Jamie Gangel
Quick Facts
Biography
Jamie Sue Gangel (born 1955) is an American television news reporter based in the United States. Since August 2015, she has been a CNN Special Correspondent. She became a national correspondent for the NBC News' Today show in February 1992. Since joining NBC News in 1983 as a general assignment and political correspondent based in Washington, DC, Gangel had been a frequent contributor to NBC Nightly News, Today, Dateline NBC andMSNBC.
Early life
Gangel was born and raised in New York City, the daughter of Richard I. Gangel and Phyllis Gangel-Jacob. Her parents divorced eleven months after her birth. Her mother, a retired justice of the New York Supreme Court, is Jewish. Gangel was raised in the Jewish faith.
Education
Gangel graduated with a B.S. degree from Georgetown University's Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service in 1977. She attended Harvard University in 1976, where she studied international economics.
Career
Gangel began her career in broadcast journalism in 1978 as an assignment editor for WJLA-TV in Washington, D.C. At the same time, she worked for all-news radio station WTOP-AM, the CBS affiliate in Washington. In 1982, she joined television station WPLG-TV in Miami, Florida as a general assignment reporter and substitute anchor.
Gangel provided some of the first reports of the September 11, 2001 attacks from New York, including confirming that the Pentagon had been hit by a plane and that the CIA offices had been evacuated. Her exclusive interviews have included Frank Zappa and former Presidents Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush.
On August 24, 2015, Gangel began a new phase of her career as a Special Correspondent for CNN.
Personal life
Gangel is married to New York Times bestselling author Daniel Silva and they have two children, twins Lily and Nicholas. The family resides in Florida. Silva converted to Judaism as an adult.
Awards
Gangel has won numerous awards for reporting, including the
- Edward R. Murrow Award, presented by the Radio-Television News Directors Association;
- Gracie Award, by the American Women in Radio and Television;
- Clarion Award, and the
- Associated Press Award for Best Spot News Coverage.