Kai Wright began his career as a journalist in the late '90s at the Washington Blade. His first assignment was a story looking at the disproportionate risk of HIV infection among people of color, and particularly young gay men of color. He then spent much of his early career writing about impact of HIV/AIDS on young gay men of color.[7]
Wright went on to become a favorite reporter at Type Investigations (formerly The Investigative Fund) where he covered economic inequality, access to healthcare, and racial inequity.[1] At the same time he became an Alfred Knobler Fellow at its parent organization, The Nation Institute.[8][6]
Wright gained notoriety in the HIV prevention world as he, while writing as a columnist and later senior writer at The Root, he served as publications editor for the Black AIDS Institute.[9][10]
He spent time as senior editor at City Limits, copy editor at the New YorkDaily News, and news reporter at The Washington Blade[11] before joining ColorLines in 2010, initially as editorial and later as, editor-at-large[5][3] He is credited with transforming the publication from a bimonthly print journal to a daily digital destination reaching 1 million readers a month.[11]
In 2015, Wright was persuaded to join The Nation as a features editor, making it, at the time, one of the few political magazines with people of color in senior leadership.[4] Wright edited the magazine's features, investigative reports, and editorials, helped cultivate new talent, and developed new digital ventures. The magazine looked to him to enhance coverage in his areas of expertise - issues of race and racial justice, inequality, labor, health, and sexuality.[11]
While features editor at The Nation, Wright began hosting the podcast “The United States of Anxiety” in partnership with WNYC Studios.
Drifting Toward Love: Black, Brown, Gay Coming of Age on the Streets of New York
National Association of Black Journalists 2012 Salute to Excellence - Winner[21]
Digital Media – Single Story: News - "Deadly Secrets: How California Law Shields Oakland Police Violence” Ali Winston, Esther Kaplan, Kai Wright - ColorLines
^Wright, Kai; Gerald, Gil (2008). Saving Ourselves; The State of AIDS in Black America and What We're Doing About It. Los Angeles, California: Black AIDS Institute.
^National Association of Black Journalists (2012). "2012 Salute to Excellence Winners". National Association of Black Journalists. Retrieved 2022-02-03.