Top 67 Quotes & Sayings by Tamron Hall

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American journalist Tamron Hall.
Last updated on November 15, 2024.
Tamron Hall

Tamron Hall is an American broadcast journalist and television talk show host. In September 2019, Hall debuted her self-titled syndicated daytime talk show, which earned her a Daytime Emmy Award. Hall was formerly a national news correspondent for NBC News, daytime anchor for MSNBC, host of the program MSNBC Live with Tamron Hall, and a co-host of Today's Take, the third hour of Today. She hosts Deadline: Crime on Investigation Discovery channel. In summer 2016, Investigation Discovery premiered the TV special Guns on Campus: Tamron Hall Investigates, which commemorated the 50th anniversary of the tower shooting at the University of Texas at Austin.

Al Roker is one of the most sensible people you'll ever meet. He's raised two daughters and a son. And I love him, in that as jovial as he is, he's a straight shooter. He's a New Yorker, as they say.
I'm definitely a foodie.
My ability to not be afraid to ask tough questions or to confront, that matters. — © Tamron Hall
My ability to not be afraid to ask tough questions or to confront, that matters.
The thread that has always connected my family was the news.
Everything I ask is a question from Tamron, like it or not. My team does not write my questions. We put together a segment. We talk about the elements that I want, but we have a conversation for that hour with our guests.
We all have roadblocks; we all have challenges.
I root for anyone who's got kids and if they want to make it work.
On career day as a young journalist, I scraped up my money and went to this big conference for young journalists, and the great feedback I got was that I would not or should not become an anchor because my eyelashes were too long and too distracting.
Victims and survivors deserve more than a person seeking a headline.
When I first started out as a young journalist, I know that on at least two occasions, when I walked into a newsroom, I knew I was replacing the black person in that job.
Someone - a man - advised me not to become a news anchor because my eyelashes were too long, and they would distract the viewers.
I had braces for six years! Kids would call me 'big teeth' or 'rabbit teeth.'
You understand, in my life, the only other person I spoke with or speak with more than Prince is my mother.
The two things that I require for anyone who's around me: you need to love food, and you need to be able to laugh. — © Tamron Hall
The two things that I require for anyone who's around me: you need to love food, and you need to be able to laugh.
I am followed in department stores. I have walked in dressed professionally or dressed in jeans, and I have walked into stores, and instantly, security is on my back.
It's a tough town, it's a loving town, it's a supportive town, and that's why so many great news people, journalists have come through Chicago or are from Chicago.
When I was a general assignment reporter early in my career, I was the one knocking on their door after a tragedy.
I feel it's tougher for the guys, because if I break up with them, then they can go on and be forced to watch me on TV every day. I don't see them.
I take it seriously that it's a privilege and honor to be a role model to young girls, both black and white. It's not something I take lightly.
I laugh about it all the time, but, for whatever reason, a lot of people think that I wear a wig. I get emails and tweets about people commenting on my hair being a wig. It's one of the strangest but most entertaining things I've read about myself online.
I love my job and my relationship with the viewers who watch my shows.
I've not given up having a child. But I hope whatever route of parenthood I choose, whether it's adoption or I'm able to conceive, I just hope that I'm able to give someone as beautiful a life as my parents gave me.
The troops aren't red and blue. They're not black and white. They're not male and female. They are Americans! When they put their uniforms on, they are Americans. And that's a fact.
Trust me: I do hit the snooze button about 4 times.
I remember reading the cruelest, most awful thing about my hair online. A person speculated about who I was as a person and even read into my personal life based solely off my hairstyle. He or she said I must be lazy because I have short hair. It was just devastating.
I am grateful that as a reporter and as an anchor, people have allowed me to share their stories.
The biggest compliment I get is when someone tells me, 'You're so real.' Even if my journey isn't exactly like theirs.
I love Chicago. I wouldn't be where I am now, and I certainly wouldn't have the confidence that I hope that I project, if I'd not lived in Chicago.
We're not monolithic. What is blackness? To me, how do you define that?
When I came to Philadelphia in the late '80s, it was going through a very difficult time.
I'm about being honest and knowing that people are watching, and they want to know that I'm asking questions that they want the answers to.
We are presented with a unique situation in the black community in that we have embraced the beauty of hip hop, the real rawness of it, the real fun of it, but we also have to address the damage it has done. We have to look at what it's done to our black girls, especially when it comes to domestic violence.
What I've learned is that people have a desire to talk after the first line of reporters go away, and they are no longer speaking out of shock.
I love edgy comedy. 'Coming to America' still gets me and 'Friday.' I watch old Richard Pryor stand-up on VHS, too.
I met Bon Jovi on the way to Washington, D.C. I think I called him Jon Jovi. Ugghhhh. I just smiled and pretended it didn't happen. I love him and his wife; they're so sweet. I was very nervous.
It's not my job to judge or assess. I think single, black, white, married - people are doing the best they can.
I am a gummy bear fanatic.
I quite enjoy cooking. I love cooking for my friends. It's communal, it reminds me of being with family, and it's also a form of therapy; it heals you from the inside out.
I will never answer that question of what are the challenges I face. You speak it into existence, and I choose to use that air for other things. — © Tamron Hall
I will never answer that question of what are the challenges I face. You speak it into existence, and I choose to use that air for other things.
The best advice I received came late, and it's this: Don't read the comments section of any story that mentions you!
I was on morning TV for 10 years in Chicago.
I've been given an opportunity to make a difference.
I have three incredible nieces and a nephew who's going off to college. To hear them say they're proud of me left me in tears.
It used to upset me - now it makes me sad - to see people use patriotism and our troops as a pawn in their political argument. Because I know personally, growing up in a military family, the sacrifice that is made on a daily basis.
We all have these challenges and stereotypes that exist, but you can't let that hold you down... If that's the first thing you think about as a black woman - the challenge that lies ahead - you are thinking in the wrong direction, in my opinion.
I love morning television because it's the most vulnerable time of day, when you are at your rawest, and if I have the ability to make viewers smile, that's a gift from God.
My dad was in the Army, so what was happening internationally and nationally was always important to my family.
I didn't want to be the aunt where you come over and can't sit on the sofa.
So I have people who tweet and ask me, 'You can't be this happy all the time. You can't be this cheerful.' Well, yes I am. From where I've come from and my family and what I see as real struggles in day to day life, through my reporting. I'm never going to look at challenges.
I was 7 years old, and I challenged everything. I never accepted answers on face value. — © Tamron Hall
I was 7 years old, and I challenged everything. I never accepted answers on face value.
One of my favorite memories was one time Prince picked me up and said we were going to Michael Jordan's birthday party.
If someone says, 'I love that lipstick,' I will always try to answer, honestly, if I know what color it is. It's a connective tissue.
Looking back, I've always enjoyed hearing about the lives of other people, their experience through their jobs, their lives, and their children. It's always been a treat to hear about others.
I love Jidenna and Leon Bridges.
I grew a reputation for always asking questions and being nosy.
I'm proud of my hard work. Working hard won't always lead to the exact things we desire. There are many things I've wanted that I haven't always gotten. But, I have a great satisfaction in the blessings from my mother and father, who instilled a great work ethic in me both personally and professionally.
I think when I first straightened my hair, I was a teenager. I don't believe that I was consciously doing it to look white or to be on television. It never crossed my mind. All of the girls in my neighborhood got perms and their hair straightened. But I know that historically it was to assimilate and there are some people who do it for that reason.
As a kid from Texas, it always amazes me when city kids don't know how to ride a bike.
When I came to MSNBC, its identity as the place for politics was growing.
Every time a young girl comes in and asks me for advice, if you start your conversation with, 'How hard is it as a black woman,' or, 'How hard is it as a woman,' I turn you around. Because I cannot - we cannot look at the roadblocks and see the road at the same time.
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