FAMU alum Roy Wood Jr. speaks truth — with a smile
The stage lights are low, the mic stand wobbles, and Roy Wood Jr. leans in with a half-smile that warns something sharp is coming. The sound that follows isn’t just laughter — it’s charged, each punchline landing with intent. Before he became a correspondent on “The Daily Show” and host of CNN’s “Have I Got News for You,” his craft was sharpened at Florida A&M University (FAMU), where raw observation turned into insight and personal pain became comedic payoff.
“I try my best, when I’m away from FAMU, to honor the university in how I carry myself,” Wood explains. “Because someone might decide to attend based on what they see in me.”
That mindset carried him from open mics to hosting the 2023 White House Correspondents’ Dinner. And it started with a fake late-night show, a class project that became a running bit.
“In one of my classes, I made a mini “Larry King Live” just to get a laugh,” he recalls. “It was supposed to be a throwaway assignment. Now I’ve got a show on CNN.”
Sharpened at the Highest Hill
Raised in Birmingham, Ala., Wood arrived at FAMU with the instincts of a truth-teller. His father, Roy Wood Sr., was a pioneering journalist whose reporting carried weight in Black media.
“My dad fought for what was right and spoke up against injustice,” Wood reflects. “I just figured out a funnier way to do the same thing.”
In Tallahassee, his world widened. A roommate from Miami introduced him to South Florida slang, food, and music, immersing him in a broader spectrum of the Black experience. “Alabama was a very Black American upbringing. But Florida was a Pan-African experience. It opened me up to so many ways Black people exist.”
FAMU’s campus became his proving ground. He worked at WANM 90.5 FM, testing sketches on live radio, and hosted talent shows in Lee Hall. “That was my training camp,” he says. “If I could entertain Rattlers, I could entertain anybody.”
That immersion deepened his commitment to Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs). Wood supports the Orange Blossom Classic (OBC), one of the most celebrated HBCU football events.
“The OBC kicks off the fall with so much love,” he notes. “It’s a way for us to see each other, celebrate each other. There’s nothing like it.”
He embodies the pride FAMU represents. “I’m always trying to figure out how I can contribute long-term to FAMU and HBCUs. It’s got to be more than showing up and being seen.”
The Mistake That Molded Him
His path wasn’t flawless. A credit card fraud arrest threatened to end his college career — and his future in entertainment.
“You get them ice-cold handcuffs on, standing in that intake line, and you think, ‘This is my life now.’”
His way out came through a probation officer who saw potential beyond the charge sheet. “I was lucky someone let me keep working and not violate probation. But for many, it doesn’t go that way.”
That brush with the law gave his material an edge — a platform for those rarely offered second chances. He calls it the moment that separated pretending to be a comedian from becoming one.
From then on, Wood’s sets carried more weight. He mixed personal history with sharp political commentary. In one bit, he jokes about being pulled over in Alabama, drawing chuckles before letting silence reveal the reality of racial profiling.
“Comedy can be a tool in times of political tension or racial injustice,” he says. “Not always with answers, but with a way to frame the moment.”
That approach, shaped by his father and refined at FAMU, has carried him nationwide, making him one of America’s most respected cultural commentators.
The Work Ahead
In 2025, his reach continues to grow. He began the year with his Hulu stand-up special “Lonely Flowers,” pairing personal history with social critique. His memoir, “The Man of Many Fathers” is due later this year.
On-screen, he stars in “Love, Brooklyn”and appears in the film “Outcome.” He’s also set to host the 85th Peabody Awards and the 46th Sports Emmys. At CNN, his wit anchors “Have I Got News for You.”
Together, the projects signal a performer who refuses to be boxed in — balancing stand-up, commentary, and cultural critique with the same precision he once brought to a shaky mic stand.
Words for the Next Rattlers
His advice to FAMU students stepping into careers that challenge the status quo comes without hesitation:
“Make no mistake — it’s coming. Be ready. Don’t be afraid to say the thing that makes people uncomfortable. That’s where transformation starts.”
That conviction drives every performance. “I’m not just there to be funny. I’m there to start conversations, to leave something behind.”
Wood’s words remain, sparking thought long after the applause fades.
This story was originally published August 31, 2025 at 2:43 PM.