April 07, 2014 | Vol. 20 No. 30

 

 

Noted TV journalist Gwen Ifill will speak to students and faculty Wednesday
Published: 11/5/2012

Gwen Ifill

Gwen Ifill

Gwen Ifill, moderator and managing editor of Washington Week and senior correspondent for the PBS NewsHour, will make a guest appearance on campus at 6:30 p.m.  Wednesday, Nov. 28 in the BLUU auditorium.

 

Co-sponsors are the Schieffer School of Journalism and KERA-TV.  Fort Worth Star-Telegram columnist Bob Ray Sanders and TCU student Lexy Cruz will share the stage as moderators for the evening.

 

The hour-long event is free to faculty and students, however, limited seating dictates that attendance will be first-come, first-served.

 

Ifill reports on a wide range of issues from foreign affairs to U.S. politics and policies interviewing national and international newsmakers.  She has covered seven Presidential campaigns and moderated two vice presidential debates.

 

Each week on "Washington Week," Gwen leads a robust roundtable discussion with award-winning journalists who provide reporting and analysis of the major stories emanating from the nation’s capital.  Now in its 42nd year on the air, Washington Week is the longest-running prime-time news and public affairs program on television.

 

During the 2008 presidential campaign season Washington Week launched a nine-city series of road shows across America with live audiences.  The regular broadcasts and whistle-stop series earned Washington Week a 2008 Peabody Award.  In honoring Washington Week, the committee cited the program for its "reasoned, reliable contribution to the national discourse," and as the gold standard "for public-affairs enthusiasts who prefer illumination to confrontational fireworks."

 

Before coming to PBS in 1999, Gwen was chief congressional and political correspondent for NBC News, White House correspondent for The New York Times, and a local and national political reporter for The Washington Post. She also reported for the Baltimore Evening Sun and the Boston Herald American. Her work as a journalist has been honored by the Radio and Television News Directors Association, Harvard’s Joan Shorenstein Center, Ebony Magazine and Boston’s Ford Hall Forum.

 

Gwen has received more than 20 honorary doctorates and currently serves on the boards of the News Literacy Project, the Committee to Protect Journalists, and she is a fellow with the American Academy of Sciences. A native of New York City, Gwen graduated from Simmons College in Boston.
 


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