Steve Powers

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Steve Powers (born February 25, 1934 in New York City) is a musician, journalist and teacher who has had a 45 year career in New York City radio and television, as well as academia.

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[edit] Education

Born in New York City, Powers attended the University of Virginia where he worked at the student radio station, WUVA. He was a member of the UVa Jazz Club, once integrating the university auditorium playing in a concert with Dizzy Gillespie, an experience he repeated thirty years later when he played another concert with Gillespie, at New York's Blue Note club. After UVa, Powers attended the City College of New York where he became editor of Roundhouse Magazine; in 1956 he received a degree in Business Administration from CCNY. In 1987 Powers earned a Ph.D. from New York University, in Neil Postman's Media Ecology program.

[edit] Journalism career

After graduating from CCNY in 1956, and serving as a Search and Rescue officer in the United States Coast Guard in Puerto Rico, Powers returned to the New York area and started looking for work as a jazz disc jockey. He was hired by radio station WADS, in Ansonia, Connecticut in 1961 as a newscaster. He subsequently worked as a newscaster and news director for several radio stations in Connecticut. In 1963 he anchored the coverage of the assassination of John F. Kennedy on WICC for 13 straight hours.

Powers moved to WMCA radio in New York and went on to anchor his own morning drive-time news/talk show. He left WMCA in 1972 to become a correspondent at ABC radio network news and worked at RKO radio network news.

In 1980, Powers became an anchor/reporter on television at WNYW-TV, NY (Fox-TV) where he worked for 13 years. He was the first reporter to cover John Lennon's death on December 8, 1980, broadcasting the first network radio reports while assisting with WNYW-TV's television coverage of the story. From 1980-1993 he was the anchor/reporter for WNYW-TV Channel 5 News, where he was awarded an Emmy Award in 1981; in 1986 he was also nominated for an Emmy for an Outstanding Feature story. In later years, Powers was the anchor of noon-6:00 P.M.newscasts for New York Times Radio, and the writer/producer/voice of the "Health Times" medical reports on WQXR-FM, NY. He signed off for the last time from New York Times radio in June 2007.

In addition to his work in radio and television, Powers served as a college professor in the field of media communications. From 1976 to 1993 Powers periodically taught as an adjunct professor at the Columbia School of Journalism, The New School, and New York University. In 1993, he became an Associate Professor at St. John's University teaching journalism and media.

Powers has also lent his voice narrating Aaron Copeland's "Lincoln Portrait" in concert and has appeared in diverse commercials and documentaries.

[edit] Book authored

In 1992 Powers co-authored the book How to Watch TV News with media theory pioneer Neil Postman. The book is an explication of the difference between what TV news says it is presenting and what it actually delivers - "real news" versus entertainment fodder - illuminating the biases, strengths, and weaknesses of TV news as well as the influence of commercials. It has been adopted by college professors and teachers as required reading for their journalism and media literacy courses. Powers is working on a new edition of the book, which is scheduled for publication by Penguin Books.

[edit] Music career

In addition to the Gillespie concerts, Powers had a career as a professional musician. He taught himself Latin percussion and became played with Willie Rodriguez, Charlie Palmieri and Randy Carlos as well as playing drums with Tony Bennett, Joe Jones, and David Amram.

[edit] Personal life

Powers lives in upstate New York with his wife, Sheri Powers, and his grandson Hip Hop artist Dov Powers. He has four adult children by a previous marriage: Lisa, Marisa, Laura and Anthony.


[edit] Professional honors and awards

  • 1986 Emmy Nomination Best Feature
  • 1981 Group Emmy Award, Member Best News Broadcast
  • 1981 NY Press Club Deadline Award, Best TV News Reporting on a Breaking Story
  • 1982 UPI NYS Broadcast Nomination, Best Enterprise TV Awards News Reporting
  • 1978 NY Board of Education Career Award, Helping Youths
  • 1970 Clio Award, Broadcast Radio Promo