Emily Rooney | |
---|---|
Born | Rowayton, Connecticut | January 17, 1950
Occupation | Journalist, writer, news producer, television personality |
Nationality | American |
Citizenship | United States |
Alma mater | American University (1972) |
Spouse | Kirby Perkins |
Children | Alexis (daughter) |
Relatives | Andy Rooney (father) Marguerite "Margie" Rooney (née Howard) (mother) Brian Rooney (brother) Martha Fishel (twin sister), Ellen Rooney, sister |
Website | |
www |
Emily Rooney (born January 17, 1950) is an American journalist, television talk show and radio host and former news producer. [1] She hosted the weekly program Beat the Press on WGBH-TV until its cancellation on August 13, 2021. [2] [3] [4]
In the mid-to-late 1970s, Rooney worked at the CBS affiliate in Hartford, Connecticut, WFSB as an assignment editor among other positions at the station. From 1979 to 1993, she worked at WCVB-TV in Boston as assistant news director, and then a news director for three years. In May of 1993, she was hired to serve as executive producer of World News Tonight (as hosted by Peter Jennings, who had hand-picked her), ABC's nightly news program. Her tenure would last just seven months before she was fired as producer. [5] Following her tenure with ABC and WCVB, Rooney was director of political coverage and special events at the Fox Network in New York, from 1994 to 1997. [6]
From 1997 to 2014, she was also the creator, executive editor, and moderator of Greater Boston , which was later rebroadcast on the Boston-based WGBH radio station, where she also hosted the Emily Rooney Show. During that same period, Rooney moderated a weekly media analysis TV show, Beat the Press.
On May 29, 2014, WGBH announced Emily Rooney would be stepping down from her host position on the Greater Boston TV show to become a special correspondent for the program. [7] After 18 years as host, her final Greater Boston show aired on December 18 of that year. She continued to host Beat the Press until its cancellation on August 13, 2021.
On March 29, 2021, a public letter signed by over 700 filmmakers was sent to PBS President Paula Kerger titled, "A letter to PBS from Viewers like Us". It was organized by Beyond Inclusion, BIPOC-led collective of non-fiction filmmakers, executives, and field builders.." [8] The letter was in response to recent conversations sparked by Grace Lee’s essay [9] for the Ford Foundation’s Creative Futures series and Kerger’s public response to it. [10]
That letter raised questions about how much funding and airtime filmmaker Ken Burns has received over the years in comparison to BIPOC filmmakers, and demanded access to specific data about equity across the board. [11]
On April 2, 2021, during a Beat the Press episode discussing the PBS letter, the six-hour documentary Hemingway by Ken Burns, and the five-hour documentary Asian Americans from Renee Tajima-Peña, Emily Rooney remarked, "I didn’t see Asian Americans but there’s a possibility it wasn’t as good as some of Ken Burns’ films." At the end of the show, she stated, "regardless of what this group says, it’s resentment that a white guy [Burns] is getting all this time. [12]
On April 14, a letter was sent to WGBH from a New England group of filmmakers that grew out of the Documentary Producers Alliance-Northeast in solidarity with Beyond Inclusion, also condemning Rooney’s comments. [13] In reply, WGBH General Manager Pam Johnston "rebuked the comments" in a statement: "Emily Rooney’s comments on the April 2 edition of Beat the Press did not meet WGBH’s standards for opinion journalism, or our commitment to being an anti-racist organization that respects all people." [14]
In a follow-up letter dated April 16, the regional group now referred to as Filmmakers in Solidarity, pointed out the urgent need to address the lack of diverse voices in public media locally, as well as nationally. [15] Among other requests, they demanded Rooney apologize for relying on "derision, racist tropes and more ignorance than fact" when discussing the lack of diverse filmmakers on PBS.
On April 16, she issued a pre-recorded apology at the start of her WGBH show, Beat the Press. In it, Rooney said her remarks were "uninformed, dismissive, and disrespectful" and while her "intention was to offer further balance to the discussion" she acknowledged "my comments did not accomplish that and instead I crossed a line." [16] [17] [18]
Asian Americans, from Series Producer Renee Tajima-Peña, won a Peabody Award in June 2021. [19]
Emily Rooney is the daughter of noted CBS 60 Minutes correspondent and humorist Andy Rooney. She has an identical twin sister, Martha, who is Chief of the Public Services Division at the United States National Library of Medicine in Bethesda, Maryland. Her brother Brian Rooney was a correspondent for ABC News for 23 years. [20] Her sister, Ellen Rooney is a former film and video editor at ABC News and is now a professional photographer in London. Rooney has one daughter, Alexis. Rooney's husband, WCVB-TV reporter Kirby Perkins, died suddenly of heart failure July 1997. Rooney lived in the metro west suburb of Newton for many years and now resides in Boston's Back Bay neighborhood. [21] [22]
She is a graduate of American University in Washington and holds honorary doctoral degrees from the University of Massachusetts Boston and Westfield State College.
Emily Rooney has been awarded the National Press Club's Arthur Rowse Award for Press Criticism, a series of New England Emmy Awards, and Associated Press recognition for Best News/Talk Show. Rooney's WGBH news program, Greater Boston, has received two Regional Edward R. Murrow broadcast journalism awards and five New England Emmy awards. Rooney has also received a New England Emmy in the category of Outstanding Achievement in Commentary/Editorial. [23]
Andrew Aitken Rooney was an American radio and television writer who was best known for his weekly broadcast "A Few Minutes with Andy Rooney", a part of the CBS News program 60 Minutes from 1978 to 2011. His final regular appearance on 60 Minutes aired on October 2, 2011; he died a month later at the age of 92.
The Alfred I. duPont–Columbia University Award honors excellence in broadcast and digital journalism in the public service and is considered one of the most prestigious awards in journalism. The awards were established in 1942 and administered until 1967 by Washington and Lee University's O. W. Riegel, Curator and Head of the Department of Journalism and Communications. Since 1968 they have been administered by the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism in New York City, and are considered by some to be the broadcast equivalent of the Pulitzer Prize, another program administered by Columbia University.
WGBH-TV, branded GBH or GBH 2 since 2020, is the primary PBS member television station in Boston, Massachusetts, United States.
WGBX-TV, branded GBH 44, is the secondary PBS member television station in Boston, Massachusetts, United States. It is owned by the WGBH Educational Foundation, alongside WGBH-TV, WFXZ-CD, and multiple public radio stations in Boston and on Cape Cod. WGBX-TV, WGBH-TV and the WGBH and WCRB radio stations share studios on Guest Street in northwest Boston's Brighton neighborhood; WGBX-TV's transmitter is located on Cedar Street in Needham, Massachusetts.
WCVB-TV is a television station in Boston, Massachusetts, United States, affiliated with ABC and owned by Hearst Television. The station's studios are located on TV Place in Needham, Massachusetts, and its transmitter is located on Cedar Street, also in Needham, on a tower shared with several other television and radio stations.
Rory O'Connor is a journalist, author, educator, and documentary filmmaker. He is co-founder and president of the Globalvision Corporation, and board chair of the Global Center, an affiliated non-profit foundation. His films and television programs have aired on PBS, BBC, NHK, CBS, NBC, ABC, Fox, and numerous other networks. He has been involved in the production of more than two dozen documentaries, and his broadcast, film and print work has been honored with a George Polk Award, a Writer's Guild Award for Outstanding Documentary, an Orwell Award and two Emmys. He has written several books and blogs for the Huffington Post, AlterNet, Al Jazeera and other news sources.
Fetch! with Ruff Ruffman is an American live-action/animated television series that aired on PBS Kids Go! and is largely targeted toward children ages 6–10. It is a reality-game show hosted by Ruff Ruffman, an animated anthropomorphic dog who dispenses challenges to the show's real-life contestants. The series ran from May 29, 2006, to November 4, 2010 on PBS across five seasons and 100 episodes, and featured 30 contestants. Although a sixth season was planned, with auditions taking place in January 2010, WGBH announced on June 14, 2010 that the series would end due to lack of funding. In June 2008, the series received its first Emmy for Best Original Song for its theme.
David M. Wedge is a New York Times-bestselling author, journalist, podcast host and award-winning former reporter for the Boston Herald.
Paula S. Apsell is the television Executive Producer Emerita of PBS's NOVA and was director of the WGBH Science Unit.
Thomas Caswell Ellis was a Boston-based journalist, well-known throughout New England for his tenure as anchor for three of Boston's network-affiliated stations. His career in television news spans more than 40 years.
Margery Eagan is a talk radio host and a frequent guest on CNN, ABC, Fox News, and the Imus in the Morning radio show. For many years she was a columnist for the Boston Herald. Subjects of her commentaries include gender/women's issues, Catholicism, and politics.
WGBH is a public radio station located in Boston, Massachusetts. WGBH is a member station of National Public Radio (NPR) and affiliate of Public Radio Exchange (PRX) and American Public Media (APM). The license-holder is WGBH Educational Foundation, which also owns company flagship WGBH-TV and WGBX-TV, along with WGBY-TV in Springfield.
James Spencer Braude is a lawyer, former union official, and Boston radio and television personality.
Callie Crossley is an American broadcast journalist and radio presenter in the Boston area.
Market Warriors is an American reality television series that follows four professional antiquers as they buy assigned items at flea markets and antique shows on a budget. The items are then sold at auction, where the antiquers compete for the highest profit, which is most often determined by the lowest loss.
Patricia Alvarado Núñez is an American television producer, director, and published photographer based in Boston, Massachusetts. She has created, produced, co-produced, executive produced, written and directed television and digitally distributed documentaries, music specials and series on social and cultural issues including the American Experience PBS primetime documentary Fidel in 2004, an episode of PBS Kids' Postcards from Buster which was nominated for a 2008 Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Children Series. She later served as the Creator and Series Producer of the WGBH series "Neighborhood Kitchens" which won an Emmy Award in 2014. Patricia was an Executive Producer of "Sing That Thing," an amateur choral group competition television series which ran for four seasons by broadcaster WGBH. Alvarado Núñez is currently the Executive Producer of WGBH's World Channel online, television, and podcast series "Stories from the Stage" which broadcast nationally on the PBS network and won two Webby Awards.
Linda Polach is an American news media executive. She is currently Executive Director of the WGBH Studio located at for the Boston Public Library for WGBH Educational Foundation in Boston, Massachusetts, operator of WGBH-TV Channel 2 and its all-news radio station WGBH (FM) in Boston, Mass. The studio is one of, if not the only, Public TV/Radio Studios situated in a Public Library anywhere in the world.
Good Day! is an American morning television program which aired from September 24, 1973, until October 11, 1991. Produced by WCVB-TV in Boston, Good Day! aired on that local ABC affiliate for its entire 18 years of production, airing in various timeslots between 9 and 11 a.m. on WCVB's morning schedule. The program was later syndicated to seventy-one American television markets, expanding its viewership beyond its primary New England viewer base.
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Andrea Joy Campbell is an American lawyer and politician who is serving as the attorney general of Massachusetts. Campbell is a former member of the Boston City Council. On the city council, she represented District 4, which includes parts of Boston's Dorchester, Mattapan, Jamaica Plain, and Roslindale neighborhoods. A member of the Democratic Party, she was first elected to the council in November 2015 and assumed office in January 2016. She served as president of the council from January 2018 until January 2020. Campbell unsuccessfully ran for mayor of Boston in 2021, placing third in the nonpartisan primary election behind Annissa Essaibi George and Michelle Wu, the latter of whom would go on to win the general election.
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