News

Black Teen Who Once Appeared on ‘Jeopardy’ Accepted to More Than 15 Colleges, Awarded $2M in Scholarships

Rotimi Kukoyi, a Nigerian American teen from Hoover, Alabama, has been accepted to more than 15 universities including Yale and Harvard. He also received a total of $2 million in scholarship offers.

Rotimi said he was inspired to strive harder academically after joining the “Jeopardy!” Teen Tournament in 2018. He was still a freshman at that time and he met outstanding students from across the country.

“It was really fun experience but also put me in contact with some pretty cool students from across the country,” Kukoyi said on Good Morning America. “A lot of them are older and they’re like seniors or juniors that applied to many prestigious schools a lot of them are attending prestigious universities now. So that was kind of my original inspiration to apply to those universities.”

Rotimi, who became the first Black National Merit Scholar at his school, was accepted to more than 15 prestigious universities including Yale, Harvard, Stanford, the University of Virginia, Vanderbilt, Emory, Rice, Johns Hopkins, Duke, the University of Alabama, Case Western Reserve University, UAB, Auburn University, Washington University in St. Louis, and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Rotimi decided to attend the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where he was awarded its prestigious Morehead-Cain Scholarship, the oldest merit scholarship program in the country.

He has plans to pursue a career in public health to help others. His decision was triggered mostly by the things he saw during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“COVID really sparked [my interest in public health] because that was the first time that I really saw how clear the health inequities were,” he said. “African Americans had a much higher chance of dying from COVID than white Americans. It was almost like there were two separate pandemics impacting our nation, and we saw [some people] marginalized and impacted way more.

“I want my legacy to be one that’s focused on impacting other people. I suppose a lot of people in the pursuit of their own goals can kind of forget what it’s all about.”

Related Posts

Garcelle Beauvais’ 3 Kids: All About Oliver, Jaid and Jax

Garcelle Beauvais has one son from a previous marriage and twin boys with her ex-husband Photo: Oliver Saunders Instagram Garcelle Beauvais is a fiercely protective mama to her three…

In 1963, Avedon Took a Picture That Shed Light on America

William Casby, who had been enslaved, was 106 when a famous photographer asked him to sit for a photo. May 8, 2023You’re reading the New York Today newsletter.  Metropolitan…

Floyd Mayweather: The lonely king of boxing

 Boxing in the 21st century is a playground for many big names, making this sport more and more crowded. However, to call who is the real king of…

Adeola Sowemimo: Nigeria’s first female Boeing 787 pilot is an inspiration to African women

Adeola is a trailblazer and an inspiration to all African women, young and old alike. The era where people identify some professions only to the male gender is…

David Steward: The Richest Black Man in America, But Not for the Reasons You Think

Steward’s vision for STEM City USA is rooted in his belief that technology can and should be used to bridge gaps in education and opportunity. In a world…

Derrick Hayes: American restaurateur and CEO of Big Dave’s Cheesesteaks

Derrick Hayes is charismatic, driven, humble, confident, and honestly the epitome of American exceptionalism and the embodiment of the American dream. However, the now 35-year-old’s life, he just…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *