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Glenda A. Hatchett (born May 31, 1951), known professionally as Judge Hatchett, is an American television personality, lawyer, and judge who is the star of the former court show, Judge Hatchett and current day The Verdict with Judge Hatchett, and founding partner at the national law firm, The Hatchett Firm.
Judge Rinder. Judge Romesh. Judge Steve Harvey. Judge Wapner's Animal Court. Judy Justice. Justice for All with Judge Cristina Perez. Justice with Judge Jeanine. Justice with Judge Mablean. The Judge.
Eboni Kiuhnna Williams (born September 9, 1983) [1] is an American lawyer and television host. She hosts the nightly news show The Grio with Eboni K. Williams on TheGrio. She co-hosted a talk show on WABC Radio in New York City and was a co-host of Fox News ' 2017 show Fox News Specialists. In October 2020, she was cast in The Real Housewives ...
September 23, 2013. ( 2013-09-23) –. February 29, 2020. ( 2020-02-29) Lauren Lake's Paternity Court (originally known as Paternity Court) is a nontraditional court show in which family lawyer and legal analyst Lauren Lake heard and ruled on paternity cases and rendered DNA test results. The show was produced by 79th & York Entertainment and ...
Rachel Lynn Lindsay [1] (born April 21, 1985) [2] [3] is an American media personality, attorney and podcaster. She is best known for her role as a contestant on the twenty-first season of ABC 's The Bachelor and as the lead of its spinoff, The Bachelorette, in its thirteenth season. She was the first African-American lead in the Bachelor ...
As with other court shows, such as The People's Court and Judge Judy, a former judge presides over small claims court cases as an arbitrator. On this show, the arbitration judge is Karen Mills-Francis, an African-American woman twice elected Miami-Dade County Court judge, who proclaims that "Justice isn't always black and white".
A modern-day African-American woman must escape from a 19th-century Southern slave plantation. The Arena: 1974: In the ancient Roman city of Brundisium, a group of slave girls are forced to become gladiators. A Respectable Trade: 1998: A four-part TV miniseries based on a historical novel. Ashanti: 1979
Joan Murray (journalist) Joan Murray (November 6, 1937 – December 18, 2021) was the first African-American woman to report the news on a major network show. She was employed by CBS in 1965 after writing a letter to CBS-TV requesting they hire her as a news broadcaster. [1]