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Suiting Up with Paul Rabil

Jemele Hill

Suiting Up with Paul Rabil

Paul Rabil

Sports, Business

51.2K Ratings

🗓️ 22 March 2021

⏱️ 64 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

After 5 college internships and 20 years of sports reporting in Raleigh, Detroit and Orlando, Jemele Hill decided to give up her dream job as a SportsCenter anchor to start her own network. Why? Her goal is to elevate the voices of Black women, and she's trailblazing a future she would've never thought possible from the beginning. When she took her first job as a columnist in Orlando, she was the only Black female sports columnist in North America. Today, Jemele's a contributing writer for the Atlantic, covering mostly American politics. She hosts a weekly show with Cari Champion on VICE TV, another show with Van Lathan at the Ringer, and her bi-weekly podcast called "Jemele Hill is Unbothered" – spanning sports, politics and culture. With her millions of followers and wall-to-wall opportunities covering politics and pop culture, she's often asked by her colleagues why she continues to cover sports. She told me “Sports is the one thing in this country that brings us together.” I met Jemele several years ago after she reported on a Native American team in South Dakota that faced racial slurs and were expelled from the league they played in. She uncovered those truths behind the incidents. After I reached out, she connected me with one of her interviewees, Angelo Ruiz from the 7 Flames lacrosse team, and I've been closely following her career ever since. Among many topics, Jemele and I discuss her career, the rise and threat of uncredible news across social media, her biggest stories throughout the 2020 election, a learning moment with Kobe Bryant, and the best ways athletes and sports leagues can continue to advocate in the national spotlight and throughout their local communities.

Transcript

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0:00.0

What's up everyone this is an all new episode it's suiting up presented by

0:06.8

public comment out systems episode number seven of season three and on your

0:11.0

host all rables okay world renowned and acclaimed writer is only part of my

0:16.4

next guest stacked resume she's been named a practically every list of most

0:20.4

influential people most recently named to the most powerful women in sports

0:24.3

list by ad week in 2021 she partnered with Spotify and launched her own

0:29.0

podcast network aim to elevate black women and that's become her mission to

0:34.0

educate uplift and engage in equality for black indigenous and people of

0:37.4

color with her emphasis on women of color through the avenue of sports

0:41.4

politics and activism over 20 years 20 years she's demonstrated the

0:46.6

perseverance and resilience that's changed in entire industry she was the

0:50.3

first ever black woman sports reporter then she became a blackbuster

0:54.5

personality and host at ESPN on her way to building a media empire she even

0:58.8

hosts a weekly radio show now with Carrie champion and writes for the

1:03.3

Atlantic boss during women's history month we recognize those who have

1:07.7

changed the world and those continuing to do the good work by uncovering

1:11.4

truce and amplifying the important stories of so many others I met Jamel

1:16.1

through maybe to no surprise Twitter three years ago while she was uncovering

1:21.3

a powerful story on Angelo Ruiz a seven flames lacrosse player a team made up

1:26.4

of mostly Native American players who played in a high school across league in

1:29.7

North Dakota that team Ruiz played on face racial slurs excessive physicality

1:33.8

throughout their season and then they were banned from play Jamel covered it at

...

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