Richard Lui

Richard Lui (born c.1972) is an American journalist and news anchor for MSNBC and NBC News. Lui anchors Early Today on NBC and is a dayside anchor for MSNBC broadcasting from 30 Rockefeller Plaza in Midtown Manhattan, New York City.[2] He was formerly at CNN Worldwide.[3] At CNN Worldwide he became the first Asian American male to anchor a daily, national cable news show[4] when he solo anchored the 10 a.m. hour on CNN Headline News (2007 to 2010). Mediaite ranked Lui among the top 100 in news buzz on its "Power Grid Influence Index of TV Anchors and Hosts" and one of "The 50 Sexiest in TV News".[5]

Richard Lui
Lui in 2012
Bornc.1972[1]
NationalityAmerican
Education
OccupationNews anchor
EmployerNBCUniversal, Comcast
Notable credit(s)
NBC News
CNN
Citigroup
Oliver Wyman

Lui is also a columnist, contributing to publications including USA Today, Politico, The Seattle Times, Detroit Free Press, and San Francisco Chronicle.[3] His public speaking spans six continents and some 200 events in the last several years. Twitter Counter places his following in the top 1%.[6]

Lui's enterprise reporting has focused on humanitarian issues including gender equality, human trafficking, and affordable housing.[7] His charity work in the same spaces has led him to work with Plan International USA as a global ambassador (alongside Freida Pinto and Marcia Cross) for its Because I am a Girl campaign.[8] He also is ambassador for the Epilepsy Foundation and sits on the president's council for America's largest food source to the poor, Food Bank for New York City. Lui's work and reporting on humanitarian issues spans 30 years and six continents. He has received civil rights awards from organizations including AAJA, WWAAC, and OCA.[3]

Before journalism, Lui spent 15 years in business with Fortune 500 and tech companies. He is patent holder and co-founder of the first bank-centric payment system, which was seed-funded and incubated by Citibank.[4] Business Insider recognized Lui as one of 21 dynamic careers to watch alongside Warren Buffett and Mark Cuban.[9]

Business career

Richard Lui at a panel discussion for the new show Fresh off the Boat

Lui started in business in 1985, working in manufacturing, strategy consulting, food and beverage, environmental, oil, and technology industries. He has held chief roles from operations to marketing.[10] At the start of his career, Lui skipped college and spent four years at startup Mrs. Fields Cookies. At the age of 18, Lui became the youngest in the company's history to run a regional training center.[11]

After Mrs. Fields, Lui entered college, followed by work at Clean Environment Equipment (QED), where he led its global advertising and public relations. According to the company's website, its oil recovery products are on almost every major refinery with an underground oil spill.[12] Until 2008, Lui worked for Citibank as Director, COO, and CMO of a business unit focused on payments and commerce.[13] His patented payment infrastructure bypassed MasterCard and Visa, enabling consumers to pay for goods and services by connecting directly to their bank. It included wireless access to checking, brokerage, and other funds. Before Citibank, Lui worked at Oliver Wyman New York.[14] His business development work included moving online brokerage businesses to mobile platforms, and the globalization software market. Lui also helped launch a joint venture with IBM in the retail vertical.[10]

Charity and Humanitarian Work

Richard Lui gives the keynote speech to Delta Air Lines executives on subject of the “universal worker” and globalization in May 2009.

Lui started community work in high school as a YMCA counselor in the 1980s. He taught addicted mothers computer skills at the American Indian Family Healing Center and served as campaign manager for a citywide position that managed City College of San Francisco.[15]

As an ambassador for Plan International USA, Lui works to identify and advise on ways of talking about the role male adults and children have in gender inequality and female victim blaming, as well as help to generate organizational growth strategies. For Plan International USA, he has travelled to Central America, South America, Asia, and Oceania for research and to assess global trends.[16]

Lui has collaborated with Polaris Project, a global anti-human trafficking organization. He has reported and consulted on human trafficking stories for a decade, and spoken on domestic and global trends at high schools, universities, and conferences globally.[17][18] The U.S. Department of Justice asked Lui to present his work on trafficking at its annual gathering of attorneys and immigration officers in Atlanta in 2012.[19][20]

Lui has worked with the Aspen Institute for several years, speaking at its annual, C-SPAN broadcast symposium on the "State of Race in America". He also led Aspen Institute conversations at the State Department on foreign affairs in U.S. journalism.[21]

Lui is a member of the US State Department's Speakers Program—he has keynoted in Asia, Europe, and the Middle East.[22] He is a UN Foundation Fellow and hosted programs alongside former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright[23] and UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon for the United Nations Association of New York.[24] He has given commencement speeches at UC Berkeley and City College of San Francisco, and spoken at events for Harvard University,[25] Fuqua School of Business at Duke University, and Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan.[26]

In the affordable and homeless housing space, Lui volunteered for Habitat for Humanity in Ghana, the Golan Heights, and Haiti with former President Jimmy Carter and former First Lady Rosalynn Carter.[27] Lui served on the board of directors for Crossroads Homeless Services and PRI affordable housing development company.[28][29]

Civil Rights

Richard Lui, Jeff Yang, Greg Pak, and Erin Quinn at a panel discussion for the show Fresh off the Boat

Asian Americans Advancing Justice awarded Lui an American Courage Award for Distinguished Service in 2014, the year after former Representative Barney Frank received it.[30] The Asian American Journalists Association awarded Lui the Suzanne Ahn Civil Rights and Social Justice Award in 2013, an honor in memory of humanitarian Suzanne Ahn. Civil Rights organization OCA awarded Lui with its Community Service Award in 2012 and 2013.[31]

Politics

Lui's interest in politics started in the 1970s, when he debated California's controversial Proposition 13 during bus rides to school.[32] That interest turned into a job at 19: campaign manager for San Francisco College Board incumbent Alan Wong. After the election, Lui returned to college and planned to write on policy and the affairs of state, subscribing to The Washington Post when it had to be mailed to the West Coast.[32]

In the 2012 election cycle, Lui hosted APIAVote's Presidential Debate,[33] APA Presidential Inaugural Ball,[34] and APA Congressional Caucus’s forum at the Capitol.[35][36] He also conducted Asian Pacific American Institute on Congressional Studies (APAICS) training sessions for elected and appointed officials. Lui also contributes political opinion pieces to publications, including The Seattle Times,[37] San Francisco Chronicle,[38] Politico,[39] and Huffington Post.[15]

Journalism career

Richard Lui reporting for CNN on human trafficking in Ghana in March 2010.

In the 1990s, Lui was exposed to a pivotal time in California politics. As a reporter at KALX, he was assigned to Dianne Feinstein's first successful U.S. Senate campaign and the Rodney King verdict and riots.[40]

Later, in the 2000s, Lui moved to Asia to capture a heated moment in regional politics. He was at Channel NewsAsia, an English language network reaching 24 territories.[41] Two Muslim countries in Southeast Asia were undertaking key transformations. Indonesia’s Sukarno family was defeated after rule spanning over half a century. And Malaysia's prime minister, after almost a quarter of a century, handed over power.[42] Lui also covered the South Asian tsunami, and the 2003 SARS and bird flu outbreaks.

During five years at CNN Worldwide, Lui anchored and reported on all CNN English-language networks, including CNN US, CNN International, and HLN. He anchored live breaking stories such as the 2009 Gaza-Israel War, Virginia Tech Massacre, 2006 Hezbollah-Israel War, Mumbai train terrorist bombings, and Mumbai Hotels Siege.[43]

In 2006, Lui's undercover reporting exposed child sex slavery in Indonesia. Later, in a CNN Freedom Project report, he investigated seven-year-olds sold to Ghanaian fishermen as labor slaves.[17] His field reporting explored political and civil rights controversies in the Asian-American community, including the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act, which led to a system of illegal immigrants called paper sons.[44] He reported on the racially motivated killing of Vincent Chin and its association to the Muslim-American community’s post 9/11 challenges.[45] In addition, he reported extensively from the Gulf on the BP oil spill.[46] He received Peabody and Emmy awards for his team reporting at CNN during Hurricane Katrina and the Gulf Oil Spill.[47][48]

Richard Lui interviews a guest for MSNBC.

Lui joined MSNBC in 2010. Today, Lui anchors Early Today for NBC News. At MSNBC, his beat is politics. He is based at NBC's offices at 30 Rockefeller Plaza. In addition, Lui covers sports for both NBC News and MSNBC morning shows. He also served as news anchor for The Weather Channel’s program with Al Roker, Wake Up With Al.[49]

Some of the events he's anchored breaking coverage of include the Scotland independence vote, 2013 government shutdown, Boston Marathon bombing, Japanese earthquake and tsunami, NATO's attack in Libya, and the Arab Spring and Egypt’s revolution.[50] Lui's field reporting has included covering the Ferguson unrest, Hurricane Sandy, and the 2012 U.S. Presidential election. For the election, his reports have ranged from the implications of the Tea Party movement to presidential election night exit poll data.[51][52] In an NBC News investigation, Lui reported on a phenomenon involving high-volume brothels in the U.S. where women are forced to have sex 100 times a day.[17][53][54][55]

Lui is a member of the Asian American Journalists Association and was elected 2013 Member of the Year.[56]

Personal life

Because his grandfather, an illegal immigrant, filed false papers on documents, Lui's real last name is Wong.[2][3][57] Lui is the son of a Presbyterian minister.[58] He said in an op-ed he grew up on welfare and almost flunked out of high school. He is an automobile enthusiast and is an aerodynamics, airplane industry hobbyist.[59] In his speeches, he has said he started "wrenching" when he was 10.[60] He studied in Spain and speaks Spanish conversationally.

gollark: Nuclear cars are the future of cars. Just have a big lump of plutonium to heat up water to drive turbines.
gollark: We should ban all cars which do not run on nuclear power.
gollark: I think only city centres probably will in practice.
gollark: A cool but also still impractical alternative to batteries for solar would just be to have a giant ring of solar panels around the planet, linked with superconductors.
gollark: (or nuclear if people weren't irrationally scared of it)

See also

References

  1. Lu, Charlie (12 May 2009). "Prominent Chinese American News Anchor Shares His Journey". Epoch Times. Retrieved 25 October 2012.
  2. "Hyphen TV Special Edition,". Hyphen. Feb 28, 2011.
  3. "Meet the Faces of NBC News TV". NBC News.
  4. "Entrepreneurial Alumni" (PDF). (Spring 2002). InCompany, University of Michigan Business School.
  5. "Mediaite news anchor ranking,". Hyphen. Feb 28, 2011.
  6. , Twitter Counter @RichardLui
  7. , Richard Lui Verified YouTube Channel
  8. , Because I am a Girl
  9. , Business Insider
  10. "OCA Northern Virginia". Facebook. Feb 28, 2011.
  11. Richman, Tom (October 1, 1987). "Mrs. Fields' Secret Ingredient". Inc. Magazine.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  12. Conn, Jennifer (August 12, 1996). "Texas Hospitals Use Mobile Waste System". Waste & Recycling News.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  13. "Oliver Wyman Alumni".
  14. Lui, Richard (September 19, 2012). "The Perception Gap". Huffington Post.
  15. , Plan International USA, About Richard Lui
  16. "Enslaved In America". NBC. Archived from the original on 2011-07-22.
  17. "Enslaved in America". NBC Weekend Nightly News. April 3, 2011. Archived from the original on 2013-01-04.
  18. "A Community of Contrasts: Asian Americans in the United States, 2011". Advancing Justice Conference 2011. October 27, 2011.
  19. "Advancing Justice Conference 2011".
  20. Sonmez, Felicia (April 11, 2011) (April 11, 2011). "The State of Race in America". Washington Post.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  21. https://www.flickr.com/photos/usembassyjakarta/6119066167/in/photostream/
  22. http://unanyc.org/events/current/20131023_award_dinner.html
  23. http://www.unanyc.org/news/2012/20121025_unany_awards_dinner.html
  24. http://www.hpair.org/conf/aconf2011/speakerlist.pdf
  25. https://www.google.com/diversity/workforce.html
  26. "Building Affordable Housing in Ghana". CNN. 2010.
  27. "PRI, Georgia's most prolific non-profit, affordable housing developer".
  28. "Crossroads, a homeless services non-profit".
  29. http://www.advancingjustice-aajc.org/tags/richard-lui
  30. http://alist-magazine.com/home/tag/richard-lui/
  31. http://www.nbcnews.com/id/39404541/ns/msnbc-meet_the_faces_of_msnbc/t/richard-lui/#.UgPBN5LkuIo
  32. http://www.asianfortunenews.com/article_1012.php?article_id=8
  33. http://www.capal.org/event/capal-2013-apa-heritage-ball-page/
  34. http://capac-chu.house.gov/press-release/capac-and-democratic-leadership-celebrate-asian-pacific-american-heritage-month
  35. https://twitter.com/richardlui
  36. http://seattletimes.com/html/opinion/2019345533_guestrichardluiasianvotersxml.html
  37. Lui, Richard (February 11, 2013). "The Many Faces of Immigration Reform". The San Francisco Chronicle.
  38. http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1112/83246.html
  39. http://tv.msnbc.com/bios/richard-lui/
  40. Thielman, Matt (August 3, 2010). "MSNBC taps Lui". Variety.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  41. http://www.nbcnews.com/id/39404541/ns/msnbc-meet_the_faces_of_msnbc/t/richard-lui/#.UgPCEZLkuIo
  42. "CNN Saturday Morning News". (CNN Transcripts). June 17, 2006.
  43. "Paper Sons: Chinese American illegal immigrants". CNN.
  44. "Groom to-be clubbed to death". CNN.
  45. "Oil Spill Impact". HLN TV.
  46. http://www.cnn.com/2013/07/13/us/peabody-awards-fast-facts/
  47. http://shoreroadmultimedia.com/about-us/awards/
  48. https://www.facebook.com/rlui
  49. "Mubarak to Resign: Broadcasters Produce Special Reports..." Media Bistro. February 10, 2011.
  50. http://www.nbcnews.com/id/39404541/ns/msnbc-meet_the_faces_of_msnbc/t/richard-lui/
  51. "Seeking more, octogenarian finds it in Tea Party". NBC News.
  52. http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/school-stabbing-spree/alex-hribal-not-loner-or-weirdo-lawyer-says-n77126
  53. "A story both sordid and unbelievable". NBC News.
  54. "Enslaved in America". NBC News Investigations. July 18, 2011. Archived from the original on 2011-04-06.
  55. http://aaja2014.sched.org/speaker/richard_lui.1scshzuh
  56. Lu, Charlie (May 9, 2009). "Prominent Chinese American News Anchor Shares His Journey". Epoch Times.
  57. Lui, Richard (September 19, 2012). "The Perception Gap". Huffington Post.
  58. "The Universal Worker". Delta Air Lines World Headquarters. 2009.
  59. "Personal Innovation". 8th Annual APACC Celebration.
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