Jami Floyd
Jami Floyd is an American attorney, journalist, network news anchor, legal and political analyst, and former White House Fellow. She is the former Legal Analyst at Al Jazeera America and currently is the Legal Editor and host of, "All Things Considered," at WNYC Radio.
Education
While at Binghamton University as an undergraduate, Floyd worked as disc jockey at WHRW. Floyd graduated in 1986 with a B.A. in political science and a concentration in Journalism. In 1989, she attended and graduated with honors from the UC Berkeley School of Law, University of California, Berkeley, where she had been an associate editor of the law review. She received a Master of Laws degree in 1995 from Stanford Law School, Stanford University, where she also worked as a teaching fellow.Career
Law
Floyd began working as an attorney in the California Supreme Court as a law clerk to Associate Justice Allen E. Broussard.She began practice in civil and criminal law when she entered the law firm Morrison & Foerster. She left the firm in 1993 to join the San Francisco Public Defender office, where she worked as a trial attorney.
Washington, DC
Later that year, Floyd was selected to serve in the Clinton Administration as a White House Fellow and moved to Washington, D.C.. She was assigned first to the office of First Lady Hillary Clinton, where she assisted in the Clinton Administration's effort to pass comprehensive Health Care legislation, and later to the staff of Vice President Al Gore where she worked on the Brady Handgun Prevention Act, the Violent Crime Control and the Enforcement Act of 1994 and various other domestic policy initiatives. She also helped to vet judicial nominees and worked as a speech writer for the Vice President.Television
Floyd's first television broadcasting job was as reporter and legal analyst for KPIX Radio and TV in San Francisco. During that time, she spent much of her time in Los Angeles, covering the murder trial of O. J. Simpson and the nationwide response to his acquittal. In 1995, she briefly joined CBS News as a legal analyst before moving to New York City to help launch the cable outlet Court TV, as an anchor and correspondent.In 1997, she joined ABC News where she worked news correspondent for World News Tonight with Peter Jennings. She has also reported for Good Morning America and Nightline, and has co-anchored both Early Morning News Now with Anderson Cooper, and led the Consumer Unit for 20/20. Beginning in 2000, she led the Law and Justice Unit with Terry Moran and John Miller.
In February 2005, Floyd returned to Court TV to launch her own series, Jami Floyd: Best Defense. on which guests offered their legal analysis and spin on legal and political stories, as well as coverage of major trials.
In 2010, when Court TV folded, she joined MSNBC as a legal and political analyst.
In 2012 she hosted TED Talk's in NYC on NYC Media. In 2013 she joined the newly launching Al Jazeera America based in New York City and stayed with the network until shortly before its closure in 2015.
Journalism
In 1998, as an ABC reporter, Floyd put together a television documentary for ABC 20/20 television, about the rape and killing of Brandon Teena. It served as the basis for the full-length documentary movie, The Brandon Teena Story and the popular feature film Boys Don't Cry.On September 11, 2001, she was dispatched by ABC News to cover the devastation at Ground Zero. Reflecting on her reporting in the days and weeks that followed for the 9/11 Tribute Center, Floyd later said, "As a journalist you make your decision you are going to fulfill your obligation to your viewers, readers, listeners.... You cannot have a democracy without journalism."
In April 2005, Floyd caused a stir with comments she made to the LA Times about then-Court TV colleague Nancy Grace. Floyd expressed a concern in the LA Times that Grace presented a televised "rush to judgment" when she said, "I rarely agree with what comes out of her mouth, but it's hard not to like the person," said Floyd, who returned to Court TV's midday programming in 2005 after nearly a decade at ABC News. She went on to say "We have a lot of guests who come on and mimic Nancy."
In September 2005, Floyd elaborated on her comments about Grace in Elle saying: "Nancy's appeal is not unlike Oprah's. Nancy is Everywoman, someone you could see at a mall, on the bus. She's not an elitist from Harvard. She is what any woman could become."
In March 2008, Floyd participated in the Glamour roundtable "Your Race, Your Looks."
Floyd has served as a frequent guest on the Fox News Channel, and Floyd's Bill O'Reilly over revelations about CIA torture practices in the post-9/11 search for terrorists generated nearly a million views on YouTube.
From 2010 to 2014 Floyd was a regular contributor to the WNYC.org website "It's a Free Country," and the PBS.org website "Need to Know," writing about politics, race, law and justice.
Since 2010, Floyd has co-hosted with WNYC's Brian Lehrer an annual Martin Luther King, Jr. Day celebration at the Apollo Theater. Together they conduct moderate panels, introduce live music performances, host spiritual leaders and engage in conversation with a full theater from Harlem on the topic of social justice and Dr. King's vision for America.
In May 2012, Floyd published a piece for Marie Claire, a women's magazine, a response to Samantha Brick's essay, "Don't Hate Me Because I'm Beautiful."
In 2016, she was a consulting producer on the film, an American documentary film produced and directed by Ezra Edelman for ESPN Films and their 30 for 30 series. The documentary explores race and celebrity through the lens of O.J. Simpson, including his trial for the murders of Ronald Goldman and Nicole Brown Simpson, which Floyd covered. O.J.: Made in America premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2016, was released in theaters in New York City and Los Angeles in May 2016, and debuted on ABC on June 11, 2016, and aired on ESPN. The documentary has received widespread critical acclaim.
Floyd also blogs at Medium
Recognition
Floyd and has won a Gracie Award, a Telly Award, and the National Association of Black Journalists Salute to Excellence Award and has been nominated twice for an Emmy Award.Awards and nominations
Floyd has won more than a dozen awards, including the Gracie Award, and the RTNDA Unity Award and she has been nominated twice for an Emmy Award.In August 2015, she was named a Public Scholar by the New York Council for the Humanities, for a two-year term, fall 2015 to fall 2017.
In 2017, the film on which she consulted, OJ: Made in America, was nominated for an Oscar.
Personal life
Floyd was born September 10, 1964, and raised in New York City. Her father formerly worked as a chief architect for restaurateur Warner LeRoy and was also keen in arts and decorating. Floyd says that she is an "African American", having been born to a black father and a white mother. Her family lived in Mitchell-Lama housing on the Lower East Side.In 2017, Floyd launched the , which grew out of a salon she hosted on the Upper West Side of Manhattan and attended by Ezra Edelman, Walter Mosley, Soledad O’Brien and Adaora Udoji among others. The project was inspired by the presidency of Barack Obama, the first president to identify as African American, whose mother was white and father was an foreign exchange student on scholarship from Kenya to the United States. In consultation with the group, whom Floyd calls her core collaborators, she decided to launch a series of public conversations exploring the changing nature of racial identity, as well as a photography and documentary exhibition. The project officially launched in on the 50th Anniversary of the Supreme Court decision in Loving v. Virginia.
Floyd married criminal defense and civil rights attorney , and they have two children together. In August 2005, Floyd moved to New York's Upper West Side, where the family has since resided.