Asunción "Sunny" Cummings Hostin[1] (/ˈhɒstɪn/; born October 20, 1968) is an American lawyer, author, and television host. Hostin is co-host on ABC's morning talk show The View, for which she received nominations for Daytime Emmy Awards, as well as the Senior Legal Correspondent and Analyst for ABC News. She was also the host and executive producer of Investigation Discovery's true crime series Truth About Murder with Sunny Hostin.
Hostin began her career as a law clerk to retired Chief Judge of the Maryland Court of AppealsRobert M. Bell and later became a trial attorney in the U.S. Department of Justice's Antitrust Division.[10] Hostin left the Antitrust Division to become a federal prosecutor, specializing in child sex crimes.[11] Hostin was awarded a Special Achievement Award for her successful prosecution of sex offenders.[12] Hostin was also a Managing Director of Business Intelligence and Investigations at Kroll Inc., the world’s leading risk-consulting company, where she led groups of investigators all over the world to investigate and uncover fraud.[13]
She began her television career as a commentator for Court TV and began using the stage name "Sunny Hostin" after host Nancy Grace was unable to pronounce "Asunción" and asked if she had a nickname she could use instead.[14] Hostin was then offered a spot on the Fox News program The O'Reilly Factor,[7] where she appeared on the show's "Is It Legal?" segments, regularly debating with Bill O'Reilly and Megyn Kelly.[citation needed]CNN President Jon Klein signed her to the network in September 2007 as the legal analyst for its flagship morning show American Morning. In 2014, Hostin began frequently appearing as a guest contributor on the ABC daytime talk show The View.[15] Also in 2014, she appeared as a contestant on the Mother’s Day edition of Food Network’s Chopped. She was eliminated in the final round, and returned the next year for the Amateurs Redemption episode, which she also did not win.[16] In 2015, Hostin participated in a TEDx Talk titled A Possibility Model that details the effects of an early trauma.[17] In March 2016, it was announced that Hostin was joining ABC News as Senior Legal Correspondent and analyst.[18] She became a permanent co-host of The View beginning the show's twentieth season in September 2016.[19] In 2017, Hostin made a cameo appearance as herself in the comedy film Girls Trip.[20]
In 2019, Hostin hosted and executive-produced the six-episode documentary series Truth About Murder With Sunny Hostin on Investigation Discovery, on which she travels to various parts of the US to explore the stories behind some of the nation’s most notorious homicides.[21][22] She also hosted a podcast titled Have You Seen This Man?, produced by ABC.[23][24] Hostin released I Am These Truths, a memoir, in 2020.[25] The following year, she released a novel, titled Summer on the Bluffs.[26] The book will be adapted into a television series.[27] Hostin is also set to executive-produce The Counsel, a drama television series inspired by her life and career.[28]
In a discussion on The View, Hostin said that Latino voters who did not support Kamala Harris in the 2024 presidential election did so out of sexism and misogyny.[29][30][31] In another discussion on The View, she also claimed that "uneducated white women" were to blame for Trump's victory in the 2024 election.[32] In another discussion on The View, Hostin claimed that Patrick Mahomes' wife, Brittany Mahomes, should have known that it was "problematic" to support "a racist" for president, given that she is in an interracial marriage.[33] Additionally, Hostin has repeatedly claimed that Donald Trump won the 2024 election due to sexism and racism.[34]
^Cole, Harriette (August 23, 2021). "Journalist and Lawyer Sunny Hostin on Identity, Achievement and Passion". AARP. My grandmother, my mother's mother, was born in Puerto Rico. She is what we in Puerto Rico call a Taíno, she was a native there, indigenous to Puerto Rico, so sort of an Indian Puerto Rican. My mother's father is a Sephardic Jew, so Jewish but from Spain. And then my father is African American. So I am definitely multiracial.