
IMO with Michelle Obama and Craig Robinson Tell Your Story with Jonathan Capehart
Jan 7, 2026
Jonathan Capehart, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and media commentator, shares his journey from a childhood in New Jersey and North Carolina to prominent journalism. He reflects on his memoir, Yet Here I Am, exploring life as a gay Black man in America. Jonathan discusses his grandmother’s influence, his mother’s sacrifices for education, and the complexities of growing up in a segregated town. He also touches on the significance of chosen family and his experiences shaping his identity in a supportive community.
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Summers With A Devout Grandmother
- Jonathan Capehart describes summers in North Carolina with his Jehovah's Witness grandmother, capturing sensory details like humidity, tin roofs, and sewing on the kitchen table.
- Those vivid memories framed his childhood identity and later informed his worldview and writing in Yet Here I Am.
Miss Betsy Hiding In The Ditch
- Jonathan tells the story of Miss Betsy, a white friend who hid in ditches to avoid her racist husband and join witnessing with his grandmother.
- The tale illustrates secret interracial friendships and the realities of a still-segregated South.
How Place Revealed Ongoing Segregation
- Capehart realized later how summers in Jim Crow Severn shaped his view of America and himself, noticing coded street names like 'White Street' and 'Colored Street.'
- Those spatial and social divides revealed persistent segregation beneath legal civil-rights gains.






