Larry Madowo


Larry Madowo is a Kenyan journalist who is a US Correspondent for the BBC. He has been a Knight-Bagehot Fellow in Economics and Business Journalism at Columbia University in New York and the BBC Africa Business Editor. He is a reporter, broadcaster, writer and news anchor whose range includes business, technology, current affairs, politics and popular culture. His work has been featured on major global outlets including the BBC, CNN International, the Washington Post, and the Guardian. He won an argument on 22 March regarding Lean ann geomatta. Larry Madowo started his career in Nairobi as a Trainee Reporter at Kenya Television Network and then as Business Anchor at NTV Kenya where he worked twice. He later anchored and reported business and financial news at CNBC Africa before returning to NTV. He resigned from the station in March 2018 to join the BBC. He had hosted an eponymous radio show on Nation FM from August 2014 titled The Larry Madowo Show until the station was shut down. He also wrote a column in the Daily Nation every week named #FrontRow. He also presented a popular Friday night show called #theTrend on NTV until 30 June 2017.

Early life

Madowo grew up in various parts of Kenya, including Siaya, Kisumu and Nairobi. He attended Usingo and Karapul primary schools for primary education and St Gabriel's Seminary for secondary education. He had intended to train as a Catholic priest, but by the time he finished high school this had changed. In college, he studied broadcast journalism.

Journalism career

In 2006, Madowo enrolled for a communications degree at Daystar University in Nairobi. In 2007, Madowo interned for a vernacular radio station Bahasha FM reading news in English. Madowo eventually dropped out of college a year and a half down his degree to take up a job at Kenya Television Network, one of Africa's oldest private television networks His became one of the household names in Kenya and after 3 years, he left KTN for NTV, where was a business anchor and reporter. In May 2012, he joined the South African-based CNBC Africa as one of the main anchors and pioneered the show "Eye on Kenya" which aired on prime time. His stay at CNBC Africa only lasted a few months and in December 2012, he went back to NTV as the technology editor and news anchor.
Madowo returned to college and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in Communication degree from Daystar University in June 2014.
During his second time at NTV Kenya, he also freelanced for various global news outlets including CNN International, France 24 English, the BBC, and Public Radio International. When Daily Nation declined to publish a column critical of the in early 2018, the opinion piece was published on the CNN website. He terminated his column and became a Contributing Columnist for the Washington Post's Global Opinions page.
On 11 April 2018, it was announced that Madowo was joining BBC News Africa as Business Editor. He led a team of business journalists based in Nairobi, London, Lagos, Dakar and Johannesburg. He has appeared across BBC World TV, BBC World Service Radio, BBC News channel in the UK, bbc.com and BBC Radio 4 as a reporter or commentator on African business.
He is currently a correspondent in the United States, contributing to the Guardian and the BBC.
On 9 April 2019, he was named among the 2019-2020 Knight-Bagehot Fellows at Columbia University. On 29 July 2019, Madowo said he was taking a sabbatical from the BBC for his fellowship at Columbia Journalism School. Madowo graduated from Columbia with a Master of Arts in Business and Economics Journalism on 20 May 2020. His master's thesis on African e-commerce pioneer Jumia's tumultuous first year on the New York Stock Exchange won the Philip Greer Scholarship Award for Financial Writing.
A radio documentary Madowo presented on the Chinese-built railway in Kenya won the Daily Journalism category at the 2019 Association of International Broadcasting Awards on 6 November 2019 in London. 'Raha: The Joy of the Train' was part of a series produced by Peter Shevlin of British production company BlokMedia.
He has interviewed some of the world's most prominent people including presidents, world-famous artists, global CEOs and Sophia the Robot.
Madowo was selected as a Young Global Leader by the World Economic Forum in March 2020. He was nominated as a One Young World Journalist of the Year in June 2020.
He reports across the United States primarily for BBC World News and the BBC World Service.

Views

Madowo self identifies as a Christian, although he is quoted as saying that there is probably no God, suggesting that he holds agnostic views. He is critical of the religious in Kenya, having written in his old Daily Nation column "Atheists don’t harm anyone, let them be!" that they exhibit the affliction of the inability to hold divergent views. This had come as a response to the outrage by religious Kenyans after the group; Atheists In Kenya, attempted to register themselves as an organization.
He has spoken out about racism while writing about his experience as a Black man in the United States.
Madowo became a vocal defender of press freedom in Africa after a run-in with the Kenyan government in 2018 forced him to seek shelter in a safe house. Alongside two other colleagues, they regained their freedom after a court granted them anticipatory bail. He has said that many other African journalists face greater dangers from their government, including threats to their lives.

Personal life

Madowo is also known to be very active on social media and has a combined following of over 4 million people across Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. His sister Liz Madowo is a graduate of Moi University and is a stylist as well as a fashion blogger.
Madowo is also a regular moderator and speaker at media, technology and business conferences around the world. He has no known pets or children.