Jamelle Bouie
Jamelle Bouie was born in Virginia Beach, Virginia, United States on April 12th, 1987 and is the Journalist. At the age of 37, Jamelle Bouie biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
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Jamelle Bouie (born April 12, 1987) is an American journalist and columnist for The New York Times.
He was once the chief political reporter for Slate magazine.
Bouie is "one of the leading commentators on politics and race in the Trump period," according to David Uberti, who wrote in the Columbia Journalism Review.
Early and personal life
Bouie was born and raised in Virginia Beach, Virginia. He attended Floyd E. Kellam High School, which he graduated in 2005. He graduated from the University of Virginia in 2009 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in political and social thought and government. He began blogging while at university, sparking his interest in journalism.
Bouie formerly lived and worked in Washington, D.C., and as of 2021, he is based in Charlottesville, Virginia.
Career
In 2010, Bouie was given a writing fellowship for The American Prospect. In 2012, he was given a Knobler Fellowship at the Nation Institute by The Nation. Bouie began writing about national politics as a staff writer for The Daily Beast in 2013. In 2014, he moved to Slate as a chief political reporter. In 2019, he joined The New York Times as a columnist. Bouie, a political scientist, was a participant in Barack Obama and the New America: The 2012 Election and the Changing Face of Politics, a 2013 book edited by political scientist Larry Sabato. Bouie writes articles focusing on history, public policy, and national politics, as well as the 2016 US presidential election. He also writes about entertainment, including science fiction, comics, and film.
Bouie has written extensively on race in the United States and the American Civil War, Trayvon Martin's assassination, the Charleston church shooting, and the Black Lives Matter campaign. He wrote an article for Slate arguing that there was "no such thing as a good Trump voter" shortly after Donald Trump was elected president in 2016. Several days earlier, Trump compared voters to the "angry, recalcitrant whites" who protested the Reconstruction period following the American Civil War. He has sluggish to characterize racial in the United States as "racist," preferring instead for terms such as "racial" and "racially charged." He also blasted the media for its "horse-race" coverage of the 2016 presidential election. Noel King's interview with Jason Kessler on NPR was "total journalistic BS," he said. Other journalists are often quoted from his books on racial and national policy issues.
Bouie has been a political analyst on CBS News since 2015. He appears on Face the Country on Sunday morning, the network's Sunday morning show, and he has been active in the network's coverage of the 2016 election night. Bouie will be included in the New York Times' list of opinion columnists in January 2019. Bouie had "consistently drove political knowledge deeper," according to the journal, adding not only a reporter's eye but also a historian's perspective and sense of proportion. His passions go beyond politics to fine arts, food, and movies."