Mellody Hobson, co-CEO of Ariel Investments.Stephen Brashear/Getty Images
- Mellody Hobson will become the first Black female part-owner in the NFL following the Denver Broncos deal.
- Hobson is the co-CEO of Ariel Investments and the chair of Starbucks' board.
Not for the first time, Mellody Hobson made history this month.
Hobson, co-CEO of Ariel Investments, joined the ownership group taking over the NFL's Denver Broncos. The $4.65 billion deal appears to make Hobson the first Black woman to become a part-owner in the league.
"This is a big deal. I mean, this is history," Russell Wilson, the Broncos' quarterback, recently told The Athletic.
Hobson, 53, has had a long career in finance; serves on multiple company boards; has been honored by her alma mater, Princeton University; and shares an 8-year-old daughter with her husband, "Star Wars" creator George Lucas.
Here's how Hobson got her start, built her career, and made NFL history.
Hobson was raised in Chicago and attended Princeton University, where she studied at the school of international relations and public policy. She graduated in 1991 and started a job with investment firm Ariel Investments, where she'd interned during college.
Mellody Hobson in 2009. Molly Riley/Reuters
Hobson, who grew up bouncing between apartments and frequently experienced evictions, told Vanity Fair that she was "desperate" to understand money. "I felt like financial security would be the biggest gift I could ever have, ever," she said. Since then, Hobson has become a recognized financial literacy expert — during the financial crisis, she hosted an ABC show about how to manage your money.
Hobson at the Summit LA19 ideas festival in Los Angeles in 2019. Amy Harris/Invision/AP
In 2000, Ariel's founder, John Rogers, named Hobson president of the firm. In the meantime, she started a philanthropic organization — a public school on Chicago's South Side — and began working toward increasing corporate diversity with a conference for Black corporate directors.
Hobson speaks during the University of Southern California's commencement ceremony in 2015. Mario Anzuoni/Reuters
Hobson was named Ariel's co-CEO in 2019. By then, she'd already served on multiple company boards, including Estée Lauder, DreamWorks Animation, Groupon, and Starbucks. In 2020, she was named chair of Starbucks' board, making her one of the highest-profile Black board chairs in the US.
Hobson in 2019. Amy Harris/Invision/AP
Hobson earned Princeton's highest honor for undergraduates, the Woodrow Wilson Award, in 2019 — one year later, the university named a new residential college after her, the first to be named after a Black woman.
Stephen Brashear/Stringer/Getty
In 2005, Hobson met "Star Wars" creator George Lucas — eight years later, they were married at Lucas' Skywalker Ranch. "We have the same values ... By values, I mean what's right and what society expects of us," Hobson told Vanity Fair.
Hobson walks with film director George Lucas at the Monaco racetrack in 2013. Claude Paris/AP
The couple held the star-studded wedding, as well as a lavish party at Promontory Point in Chicago. Steven Spielberg, Oprah Winfrey, Samuel L. Jackson, Harrison Ford, and Robin Williams all helped celebrate their union, Vanity Fair reported.
George Lucas, Robin Williams, and Mellody Hobson at Lucas and Hobson's wedding in 2013. Barry Brecheisen/Invision/AP
Prince even performed at the party in Chicago. "When George and I got married and we planned our wedding reception, we reached out to ask him if he'd be willing to play," Hobson said in 2016. "And much to our shock and sheer delight, he said yes!"
Hobson is pulled onstage with Prince during her wedding reception in 2013. Barry Brecheisen/Invision/AP
About two months after their wedding, the couple welcomed a daughter via surrogate, Everest Hobson Lucas.
Hobson and Lucas arrive at the European premiere of "Star Wars: The Force Awakens" in 2015. Dylan Martinez/Reuters
These days, Hobson's firm, Ariel Investments, has $16.8 billion in assets under management, and Hobson is a significant shareholder in the company — her stake is worth tens of millions of dollars, Vanity Fair reports. For his part, Lucas is worth an estimated $6.5 billion, due in large part to the sale of Lucasfilm to Disney in 2012. The couple signed the Giving Pledge with the goal of improving education.
Lucas and Hobson at the premiere of "Black Panther" in 2018. Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP
In June 2022, Hobson joined the ownership group buying the Denver Broncos for $4.65 billion — Rob Walton, a Walmart heir and former board chairman, is leading the group. "Beyond her role at Ariel, Mellody is an influential leader in corporate and civic organizations across the nation," Walton said in a statement announcing the deal. "We know she will bring her strategic acumen and leadership perspective to our team."
Mile High Stadium in Denver, Colorado. Getty Images
While other Black women have held limited stakes in NFL franchises, Hobson is the first to be identified as being part of an original ownership group buying a team, The Athletic reports. "What a tremendous accomplishment and what a gift to be able to do what she's going to be able to do," Broncos quarterback Russell Wilson told the website.
Hobson in 2019. Amy Harris/Invision/AP