Michele Norris

Photo credit: David Welch

 

Michele Norris is one of the most trusted voices in journalism.  She is a columnist for The Washington Post opinion page and her voice will be familiar to followers of public radio, where from 2002 to 2012 she was a host of National Public Radio’s afternoon magazine show, All Things Considered. Norris is also the Founding Director of The Race Card Project, a Peabody Award-Winning narrative archive where people around the world to share their experiences, questions, hopes, dreams, laments, and observations about identity --in just six words--as the starting point for conversations about race.  Norris is also a National Geographic Storytelling Fellow.

She is the author of The Grace of Silence,  A Memoir where Norris turns her formidable interviewing and investigative skills on her own background to unearth long-hidden family secrets that raise questions about her cultural legacy and shed new light on America’s complicated racial history. Norris is currently at work on her second book exploring race and identity in America in the period bookended by the presidencies of Barack Obama and Donald Trump.  She has received numerous awards for her work, including Emmy,  Peabody, and Dupont Awards. In 2009, she was named "Journalist of the Year" by the National Association of Black Journalists. Before joining NPR in 2002, Michele spent almost ten years as a reporter for ABC News in the Washington Bureau. Early in her career, she also worked as a staff writer for the Washington Post, Chicago Tribune, and the Los Angeles Times. 

Norris was a Shorenstein Fellow at Harvard University and in 2022 received Harvard’s Goldsmith Career Award for Excellence in Journalism.  She is a judge for The Chancellor Awards and a board member for the Peabody Awards. She is also a board member of the President Obama oral history project at Columbia University and the storytelling committee for the Obama Presidential Center under construction in the South Side of Chicago.