Seth Doane
Seth Wiley Doane | |
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Born |
June 26, 1978 Harwich, Massachusetts, USA |
Occupation | Broadcast journalist |
Website | |
CNN Programs - Anchors/Reporters - Seth Doane at the Wayback Machine (archived March 20, 2007) |
Seth Doane is an American television journalist, currently working for CBS News.
Doane, the son of former Massachusetts Republican State Senator Paul Doane, was born and raised in Harwich, Massachusetts, on Cape Cod. He graduated from Harwich High School in 1996 and then went on to the University of Southern California Annenberg School for Communication in 2000, and was hired by WNYW, New York City's Fox affiliate, as a field producer. Channel One News, the high school TV network, then made him a news anchor, sending him abroad to cover stories in San Salvador, Indonesia, Afghanistan, and the Sudan. At age twenty-two, Doane was nominated for an Emmy Award at WNYW for his "School Security" segment, in which he went undercover to expose the lack of security at schools throughout Manhattan.
Doane won a Peabody Award in 2004 for his series on the Sudan. In April 2006 CNN hired Doane as a special video news correspondent for South Asia, including India. He remained with CNN, based in New Delhi, until June 2007.
In August 2007, Doane became a national correspondent for CBS News, covering a wide range of domestic issues. In 2008 he began reporting on the effects of the economic recession in a series of stories about individual people and families called, "The Other America" — a phrase that harkens back to the noted book of that name by Michael Harrington, about American poverty in the 1960s. On January 10, 2008, Seth made his debut on the CBS Saturday Early Show as a replacement anchor for Chris Wragge. During the telecast, Seth insinuated that Cape Cod, his native landscape never receives snowfall. Outcry from Massachusetts residents was staggering as year-in-year-out the Cape has been plagued by significant levels of snow and some believe Seth too young to remember any real catastrophic storms. It is not known if he will become a permanent co-anchor of the CBS Early Show as he also works on CBS Sunday Morning[1] as a correspondent. In December 2010 he was named one of the Candidates who might replace Chris Wragge on the CBS Saturday Early Show.
In April 2013, he began a two year assignment for CBS News in Beijing.[2]
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