Don Lemon
139ms
Don Renaldo Lemon-Clark, born March 1, 1966, is an American television journalist, most recognized for his decade-long tenure at CNN from 2014 to 2023. His early career saw him anchoring weekend news programs on local television in Alabama and Pennsylvania, followed by a stint as a news correspondent for NBC, appearing on programs like "Today" and "NBC Nightly News."
Lemon's journalistic achievements include an Edward R. Murrow Award in 2002 for his coverage of the Washington, D.C. sniper captures, and three regional Emmy Awards for his work on a Chicago real estate special and a business feature on Craigslist.
He joined CNN in 2006 as a correspondent, eventually rising to prominence as the host of "Don Lemon Tonight" from 2014 to 2022. Most recently, he co-hosted "CNN This Morning" with Kaitlan Collins and Poppy Harlow. His time at CNN concluded in April 2023, following several on-air controversies and reports of alleged long-standing misogynistic behavior.
Born in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Don Lemon is the son of Katherine Marie Bouligney and Wilmon Lee Richardson, a prominent attorney. He discovered Richardson was his father at the age of five. Lemon's ancestry is primarily African-American and Creole. He has spoken about experiencing sexual molestation as a child and knowing he was gay prior to that incident. He attended Baker High School, where he was class president in his senior year.
Lemon pursued higher education at Louisiana State University, where he was a Republican and voted for Ronald Reagan. He later graduated from Brooklyn College in 1996 with a degree in broadcast journalism. During his time at Brooklyn College, he interned at WNYW and worked for Fox affiliates in St. Louis and Chicago, as well as NBC affiliates in Philadelphia and Chicago.
His broadcasting career began with weekend news anchoring at WBRC in Birmingham, Alabama, and WCAU in Philadelphia. He also served as an anchor and investigative reporter for KTVI in St. Louis and Chicago's Fox affiliate. Lemon's national reporting for NBC News included correspondent work for "Today" and "NBC Nightly News," as well as anchoring for "Weekend Today" and MSNBC programs. In 2003, he joined NBC's WMAQ-TV in Chicago, where he worked as a reporter and co-anchor, earning three Emmys for local reporting.
Lemon joined CNN in September 2006. Throughout his tenure, he was known for his outspoken commentary, often criticizing the state of cable news and offering strong opinions on issues affecting the African American community, which sometimes sparked controversy.
In 2014, CNN experimented with prime-time shows hosted by Lemon, including "The Eleventh Hour" and "The Don Lemon Show." Following the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, he hosted a nightly program dedicated to the event. After a schedule realignment, this hour became "CNN Tonight," with Lemon eventually becoming its permanent host. He also contributed to CNN's New Year's Eve broadcasts.
In May 2021, Lemon launched a podcast with Chris Cuomo called "The Handoff," focusing on politics and personal life. In February 2022, CNN announced a talk show for its streaming service CNN+, titled "The Don Lemon Show."
On September 15, 2022, it was revealed that Lemon would co-anchor a new CNN morning show, "CNN This Morning," with Kaitlan Collins and Poppy Harlow. His involvement with the show ended with his termination from CNN in April 2023.
Lemon's political commentary often drew attention. He was notably critical of Donald Trump, famously stating in 2018 that the president was racist. He also engaged in debates regarding domestic terrorism, arguing that white supremacist Americans posed a greater threat than foreigners, a stance that drew criticism. In relation to the Jussie Smollett case, Lemon faced accusations of unethical journalism after it was revealed he had communicated with Smollett during the trial without disclosing it on his show.
Allegations of misogyny also surfaced. In December 2022, he was involved in an on-air dispute with his co-anchors regarding pay inequity in women's sports. In February 2023, his remarks about Nikki Haley's age and prime were widely criticized as sexist, leading to an apology and a brief absence from his show. In April 2023, Variety published a report detailing alleged instances of misogynistic behavior towards colleagues dating back to 2008, which Lemon's spokesperson denied.
On April 24, 2023, Lemon was fired by CNN, a decision he stated came as a surprise. The firing coincided with Tucker Carlson's departure from Fox News on the same day.
In January 2024, Lemon announced plans for a new show on X, "The Don Lemon Show." The show's first guest was X owner Elon Musk. However, after the interview was filmed, Musk cancelled the show on X, leading to the interview being released on YouTube and as a podcast.
Lemon has received honors and awards for his work.
He resides in Harlem, New York, with an additional home in Sag Harbor. In his 2011 memoir, "Transparent," Lemon publicly came out as gay, becoming one of the few openly gay Black men in broadcasting. The memoir also addressed colorism within the Black community and his childhood sexual abuse. He dedicated the book to Tyler Clementi.
In 2018, Lemon's sister, L'Tanya "Leisa" Lemon Grimes, passed away. He met real estate agent Tim Malone in 2016, and the couple married on April 6, 2024, in New York City.
Lemon is the author of "Transparent" (2011) and "This Is the Fire: What I Say to My Friends About Racism" (2021).
Copied!
Don Renaldo Lemon-Clark (born March 1, 1966) is an American television journalist best known for being a host on CNN from 2014 until 2023. He anchored weekend news programs on local television stations in Alabama and Pennsylvania during his early days as a journalist. Lemon worked as a news correspondent for NBC on its programming, such as Today and NBC Nightly News.
Lemon is also a recipient of an Edward R. Murrow Award in 2002 for his coverage of the capture of the Washington, D.C. snipers. He also received three regional Emmy Awards for his special report on real estate in Chicago and a business feature on Craigslist.
He joined CNN in 2006, also as a correspondent and later achieved prominence as the presenter of Don Lemon Tonight from 2014 to 2022. He most recently served as a co-host of CNN This Morning, alongside Kaitlan Collins and Poppy Harlow. After several on-air controversies and reports of alleged decades-long instances of misogyny, he was fired by CNN in April 2023.
== Early life and education ==
Don Renaldo Lemon-Clark was born March 1, 1966, in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, the son of Katherine Marie (Bouligney) and Wilmon Lee Richardson. His father was a prominent attorney whose firm was party to a lawsuit that successfully challenged racial segregation of public transportation in Baton Rouge. Lemon was born under the surname of his mother's then-husband, and discovered that Richardson was his father when he was five.
He is of mostly African-American ancestry, along with Creole; his maternal grandmother was the daughter of a black mother and a white father, who had French and Scots-Irish ancestry. Lemon has stated he was sexually molested as a child by a teenage boy who lived nearby, and that he knew he was gay prior to this incident. He attended Baker High School, a public high school in the town of Baker in East Baton Rouge Parish. He was voted class president during his senior year.
Lemon attended Louisiana State University where he was a Republican and voted for Ronald Reagan. He later graduated from Brooklyn College with a major in broadcast journalism in 1996 at the age of 30. While at Brooklyn College, he interned at WNYW. He worked for Fox affiliates in St. Louis and Chicago for several years, and was a correspondent for NBC affiliates in Philadelphia and Chicago.
== Career ==
=== Regional reporter ===
Early in his career, Lemon reported as a weekend news anchor for WBRC in Birmingham, Alabama, and for WCAU in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. For several years he was an anchor and investigative reporter for Fox affiliate KTVI in St. Louis, Missouri, and Fox's Chicago affiliate. Lemon reported for NBC News's New York City operations, including working as a correspondent for both Today, and NBC Nightly News; and as an anchor on Weekend Today and programs on MSNBC. In 2003, he began working at NBC owned-and-operated station WMAQ-TV in Chicago, and was a reporter and local news co-anchor. He won three Emmys for local reporting while at WMAQ.
=== CNN (2006−2023) ===
Lemon joined CNN in September 2006. He has been outspoken in his work at CNN, criticizing the state of cable news and questioning the network publicly. He has also voiced strong opinions on ways that the African American community can improve their lives, which has caused some controversy.
In 2014, CNN began to pilot prime time shows hosted by Lemon, including The Eleventh Hour and The Don Lemon Show. Following the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, Lemon began to host a special, nightly program featuring discussion and analysis of the event by aviation experts. After a realignment of CNN's schedule following the cancellation of Piers Morgan Live, this hour was replaced by the news program CNN Tonight; Lemon would later become the permanent host of the hour as CNN Tonight with Don Lemon. Lemon has also participated in CNN's New Year's Eve Live as a correspondent from a city in the Central Time Zone, most often alongside fellow CNN anchor Brooke Baldwin.
In May 2021, it was announced that Lemon, along with fellow CNN journalist Chris Cuomo, would launch a podcast named The Handoff centering around "politics and personal". On May 17, CNN Tonight with Don Lemon was retitled to simply Don Lemon Tonight; Lemon apologized for how he teased the rebranding on his show, stating that he "didn't mean to set the internet on fire"—in reference to viewers who thought that Lemon would be departing CNN.
In February 2022, CNN announced Lemon would be hosting a talk show for CNN's then-forthcoming streaming service CNN+ called The Don Lemon Show. Two episodes were released in the service's sole month of operation in April 2022.
On September 15, 2022, it was announced that Lemon would co-anchor a new CNN morning show with Kaitlan Collins and Poppy Harlow later in the year. On October 12, 2022, it was announced that the morning show would be named CNN This Morning. Lemon's tenure on the show ended with his April 2023 firing.
==== Political commentary ====
Lemon's outspoken criticism of Donald Trump made him a target of the president. In January 2018, after Trump controversially referred to countries such as El Salvador, Haiti, and Honduras as "shitholes" during a meeting on immigration, Lemon opened CNN Tonight with a proclamation that "The president of the United States is racist. A lot of us already knew that." In March 2016, Lemon was interviewing Omarosa Newman and Kellyanne Conway about the Republican presidential primary. Lemon cut to a commercial break after calling for Newman's microphone to be turned off because she did not want to begin the interview with his original question about a tweet comparing the physical appearances of Trump's wife and US Senator Ted Cruz's wife, which Trump had retweeted.
In October 2018, during a discussion with Chris Cuomo on Cuomo Prime Time amid the Jeffersontown shooting, Lemon argued that Americans should not "demonize any one group or any one ethnicity", and that domestic terrorism by white supremacist Americans, "most of them radicalized to the right", were a bigger threat to the safety of the country than foreigners. He went on to ask, "there is no travel ban on [white people], they have the Muslim ban, there is no white guy ban, so what do we do about that?" Lemon's remarks were criticized by conservative figures, who felt that it was "race baiting" and contradicted his suggestion that Americans should not "demonize any one group or any one ethnicity." In response to the criticism, Lemon cited data from a report by the Government Accountability Office stating that there had been 255 fatalities between September 12, 2001, and December 31, 2016, involving domestic extremists, and that killings by far-right extremists outranked those by Islamic extremists in 10 of the 15 years tracked. In the same period, no deaths were credited to attacks by far-left extremists.
==== Involvement in Jussie Smollett case ====
Lemon faced accusations of unethical journalism during the trial of the Jussie Smollett hate crime hoax case. It was revealed during court testimony that Lemon had sent Smollett messages informing him that the Chicago Police Department did not believe his account of what had happened on the night in question. Lemon, who covered the trial on his CNN show Don Lemon Tonight, did not disclose his involvement or his interactions with Smollett.
==== Allegations of misogyny ====
In December 2022, Lemon was involved in an onscreen argument with co-anchors Collins and Harlow over the pay inequity in women's sports. Lemon argued that "people are more interested in the men". In defending his stance, he stated that he could not be sexist because he had grown up as the only male in a family of all women.
On February 19, 2023, after Nikki Haley called for "mandatory mental competency tests for politicians over 75 years old", Lemon said "this whole talk about age makes me uncomfortable, I think it is the wrong road to go down", before continuing "She says people, you know, politicians or something are not in their prime. Nikki Haley isn't in her prime, sorry. A woman is considered to be in her prime in her 20s and 30s and maybe 40s." His remarks were criticized online as sexist; Lemon later apologized, and did not appear on CNN This Morning on February 20; he returned on February 22.
In April 2023, Variety published a report alleging that Lemon had a history of misogynistic behavior towards his colleagues, including Soledad O'Brien, Kyra Phillips and Nancy Grace, dating back to 2008. This reportedly included questioning whether O'Brien was black, threatening Phillips, and mocking Grace. A spokesperson for Lemon denied the allegations, saying, "The story, which is riddled with patently false anecdotes and no concrete evidence, is entirely based on unsourced, unsubstantiated, 15-year-old anonymous gossip."
==== Firing from CNN ====
On April 24, 2023, Lemon was fired by CNN; his contract would have expired in 2026. According to The New York Times, CNN had experienced difficulty in booking guests willing to appear on-air with Lemon, and polls had shown his popularity among viewers had declined. Lemon said that the firing came as a surprise, and that the network had failed to inform him in person, which CNN denied. This coincidentally occurred on the same day that Tucker Carlson was fired by Fox News.
=== The Don Lemon Show (2024) ===
On January 9, 2024, Lemon announced plans for a new show on X, The Don Lemon Show. X owner Elon Musk was the show's first interviewee. After the Elon Musk interview was filmed but before the interview aired, Elon Musk cancelled The Don Lemon Show on X, resulting in the interview being published on YouTube and as a podcast instead. Don Lemon stated after the interview, "Elon Musk is mad at me". The interview covered topics such as lawsuits filed by and against Musk, his usage of drugs, his political leanings, and his perspective on immigration and the Great Replacement theory.
== Honors and awards ==
== Personal life ==
Lemon lives in an apartment in Harlem, New York, and has another home in Sag Harbor on Long Island.
In his 2011 memoir, Transparent, Lemon publicly came out as gay—having been out in his personal life and with close colleagues—becoming "one of the few openly gay black men in broadcasting". He also discussed colorism in the black community and the sexual abuse he suffered as a child. He dedicated the book to Tyler Clementi, a college student who killed himself after his roommate outed him online.
On January 31, 2018, Lemon's sister, L'Tanya "Leisa" Lemon Grimes, died at the age of 58; police concluded that her death was an accidental drowning in a pond while fishing. After being absent for approximately a week, he opened his show on February 6 by thanking everyone who wished him "prayers and words of encouragement".
Lemon met real estate agent Tim Malone in 2016, after which the two began dating. The couple married on April 6, 2024, in New York City.
== Published works ==
Lemon, Don (2011). Transparent. Farrah Gray Publishing, Inc. ISBN 978-0-9827027-8-9.
Lemon, Don (2021). This Is the Fire: What I Say to My Friends About Racism. Little, Brown and Company. ISBN 9780316257572.
== See also ==
LGBT culture in New York City
List of LGBT people from New York City
List of United States over-the-air television networks
New Yorkers in journalism
NYC Pride March
United States cable news
== Notes ==
== References ==
== External links ==
Don Lemon on Twitter
Don Lemon at IMDb
The Don Lemon Show YouTube channel
Home
Languages