerts and recitals and sang Still's composition "Levee Land" on the CD produced by the Northern Arizona University Wind Symphony. She has given many lectures about Still's music at high schools and universities and was the editor of the second edition of the book, William Grant Still and the Fusion of Cultures in American Music, for which she compiled the first complete thematic catalog of Still's works.