Hubbry Logo
Alexis JonesAlexis JonesMain
Open search
Alexis Jones
Community hub
Alexis Jones
logo
7 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Alexis Jones
Alexis Jones
from Wikipedia

Alexis Whitney Jones (born July 6, 1983) is an American activist and motivational speaker best known for competing on the reality competition show Survivor.

Key Information

Early life and education

[edit]

Jones was born in Austin, Texas, and grew up there with her mother, father and four older brothers. Her parents divorced when she was young.[1] She attended Westlake High School just outside of Austin, and after graduation, she enrolled at the University of Southern California (USC), where she earned a Bachelor of Arts in International Relations as well as a Master of Communication Management degree, the latter of which was completed in only one year.[2] While at USC, she was a member of the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority (ΚΚΓ).[3] In addition, she performed in The Vagina Monologues and also worked at Fox Sports while attending college.[2]

Career

[edit]

While still an undergraduate, Jones came up with the idea for a non-profit organization called I Am That Girl,[4] whose main purpose would be to fight media-perpetuated notions of perfectionism that many young girls and women face. Upon finishing graduate school, she officially started I Am That Girl (IATG), using television appearances to promote it.[2] As of 2017, IATG has over 175 chapters around the world.[4]

In 2013, Jones organized the first TEDx Austin Women conference.[5] Since then, she has also founded an organization called ProtectHer, which started as a result of a series of speaking gigs in the locker rooms of various collegiate men's athletic programs.[6] In 2017, she introduced to college campuses a film and curriculum series through ProtectHer, in an effort to educate young student-athletes about sexual assault, and to encourage treating women with respect.[7]

Survivor

[edit]

In 2007, Jones auditioned for the reality competition show Survivor: Micronesia — Fans vs. Favorites. Although she had missed the deadline for auditioning, she begged producers to meet with her in hopes of getting on the show that season.[2] She was ultimately cast as one of the 20 players competing on Fans vs. Favorites, which aired in the Spring of 2008.[8]

Jones was initially placed on the Airai tribe, which consisted of ten brand new players, or "Fans;" while the opposing tribe, Malakal, consisted of ten returning players, or "Favorites". She remained on Airai even during the tribal switch on Day 12. Prior to the Day 22 merge, she became part of a Final Four alliance with fellow Fan Natalie Bolton, new Airai tribemate Parvati Shallow, and Favorite Amanda Kimmel. Favorite Cirie Fields later joined this alliance, which would come to be known as the "Black Widow Brigade".

On Day 31, Jones won the Loved Ones reward challenge, which allowed her to take a trip to Jellyfish Lake with her brother Nathan; she invited Fields and her husband, and Bolton and her mother, to come along as well.[9] Jones also got to send another castaway to Exile Island, and when Kimmel volunteered to be exiled, Jones obliged. But while she was on the reward, Kimmel found a clue on Exile Island to the whereabouts of a hidden immunity idol.

At the Final Tribal Council, Kimmel and Shallow were the two remaining finalists. During the jury questioning, Jones asked Shallow to explain why the latter might be better suited than Kimmel to be a role model for young girls. Jones also asked Kimmel to identify a part of Kimmel's game that was genuine. In the end, Jones cast her vote for Shallow to win Sole Survivor.

Other works

[edit]

Jones once served as a life coach on the MTV show MADE.[5] She has also contributed articles to the Huffington Post. In 2014, she released a book, inspired by her Web site; the book's foreword was written by her sorority sister, actress Sophia Bush.[2] Jones was also an executive producer on the documentary film A Brave Heart: The Lizzie Velasquez Story, about fellow motivational speaker Lizzie Velásquez's struggles with body-shaming. The film had its world premiere at SXSW on March 14, 2015.[10] Six days later, Jones herself was featured on an episode of TLC's Say Yes to the Dress, where she picked out the dress for her forthcoming wedding to former University of Texas men's basketball star Brad Buckman.[11]

Personal life

[edit]

In 2012, Jones' father was diagnosed with cancer. Upon hearing the news, she immediately returned home to Austin to take care of him. In 2014, Jones learned that her father's cancer was in remission.[2]

While back in Austin, she had reconnected with Buckman.[2] They had attended middle school and high school together before each attending separate colleges.[12] As soon as they reconnected, Buckman confessed that he had experienced a crush on her since childhood, but had never said anything about it.[2] Soon after, they began dating.[12] On September 12, 2015, she married Buckman in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho.[13]

On March 20, 2016, Jones and her mother were traveling in their car through the streets of Los Angeles, when some men in another vehicle next to them got their attention while stopped at an intersection. The women thought that these men were yelling vulgarities and making obscene gestures to them, so Jones took out her phone and snapped some pictures of the men just before they drove away from the scene. After posting these photos on Instagram, in hopes of getting someone to identify who the men were, two of them were identified as professional basketball stars Jordan Clarkson and Nick Young of the Los Angeles Lakers.[14] Once the team looked into the incident and was able to speak with Jones, Clarkson, and Young, the Lakers concluded that all parties involved had come up with "different interpretations" of what happened on the night in question. No charges or disciplinary action were brought forth, and the Lakers went on to express their continued support of the two players, while also supporting Jones' feelings over the incident; the club even praised her organization for the work it does for women.[15] Jones said that she was "inspired" by the way the Lakers responded after a team spokesperson apologized to her, and she was even invited by the club to give a speech to its players on the issue of respecting women.[14]

Bibliography

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Alexis Jones is an American activist, , , and media personality recognized for founding the nonprofit I Am That Girl, which promotes self-empowerment among young women through online communities and resources, and the ProtectHer program, which educates men on consent and respect toward women. Born and raised in , as a self-identified Latina with four older brothers, Jones developed an interest in women's issues early, launching I Am That Girl at age 24 after performing in . Jones holds undergraduate and master's degrees from the and began her career in media, hosting shows and contributing to networks including , , , , and TLC, while consulting for . She gained broader public attention as a contestant on the 16th season of CBS's Survivor: Micronesia in 2008, enduring 33 days in challenging conditions before elimination as part of the "Black Widow Brigade" alliance. Her activism extends to producing the award-winning documentary A Brave Heart: The Lizzie Velasquez Story, which premiered at SXSW and won multiple film festival honors, and delivering a TEDx talk viewed over one million times. Jones has authored books including I Am That Girl (2014), which inspired her nonprofit's name and focuses on personal resilience, and Joy Hunter (2023, Penguin Random House), a memoir on rediscovering happiness amid adversity. Notable achievements include receiving the 2018 Jefferson Award for public service, selection for Oprah Winfrey's SuperSoul100 list, and speaking engagements at institutions like the White House, United Nations, Harvard, and Stanford. An avid traveler, she has backpacked to over 50 countries, hiked to Mount Everest Base Camp, and maintains an online following exceeding 1.2 million across platforms. While her work emphasizes female empowerment and has drawn praise for addressing consent and self-esteem, it has occasionally intersected with sports-related criticisms, such as her public calls for accountability among professional athletes amid allegations of misconduct.

Early life and education

Upbringing in Texas

Alexis Jones grew up in , as the only girl among four older brothers, in a household that emphasized resilience and . She has described herself as a Texas tomboy and avid sports enthusiast, often engaging in activities alongside her brothers that honed her physical and . Jones attended Westlake High School, located in the Austin suburbs and recognized for its elite athletics programs, including football, which surrounded her with high-caliber athletes from an early age. Her family maintained strong ties to Austin's civic institutions, with her grandfather serving as a state district judge and her grandmother receiving the "Austin's Most Worthy Citizen" award, including a chapel named in her honor at a . These influences fostered a deep connection to local traditions, such as late-night outings to Kerbey Lane eateries, volunteering to feed the homeless near the University of Texas campus, and swimming at after school. Of Latina heritage, Jones' upbringing integrated cultural identity with Texan values of community involvement and self-reliance, shaping her early worldview amid a backdrop of family-oriented and public-service-oriented role models.

University studies at USC

Jones enrolled at the after graduating from Westlake High School in . She earned a degree in from USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences in 2005. As a member of the sorority during her undergraduate years, Jones began developing an interest in women's and , which later influenced her career. Following her , Jones pursued graduate studies at USC, completing a in communication management from the Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism. This program equipped her with skills in , which she applied in her subsequent motivational speaking and nonprofit work. Her time at USC, spanning both undergraduate and graduate levels, fostered a foundation in global affairs and media that aligned with her emerging focus on and social impact.

Survivor: Micronesia

Participation and gameplay

Alexis Jones entered Survivor: Micronesia as a 24-year-old from , assigned to the Airai tribe of self-proclaimed super-fan contestants. She contributed to her tribe's early success, including a win in the season's first combined Reward/Immunity Challenge, "," where she assisted with puzzle assembly. Airai secured seven of 13 tribal challenges overall, with Jones participating actively in physical and endurance tasks, though the tribe faced losses that led to internal voting dynamics favoring her survival in the majority alliance. Her social adaptability helped her avoid early elimination, positioning her securely through the pre-merge phase despite Airai's uneven performance. Following a tribe swap, Jones joined a reconstituted Airai including favorites Natalie Bolton and , where she reinforced cross-tribe bonds and avoided targeting. Upon the merge into the tribe on Day 19, she integrated into a dominant female , contributing to blindsides of physical threats like and Jason Siska. Jones demonstrated puzzle-solving prowess in merged challenges but secured only one individual reward win in Episode 12's "Body Slam" , outlasting six others for a visit. Her gameplay emphasized relational leverage over overt physical dominance, attending six Tribal Councils and casting successful votes against three opponents, including early post-merge targets. Jones's elimination occurred on Day 33 at the 12th , where the women's alliance initially targeted Kimmel to flush a suspected Hidden Immunity Idol. Jones lobbied to join fans in voting Kimmel, but Kimmel played the idol, voiding four votes against her and redirecting the outcome to Jones with two votes. This blindside ended her game in 12th place as the fifth jury member, after 33 days and a reported 20-pound from island hardships. Her strategic positioning within the alliance prolonged her stay but exposed vulnerabilities when internal fractures emerged under immunity pressures.

Alliances and strategic decisions

Upon joining the Airai tribe as part of the Fans contingent, Alexis Jones quickly formed a Day 1 alliance with fellow contestant , which positioned her securely within the tribe dynamics and allowed her to avoid early scrutiny. She simultaneously established a tight bond with Natalie Bolton, another native, sealing their partnership with a simple verbal agreement that emphasized mutual loyalty from the outset. This dual alignment, combined with Airai's string of immunity wins, enabled Jones to build social capital without facing immediate votes, as the tribe never attended Tribal Council pre-merge. Following the merge on Day 19, Jones and Bolton were recruited by into an emerging all-female alliance that included Shallow, Amanda Kimmel, and , forming what became known as the Black Widow Brigade. This group orchestrated key post-merge eliminations, such as the blindside of in the first merged Tribal Council, by securing a 5-4 vote through temporary cooperation with Erik Reichenbach. Jones contributed to the alliance's dominance by voting consistently with the women against male targets, including efforts to oust physical threats like when he lacked immunity. Strategically, Jones leveraged personal connections, such as her friendship with Kimmel, to influence decisions like sending Kimmel to Exile Island after a reward win rather than , prioritizing alliance preservation over personal gain—a choice she later deemed regrettable. She also pursued side deals, including a potential Final Three pact with and Reichenbach, and used reward opportunities to sway Fields' support. However, her unwavering loyalty to the without pursuing hidden immunity idols or diversifying votes left her vulnerable; on Day 30, votes intended for Kimmel redirected to Jones after Kimmel played her idol, resulting in a 4-3 blindside elimination that exposed her as a perceived threat due to her likability.

Elimination and immediate aftermath

At the Tribal Council following the immunity challenge on Day 33, the merged tribe targeted Amanda Kimmel, casting five votes against her in an attempt to eliminate a perceived strategic threat. Kimmel, however, produced a hidden immunity idol previously found by , nullifying those votes and shifting the elimination to Jones, who received two votes from Kimmel and Shallow. This blindside marked Jones as the 12th person voted out and the fifth member, placing her seventh overall in the competition. Jones later recounted her shock in a post-elimination , stating, "Yeah I didn't see that one coming at all," highlighting the unexpected nature of the idol play and her position as an unintended target within the shifting alliances. Compounding her exit, Jones was dealing with a sustained during an earlier reward challenge, which had worsened and left her hobbling as she departed Tribal Council with her torch extinguished by host . Upon elimination, Jones transitioned to the jury quarters at Ponderosa, where eliminated players observe the remainder of the game and prepare to vote on the Sole Survivor. Her ouster preserved the core women's alliance—later dubbed the Black Widow Brigade—while exposing fractures among the fans and favorites, setting the stage for further idol plays and betrayals in the final stretch.

Post-Survivor career

Motivational speaking and media presence

Following her elimination from Survivor: Micronesia on day 9 in 2008, Jones leveraged her television exposure to establish a career in motivational speaking, focusing on themes of female empowerment, resilience, and personal growth. She has delivered keynotes at high-profile venues, including , , the at West Point, and the , as well as corporate audiences for organizations such as , Nike, , , , and the . Jones's speaking engagements often intersect with her advocacy work, emphasizing practical strategies for overcoming obstacles, as evidenced by her presentations to groups like the Girl Scouts and events hosted by the . Speaker bureaus list her fee range for live events at approximately $20,000 to $30,000, reflecting demand for her Survivor-informed insights into strategy and perseverance. In media, Jones has appeared on platforms promoting these topics, including a 2023 YouTube interview on "Find Joy Every Day," where she shared post-Survivor lessons on daily happiness as a bestselling author and speaker. She featured on Oprah.com discussing safe spaces for college athletes to address consent and sexual assault prevention. Additional outlets include The Motherly Podcast in 2023, covering fertility challenges and motherhood, and a 2024 YouTube segment on "radical love" tied to her activism.

Founding of I AM THAT GIRL

Jones co-founded I AM THAT GIRL with Emily Greener in 2008, shortly after completing her master's degree in communication management at the (USC). The concept emerged from Jones's undergraduate experiences at USC, where, as a sorority member, she identified a need for forums allowing young women to openly address personal struggles such as and relational pressures, rather than perpetuating competitive dynamics. This vision was catalyzed by an invitation Jones extended to Greener—a aspiring facing industry setbacks—to a social gathering, sparking discussions on fostering authentic female solidarity. The organization was formally incorporated as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit in 2009, with tax-exempt status granted in April 2010, under EIN 27-0716912. Initially structured as a chapter-based model, it aimed to deliver leadership, social, and programs to high school and college-aged girls, emphasizing community-building over rivalry. Early efforts focused on USC and Los Angeles-area campuses, leveraging Jones's post-graduation network to establish initial chapters and workshops that encouraged vulnerability and mutual support. By promoting story-sharing as a tool for confidence-building, the founding phase laid groundwork for expansion, though formal nonprofit operations began modestly with limited revenues reported in subsequent tax filings.

Expansion into activism and global travels

Following the establishment of I AM THAT GIRL, Jones broadened her by fostering international chapters and engaging in extensive global speaking engagements to promote self-empowerment among young women. By 2015, the had developed over 125 affiliate chapters across 16 countries, enabling localized support networks for participants. This expansion continued, with the initiative reporting a presence in more than 24 countries and an exceeding 1.2 million members by the late 2010s, facilitating cross-border inspiration and community-building efforts. Jones undertook a rigorous schedule of international travels as a full-time , delivering presentations to audiences worldwide on themes of authenticity and resilience. In a interview, she described her role as traveling globally to affirm girls' value and potential, which aligned with her entrepreneurial vision of scaling empowerment beyond U.S. borders. These tours, often relentless in pace, extended her reach to venues including the , where she addressed broader activist goals related to dynamics. Parallel to this growth, Jones extended her activism into male-focused education through the founding of ProtectHer, a program originating from workshops for athletes emphasizing respect toward women and redefining masculinity to prevent violence. Launched after years of female-centric outreach, ProtectHer represented a strategic pivot, incorporating digital modules for high school and older male participants, and was integrated into her traveling to address and accountability on college campuses and beyond. This initiative complemented her global efforts by targeting systemic cultural shifts, though primarily implemented in the United States with potential for international adaptation through her speaking network.

Writings and recent developments

Key publications

Jones's debut book, I Am That Girl: How to Speak Your Truth, Discover Your Purpose, and #bethatgirl, was published on March 18, 2014, by Evolve Publishing. Spanning 240 pages with 9780989322287, it functions as a self-empowerment manual drawing on Jones's experiences and includes contributions from thirty women, offering practical guidance on self-discovery, authenticity, and personal growth. The work aligns closely with her founding of the I AM THAT GIRL organization, emphasizing actionable steps for readers to cultivate confidence amid societal pressures. Her second major publication, Joy Hunter: Messy Faceplants, Radical Love, and the Journey That Changed Everything, appeared on June 13, 2023, from Harmony Books, an imprint of . This 256-page memoir recounts Jones's personal trials, including relational and professional setbacks, framed through themes of resilience, , and self-reinvention. Unlike her earlier instructional text, it adopts a style blending with humor, reflecting a pivot toward introspective storytelling.

Shift toward personal memoir and comedy

In 2023, Jones published Joy Hunter: Messy Faceplants, Radical Love, and the Journey That Made Me, a recounting her response to personal crisis through an RV odyssey across , emphasizing themes of , stillness, and resilience. The 256-page work, released on June 13 by Harmony Books, shifts from her prior oriented I Am That Girl (2014) by prioritizing introspective narrative over prescriptive advice, drawing on her vulnerabilities to illustrate personal growth. This memoiristic turn aligns with Jones's self-described evolution as a "recovering ," reflecting a broader pivot toward raw, autobiographical amid life transitions including motherhood and . The book's cinematic style chronicles specific trials, such as relational strains and identity reevaluation, positioning as an active pursuit rather than an abstract ideal. Concurrently, Jones ventured into starting in 2024, joining an group on May 14 after decades of deferring the pursuit due to self-doubt, framing it as a lifelong aspiration tied to unfiltered expression. She debuted a stand-up on October 22, 2025, at a venue like The DC Improv, later recounting near-stage fright but ultimate exhilaration in embracing the vulnerability. Her bio evolved to highlight "part soul, part standup," signaling an integration of humor into her public persona as a counterbalance to earlier , with posts blending comedic and motivational undertones. This foray, though nascent, underscores a deliberate move toward levity in processing chaos, as explored in appearances like "When Chaos Reveals Who You Really Are" (April 2023).

Personal life

Family and relationships

Alexis Jones was born on July 6, 1983, in , where she was raised alongside four older brothers in a family that was not wealthy. Her mother was the first in the family to graduate college and subsequently supported all her children's education through undergraduate and advanced degrees, including . Jones's paternal grandfather served as a Texas state district judge, while her grandmother received the "Austin's Most Worthy Citizen" award, reflecting a lineage of and community involvement. Her father was diagnosed with cancer in 2012, an event that influenced her priorities during the early development of her . Jones married Brad, her husband, around 2015 following their engagement announced in 2014; the couple had been together for approximately three years at that point and marked their tenth wedding anniversary in September 2025. They faced fertility challenges before welcoming their first child, son Bridger, who required neonatal intensive care after a complicated birth involving a cesarean section. By September 2025, the couple had two children under the age of two, with Jones recovering from a second cesarean delivery performed less than twenty months prior. The family resides in Austin, where Jones has balanced her professional commitments with parenting amid these recent expansions.

Personal evolution and challenges

Jones grew up in , as the only girl among four older brothers, which cultivated her spirited and resourceful nature from an early age. Her parents' shaped her perspective, with her mother embodying optimism and her father realism, influencing her balanced approach to personal authenticity. This upbringing propelled her move to for undergraduate and master's degrees at the by age 22, marking an early evolution toward independence and ambition. Throughout her career, Jones grappled with sustaining rooted in intrinsic self-worth rather than external validations such as modeling gigs or speaking engagements. She has described feeling like a "" in media environments, leveraging visibility to drive initiatives while internally questioning her sufficiency without accolades. Her participation in Survivor: in 2008, where she lasted 33 days, amplified public scrutiny but also honed her resilience amid physical and social adversities. In recent years, Jones confronted profound challenges in motherhood, including fertility struggles prior to welcoming two children under age two. Recovering from a second C-section within 20 months, she managed breastfeeding for 40 hours weekly alongside family responsibilities and over 30 additional work hours, leading to severe burnout despite support like a full-time nanny and live-in family assistance. This culminated in a near-accident while multitasking—grocery shopping, pumping, and working—prompting her to quit a "dream job" after two months to prioritize parenting, which she termed her "actual dream job" for this life stage. Relocating to Bozeman, Montana, with her husband Bradley and son Bridger, Jones has evolved toward embracing motherhood's demands as her most demanding yet rewarding role, refusing extended breaks despite 2.5 years of near-constant activity with only 10 days off.

Reception and impact

Achievements and awards

In 2018, Jones received the Jefferson Award for Outstanding Public Service by an Individual 35 Years or Under, the organization's highest national honor for youth service, recognizing her founding and leadership of I AM THAT GIRL and ProtectHer in empowering young women through nonprofit initiatives. This accolade, often termed the " for public service," has previously honored figures such as and for sustained impact in community service. Jones's achievements include establishing I AM THAT GIRL in 2008 as a nonprofit providing safe spaces for girls to foster self-worth and connection, which expanded to international chapters and online resources supporting thousands of participants. She also founded ProtectHer, an organization addressing , and delivered keynote addresses at high-profile venues including the 2015 Grammy Awards, the , and the U.S. Institute of Peace, amplifying advocacy for gender empowerment and .

Criticisms of empowerment approaches

Some feminist scholars contend that individual-focused empowerment strategies, such as those advocated by Alexis Jones through personal affirmations, exercises, and mindset shifts in I Am That Girl, prioritize internal change over confronting entrenched structural inequalities like economic disparities and patriarchal institutions. This approach, critics argue, risks reinforcing neoliberal ideals by framing women's challenges as primarily attitudinal rather than systemic, thereby absolving broader societal failures from accountability. Nancy Fraser has critiqued this paradigm as transforming feminism into a tool of capitalist expansion, where exhortations to "lean in" or cultivate personal resilience—echoed in Jones' emphasis on discovering one's "purpose" and "truth"—shift responsibility onto individuals while neglecting demands for redistributive policies or to alleviate burdens like unpaid . Similarly, analyses of neoliberal feminist discourse highlight how such methods overlook intersections of race, class, and sexuality, potentially alienating marginalized women whose obstacles extend beyond self-optimization. Empirical evaluations of empowerment interventions further question their efficacy; a review of measurement frameworks notes persistent theoretical gaps, with programs often yielding short-term psychological gains but limited long-term societal impact due to insufficient integration of power dynamics. In sport and media contexts akin to Jones' activism, scholars observe that empowerment rhetoric can commodify women's agency, promoting consumable narratives of triumph that sideline critiques of exploitative industries. These concerns, drawn largely from academic feminist theory, underscore a tension between motivational self-help and demands for radical restructuring, though Jones' organization maintains an apolitical stance centered on community support rather than policy advocacy.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.