Rex Orville Montague Paul, better known as Kojo Nnamdi, is a Guyanese-born American radio journalist based in Washington, D. C.. He is the host of The Kojo Nnamdi Show and The Politics Hour on WAMU, and hosted the Evening Exchange broadcast on WHUT-TV from 1985 to 2011.
Nnamdi began his radio career in 1969 as an actor and director for children's plays that aired Sundays on Washington rhythm and bluesradio stationWOL. With the on-air name "Brother Uwezo", Nnamdi became editor for Sauti, a news magazine program on WOL, in 1970. After marrying in 1971, he adopted the on-air name that he would use for the rest of his career, Kojo Nnamdi. He described it as an "African Christian name and surname that made more sense", first name "Kojo" being an Akan name for "Monday" and surname "Nnamdi" after the first President of Nigeria, Nnamdi Azikiwe. In 1973, Nnamdi became news editor at WHUR, the radio station of Howard University, a historically black university in Washington. Later becoming news director, Nnamdi helped produce The Daily Drum, a local news program.
''Evening Exchange'' (1985–2011)
Nnamdi left WHUR in 1985 to join Howard television station WHMM as host of Evening Exchange, a public affairs show. Nnamdi hosted Evening Exchange until 2011. On June 13, 1990, Evening Exchange received its highest viewership numbers when Washington mayor Marion Barry announced on the show that he would not seek a fourth term.
''Public Interest'' and ''The Kojo Nnamdi Show'' (1998–present)
On August 31, 1998, Nnamdi became host of Public Interest on Washington public radio station WAMU, a show renamed from The Derek McGinty Show. In January of that year, previous host Derek McGinty left WAMU for CBS News. A two-hour program, one hour focused on local issues and was broadcast exclusively on WAMU, and the other discussed national topics and was distributed by National Public Radio to around 40 stations. On September 30, 2002, Public Interest was renamed The Kojo Nnamdi Show and dropped national distribution. The show then featured guest analysts until the long-term hiring of WRC-TV political reporter Tom Sherwood in February 2009. Barras joined the program after Mark Plotkin left in April 2002 to set up shop at all-news station WTOP, where he hosts The Politics Program. Originally called The Politics Hour, the name of Plotkin's show was changed after WAMU threatened a lawsuit. Nonetheless, Plotkin said in a 2006 online chat that he and Nnamdi remain friendly and regularly have dinner together. Every Tuesday the first half of the show consists of a segment called Tech Tuesday that attempts to keep listeners current on various computer/computing and technology issues. For a number of years, the first Tuesday of the month featured "The Computer Guys," John Gilroy and Tom Pivovar. Pivovar left the program in early 2006 in a contract dispute and has been since replaced with a rotation of recurring expert guests, most of whom are employed at either Mid-Atlantic Consulting or the University of Maryland, College Park.