Rashida Jones (néeAdkins; born 1980 or 1981)[1] is the president of the cable news network
MSNBC. She is the first Black woman to lead a major cable news network.[2]
Early life and education
Jones was born to Richard and Alice Adkins, the oldest of three children. She grew up in
York, Pennsylvania. The family later moved to
Richmond, Virginia, where she attended
Henrico High School and became editor of the student newspaper.[3]
Jones attended
Hampton University, majoring in broadcast journalism. She graduated from Hampton in 2002 with a degree in Mass Media Arts.[4] In 2022, Jones established a scholarship fund at Hampton University for journalism students.[5]
Career
In 2002, while a senior in college, she worked as a morning show producer at
WTKR in
Norfolk, Virginia. After several years there, she moved to
The Weather Channel as a weekend producer, and became director of live programming in 2009.[6]
Jones later worked at
WIS-TV in
Columbia, South Carolina, as news director, then moved to
New York City as an executive producer for daytime shows at MSNBC. Later roles included managing editor at MSNBC and senior vice president of specials for NBC News and MSNBC,[6] in which she managed dayside and weekend news programming on MSNBC, as well as leading coverage of breaking news and major events across NBC News and MSNBC.[7] Jones expanded the town-hall concept to a wider audience, including a criminal justice special filmed at
Sing Sing correctional facility.[8] While a senior vice president at NBC News and MSNBC, she led a shift from election coverage to a focus on
COVID-19.[9]
On February 1, 2021, Jones succeeded
Phil Griffin as the president of MSNBC and became the first African-American woman to run a major cable news network.[10]
Honors and awards
Jones is a member of the
Scripps Howard School of Journalism and Communications Hall of Fame.[11]
In 2020, she was named in Variety's 2020 New York Women's Impact Report[12]
In October, 2022, Jones was the inaugural recipient of the Media Leadership Award from
Montclair State University School of Communication and Media.[13]
In February, 2023, Jones was awarded the Achievement of Excellence Award from Scripps Howard School of Journalism & Communications at Hampton University and headlined the institution's 20th anniversary celebration.[14]
Jones received the Radio Television Digital News Foundation's Leonard Zeidenberg First Amendment Award on March 2, 2023.[15]
Personal life
Jones is divorced and has two children, a son and daughter. Her partner is Edward Fisher, the community and government relations executive at
American University.[3] She became an honorary member of
Delta Sigma Theta sorority in 2023.[16]