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The Week American Politics Turned Upside Down
From Debates to Diagnoses - “The Sunday Political Brunch” – Sunday October 4, 2020
Dr. Mark Curtis, Ed.D., is a 40 year professional in Radio and TV, all over America. Since October 12, 2015, he has been the Chief Political Reporter, as well as Weekday Co-Anchor at WOWK-TV13 (CBS) in Charleston, West Virginia.
Mark covered the entire 2008 and 2012 Presidential campaigns, traveling the country with all of the candidates as a reporter and political analyst for numerous media outlets. His coverage of Campaign 2016 has also been extensive, with campaign stops in at least a dozen states.
His book, “Age of Obama: A Reporter’s Journey with Clinton, McCain and Obama in the Making of the President 2008” was released Inaugural week 2009 by Nimble Books, Inc.
Mark is well known from his many years with KTVU in the San Francisco Bay Area, from 1993 through 2008, and WLNE-TV6 in Southern New England from 2010 to 2015. He currently contributes political analysis on KGO-TV ABC 7 and KGO Radio 810 AM in San Francisco.
He was first, the Capitol Correspondent in the Washington, D.C. bureau, for all Cox Television stations, including KTVU.
In January 1999, he moved to Oakland, to become Co-Anchor of the “KTVU Morning News,” which became the # 1 local early morning newscast in the Bay Area for the past 6 years.
Mark left KTVU in 2008, to start his own freelance news reporting, public relations and political analysis agency: www.MarkCurtisMedia.com. It is a full service, multi-media company.
He grew up in Milwaukee and graduated with a degree in Broadcast Communication from Marquette University in 1981. While there, he received a Distinguished Student Service Award for his work as Program Director at WMUR Radio. In 1986, he received a Masters Degree, with honors, from the University of Florida in Gainesville. In 2011 he completed his Doctorate in Educational Leadership at St. Mary’s College of California, in Moraga. He is an Adjunct Professor at Rhode Island College.
Curtis worked in Gainesville, FL at WCJB-TV20 as a general assignment reporter and as bureau chief in the Central Florida regional news bureau.
In 1987, he moved to WEAR-TV3 in Pensacola, Florida--Mobile, Alabama, where he served as investigative reporter covering police and court beats, county commission and state and local politics.
He spent 1992-93 as a Congressional Fellow, working in the House Judiciary Subcommittee of Rep. Charles Schumer, (D) New York, as well as for Senator Herb Kohl, (D) Wisconsin. His duties included planning for Congressional hearings, budget and issue research, developing press contacts and legislative strategies.
Mark returned to broadcasting in 1993 at the Cox Broadcasting bureau in Washington. In his five years as Capitol Correspondent, he provided daily live coverage of Congress, the White House, and the Supreme Court for eight television stations.
He's received numerous awards for his work, including the Florida Motion Picture & Television Association's "1989 Best Documentary" award in 1989 for a report on sightings of Unidentified Flying Objects. And the Florida Associated Press Broadcasters Association honored him with three awards including "Outstanding Spot News Coverage" in 1990 and 1992, and "Outstanding Enterprise/Investigative Report" in 1991. He has been nominated four times for Emmy Awards and was a regional Edward R. Morrow winner and a national finalist.
Mark has covered nine U.S. Presidential campaigns, having started with the Carter-Reagan race in 1980.
From Debates to Diagnoses - “The Sunday Political Brunch” – Sunday October 4, 2020
We look at potential fallout in, “The Sunday Political Brunch” – September 27, 2020
We look at the political fallout in, “The Sunday Political Brunch” - September 20, 2020
A look ahead at who's leading in - “The Sunday Political Brunch” – September 13, 2020
We analyze two months until Election Day in, “The Sunday Political Brunch” September 6, 2020
We wonder if the "Zoom" convention is here to stay? – “The Sunday Political Brunch” August 30, 2020
We critique the DNC in, “The Sunday Political Brunch” – August 23, 2020
An assessment of the VP choice in, “The Sunday Political Brunch” - August 16, 2020
We look at the similarities in “The Sunday Political Brunch” - August 9, 2020
We look at a month of political promise in, “The Sunday Political Brunch” for August 2, 2020
We look at the "mad dash" in, “The Sunday Political Brunch” - July 26, 2020
In “The Sunday Political Brunch” for July 19, 2020 we look at a variety of political headlines
Gauging political fallout in, “The Sunday Political Brunch” - July 12, 2020
"The Sunday Political Brunch" - July 5, 2020
We examine three months until Election Day in, “The Sunday Political Brunch" - June 28, 2020
In "The Sunday Political Brunch" for June 21, 2020 we look at presidential parentage!
We rethink VP options in - “The Sunday Political Brunch” – June 14, 2020
We look at the latest polling data in “The Sunday Political Brunch” June 7, 2020
We look at possible election fallout in, “The Sunday Political Brunch” - May 31, 2020
In this “The Sunday Political Brunch” for May 24, 2020, we look at more key Senate races