Phil Ponce
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Phil Ponce is a Chicago television journalist who hosts Chicago Tonight, a nightly television magazine of news and culture on WTTW 11.
Ponce grew up in East Chicago, Indiana, and graduated from Bishop Noll Institute in Hammond. He then attended Indiana University and received a B.A. in English in 1971. In 1974 he received a law degree from the University of Michigan. In 1982 he joined the Chicago CBS station WBBM-TV as a reporter. In 1992, he began his career at WTTW11 as a correspondent for Chicago Tonight — a position he held until 1997 when he left to become one of Jim Lehrer's supporting anchors on the national PBS show, The News Hour with Jim Lehrer. He returned to Chicago two years later as the successor to long-time Chicago Tonight host, John Callaway (Callaway still hosts WTTW's Friday Night program). Ponce also teaches journalism at Loyola University Chicago where he is the university's distinguished journalist in residence.
He has received numerous awards for his work. In 2007, he was an honorary inductee into Alpha Sigma Nu, the Jesuit honor society. Other awards include Illinois Journalist of the Year, the Studs Terkel Award and the IU Latino Alumni Award.
Ponce's two sons, Dan Ponce and Anthony Ponce, are also television reporters in Chicago: Dan with ABC7 (WLS-TV), and Anthony with NBC5 (WMAQ-TV). Ponce's daughter, Maria Ponce, works in the field of photography in Manhattan. Phil Ponce's wife, Ann Ponce, is a Chicago portrait and landscape artist. All have degrees from Indiana University; Ponce's sons also have graduate degrees from Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism.