NEW YORK
Katie Couric
Anchor, Managing Editor, CBS Evening News; Correspondent, 60 Minutes
Photo(CBS)
InteractiveA Couric OverviewPhotos, timeline and a closer look at the career of television newswoman Katie Couric.
She has covered the historic presidential election race of 2008, anchoring the CBS Evening News and primetime coverage live from the Iowa Caucuses and the New Hampshire and Ohio primaries, as well as Super Tuesday and other primary nights from New York. Couric also conducted a critically acclaimed series of in-depth and incisive interviews for the CBS Evening News called Primary Questions, for which she asked 10 questions of the then-10 candidates for president that elicited more than stump speech responses. She also covered the State of the Union in from the nation’s capitol in January.
In 2007, she covered the Virginia Tech shootings for the CBS Evening News and a one-hour primetime special and anchored an award-winning primetime special, "Flashpoint," the story of CBS News correspondent Kimberly Dozier, her colleagues and the U.S. soldiers she was with when they were the victims of a car bomb attack in Iraq. Couric anchored on-site during the California wildfires and the Minneapolis bridge collapse for the
CBS Evening News
Also in 2007, Couric reported and anchored the broadcast from Iraq and Syria in advance of General Petraeus’ report to Congress on the status of "the surge." She traveled through Fallujah and Baghdad with Generals Petraeus and Odierno, met with U.S. and Iraqi soldiers and Iraqi citizens, and interviewed President Bush when he arrived in the al-Anbar Province in a surprise trip to the U.S. troops on Labor Day weekend. From Syria, Couric sat down with Syrian President Bashar Assad and questioned him on reports of diminished relations with the United States.
In November 2006, she anchored from Amman, Jordan, covering President Bush’s summit with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. In December of that year, Couric covered the death of President Gerald Ford and, four days later, the execution of Saddam Hussein.
She has conducted numerous exclusive newsmaker interviews for the CBS Evening News and 60 Minutes, including President George W. Bush, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, John and Elizabeth Edwards just after their announcement that Mrs. Edwards' cancer had returned, Israeli Foreign Prime Minister Tzipi Livin, Norah Jones and Michael J. Fox, among many others.
On May 28, 2008, Couric and her ABC News and NBC News counterparts, Charles Gibson and Brian Williams, announced on all three network morning news broadcasts an unprecedented tri-network effort to fight cancer called Stand Up To Cancer. The initiative is designed to raise philanthropic dollars for accelerating ground-breaking research and will culminate in a one-hour, commercial free, simultaneous primetime program on ABC, CBS and NBC on Sept. 5, 2008.
Couric completed a 15-year run as co-anchor of NBC News' "Today" on May 31, 2006. While at NBC, Couric was also contributing anchor for "Dateline NBC." She was a "Today" substitute co-anchor from February 1991 before taking over the job permanently two months later. Couric joined NBC News in 1989 as deputy Pentagon reporter before serving its first national correspondent in June 1990, which included two stints covering the Gulf War.
Couric has covered most of the major breaking news events over the past 15 years, including the Sept. 11 attacks on the World Trade Center; the Columbine tragedy in Colorado; six Olympic Games, including the 1996 Atlanta Olympic bombing; the funeral of Princess Diana; the Oklahoma City bombing; the Timothy McVeigh execution; the Clarence Thomas confirmation hearings; and the end of millennium coverage, which she co-anchored with Tom Brokaw.
Couric has interviewed an extraordinarily diverse collection of newsmakers, from presidents and prime ministers to captains of industry and cultural icons. She has interviewed Presidents Jimmy Carter, George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, along with all of the major presidential candidates over the past several elections. Couric has also sat down with Vice President Dick Cheney, Colin Powell, Madeleine Albright, Sandra Day O’Connor and first ladies Laura Bush, Hillary Clinton, Nancy Reagan, Rosalynn Carter, Betty Ford and Lady Bird Johnson. She has interviewed major world leaders including Kofi Annan, Tony Blair, Ariel Sharon, Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah (in his first U.S. television interview), Benjamin Netanyahu and Shimon Peres. Other Couric interviews include Bill Gates; Tricia Meili, the Central Park Jogger; the last interview with John F. Kennedy, Jr.; and a myriad of other authors, politicians and newsmakers.
After losing her husband, Jay Monahan, to colon cancer in 1998, Couric embraced the fight against the country's No. 2 cancer killer. In March 2000, Couric launched the National Colorectal Cancer Research Alliance in association with the Entertainment Industry Foundation and Lilly Tartikoff, to fund new medical research in colorectal cancer and to conduct educational programs encouraging the prevention and early detection of the disease through proper screening. Following Couric's on-air colonoscopy in 2000, a scientifically documented 20 percent increase was noted in the number of colonoscopies performed across the country. Researchers at the University of Michigan dubbed this "The Couric Effect."
Couric received the George Foster Peabody Award for her March 2000 series on colon cancer, which also led to NBC News receiving the 2001 RTNDA-Edward R. Murrow Award for Overall Excellence. She also has won six Emmy Awards, the Society of Professional Journalists' Sigma Delta Chi Award, a National Headliner Award, an Associated Press Award, a Matrix Award, two American Women in Radio and Television Gracie Awards, the Harvard University School of Public Health’s Julius B. Richmond Award and UNICEF’s Danny Kaye Humanitarian Award.
Couric also played a leadership role in establishing The Jay Monahan Center for Gastrointestinal Health at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell. The Monahan Center, which opened in March 2004, provides a comprehensive, fully integrated multi-disciplinary program, stressing education and prevention in addition to diagnosis and treatment of gastrointestinal cancers. The Monahan Center's mission focuses on the seamless coordination of all needed care for patients and their families facing the difficult diagnosis of gastrointestinal cancer. As part of her work to generate funds for both the Center and the nine scientists whose research the NCCRA supports, Couric has hosted three extremely successful benefits. The most recent, "Hollywood Meets Motown," took place on March 15, 2006, and showcased approximately 40 film, recording industry, television and Broadway stars. These three events generated a significant portion of the almost $27 million Couric and EIF’s NCCRA have raised to date to fight colorectal and other GI cancers.
Couric was a general assignment reporter for WRC-TV Washington, D.C. (1987-89) and for WTVJ Miami (1984-86). She worked for CNN (1980-84) as an assignment editor, associate producer, producer and, ultimately, political correspondent. Couric began her broadcast journalism career as a desk assistant at ABC News in Washington, D.C. (1979).
She was born in Arlington, Va. Couric was graduated with honors from the University of Virginia in 1979 with a bachelor's degree in English and a focus on American studies. She lives in New York with her two daughters.
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