Gretchen Carlson

Gretchen Carlson

During an interview on Fox & Friends (2006)
Born Gretchen Elizabeth Carlson
June 21, 1966
Anoka, Minnesota, U.S.
Alma mater Stanford University
(B.A., Sociology, 1990)
Occupation Host of The Real Story with Gretchen Carlson
(Fox News Channel)
(2006-present)
Known for TV Journalist
Miss America 1989
Title Miss Minnesota 1988
Miss America 1989
Predecessor Kaye Lani Rae Rafko
Successor Debbye Turner
Religion Lutheran
Spouse(s) Casey Close (m. 1997–present) [1]
Children 2
Website

Official Website

Biography on FoxNews.com

Gretchen Elizabeth Carlson (born June 21, 1966) is an American television commentator who hosts the Fox News daytime show The Real Story with Gretchen Carlson weekdays. Her first book "Getting Real" will be released June 16, 2015. Previously Carlson was the co-host of the Fox News morning show Fox & Friends along with Steve Doocy and Brian Kilmeade. An accomplished violinist and winner of the 1989 Miss America Pageant while representing her native Minnesota, Carlson graduated from Stanford University before embarking on a career as a television commentator. Gaining experience as anchor and reporter for several local network affiliates before joining CBS News as correspondent in 2000, she later became co-host of the Saturday Early Show. In 2005 Carlson moved to Fox News and became the regular co-host of Fox & Friends a year later. Carlson continues to work with the Miss America pageant and serves as a national celebrity spokesman for March of Dimes. On July 10, 2013, she announced her departure from Fox & Friends.[2]

Early life

Carlson was raised in a Lutheran family in Anoka, Minnesota, the daughter of Karen and Lee Carlson.[3] She is of Swedish descent.[4] Her father owned a car dealership with her uncle.[3] She has two brothers and one sister.[3] Her grandfather was the pastor of the then second-largest Lutheran church in the United States.[5] She graduated from Anoka-Hennepin School District 11's Anoka High School, where she was the 1984 class valedictorian.[6] One of her childhood nannies was Michele Bachmann, the future Republican congresswoman.[7] Growing up, Carlson was an accomplished violinist, winning numerous local and national competitions. She performed as a soloist with the Minnesota Orchestra as an 8th grader and was the concertmistress for the Greater Twin Cities Youth Symphony. She spent five summers studying at the prestigious Aspen Music Festival in Aspen, Colorado. Winner of several Concerto Competitions at the MacPhail Center for Music in Minneapolis, she was also featured as a soloist with the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra.[8]

In 1984, she was elected as one of the Anoka Homecoming attendants.[8] Carlson won the title of Miss Minnesota in 1988 [9] and became the third woman from Minnesota to win the Miss America title. For the talent competition, Carlson played Zigeunerweisen, the violin composition of Sarasate.

Carlson graduated from Stanford University in 1990 with a degree in sociology (organizational behavior). While at Stanford University, she studied abroad at Oxford University.[10]

In September 2011, Carlson was named to the inaugural class of the Anoka High School Hall of Fame.[8][11]

Career

Carlson was previously the co-anchor of the Saturday Early Show on CBS along with Russ Mitchell. She joined CBS News as a correspondent in 2000 and began working on The Early Show in 2002. Before her tenure at CBS, Carlson served as a weekend anchor and reporter for KXAS-TV in Dallas, Texas, and was an anchor and reporter at WOIO-TV in Cleveland, Ohio, and for WCPO-TV, in Cincinnati. She began her television career in Richmond, Virginia, as a political reporter for WRIC-TV.[10] She began her media career in a franchise called Neighborhood News.

Carlson was moved to Fox & Friends initially as a weekend substitute host. But on September 25, 2006, a shifting of anchors, which included E.D. Hill moving to the 10 a.m. hour of Fox News Live, opened a weekday slot on Fox & Friends, which Carlson filled. She co-hosted with Steve Doocy and Brian Kilmeade for several years.

She announced on Fox & Friends on June 9, 2009 (also repeated on Glenn Beck's Fox News program), that her parents' car dealership had been selected for closing as part of the General Motors reorganization and bankruptcy on June 1, 2009.[12][13] A year later the Star Tribune reported that "It took an act of Congress, a national TV appeal and maybe a little bit of history on the owners' side, but Main Motor, the Anoka car dealership that Lee and Karen Carlson's family has owned for 91 years, will keep its General Motors dealership after all."[14]

Carlson left Fox & Friends in September 2013 to anchor a one-hour daytime program beginning in the fall of 2013, taking part of the slot opened by Megyn Kelly's move to primetime.[15][16]

In July 2014, Carlson appeared in the movie Persecuted as journalist Diana Lucas.

Controversy

On Fox & Friends, during a January 10, 2007, interview with Dan Bartlett, counselor to then-president George W. Bush, Carlson labeled Democratic U.S. Senator Ted Kennedy a "hostile enemy" of the United States, "right here on the home front." Bartlett replied, "Well, we don't view Ted Kennedy as a hostile enemy. We do view him to be an open and often critic of the war. He has been from the very outset. I don't think that's anything new." Keith Olbermann chose her as that day's "Worst Person in the World" on that night's broadcast of his show Countdown, while Howard Kurtz of the Washington Post called it "the Fox News exchange of the day" and asked, "Doesn't the Constitution allow for dissent?"[17]

Personal life

On October 4, 1997, Carlson married sports agent Casey Close.[18][19] They live in Greenwich, Connecticut[20] with their two children.[21]

References

  1. Carter, Bill (December 4, 2009). "For ‘Today’ and ‘Fox and Friends,’ Different Approaches on Disclosure". Media Decoder (New York City, New York: The New York Times Company). Retrieved 9 December 2009.
  2. Fung, Katherine (July 10, 2013). "Gretchen Carlson Leaving 'Fox And Friends'". Huffington Post.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Gustavus Adolphus College Alumni Bulletin: "Lee Carlson ’56" by Erin Wilken February 15, 2010
  4. Celebrity Baby Scoop: "Gretchen Carlson: I Don’t Want My Kids To 'Grow Up Feeling Entitled'" by Jenny Schafer June 29, 2010
  5. Regent University: 'Gretchen Carlson Encourages Risk-Taking at ELS" By Amanda Morad October 7, 2013
  6. "Gretchen Carlson". Pageant Center. 2007-06-12. Retrieved 2010-09-29.
  7. GOP's New Lightning Rod - George Will
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 "Graduate Spotlight - Gretchen Carlson" (PDF). Anoka.k12. Retrieved 24 Dec 2014.
  9. Miss America :: History - 1989, January 11, 2007
  10. 10.0 10.1 "Fox News Personalities - Gretchen Carlson". Fox News Channel. Retrieved 24 Dec 2014.
  11. Levy, Paul. "Anoka's Hall of Fame missing two big names: Keillor and Bachmann". Star Tribune. Retrieved December 4, 2011.
  12. Levy, Paul (June 16, 2009). "GM terminates contract with Anoka’s Main Motors". StarTribune.com. Minneapolis, Minnesota: The Star Tribune Company. Retrieved 9 December 2009.
  13. Froemming, Mandy Moran (June 4, 2009). "Anoka’s Main Motors being cut by GM". Anoka County Union. Coon Rapids, Minnesota: ABCNewspapers.com. Retrieved 9 December 2009.
  14. Levy, Paul. Carlsons get their car franchise back, Minneapolis Star Tribune, May 6, 2010.
  15. Smith, Emily. "Hasselbeck ditching 'The View' for 'FOX and Friends'". NY Post. Retrieved 10 July 2013.
  16. "Elisabeth Hasselbeck leaving "The View" to join Fox". cbsnews. Retrieved 10 July 2013.
  17. Kurtz, Howard (January 11, 2007). "One Last Surge". The Washington Post (Washington, D.C.: The Washington Post Company). pp. 4 & 5. Retrieved October 7, 2010. The president's speech surprised me last night.
  18. Going Deep: Casey Close, Alan Schwarz, baseballamerica.com, February 9, 2007
  19. "Minnesota Marriage Collection, 1958-2001". Ancestry.com. Retrieved 30 Nov 2010.
  20. "The Dish's Tommy Mottola and wife Thalia Break Bread". Greenwich Time. Retrieved 24 Dec 2014.
  21. "Former Michigan baseball star Casey Close remains true to himself, makes a name as a top agent". AnnArbor.com. Retrieved 24 Dec 2014.

External links

Awards and achievements
Preceded by
Kaye Lani Rae Rafko
Miss America
1989
Succeeded by
Debbye Turner
Preceded by
Katherine Killeen
Miss Minnesota
1988
Succeeded by
Susan Johnson